Voices of the 'ilit.
It was late last ni glit when you retired I"
y . 1 , papa !" I said, with a yawn
Behind my fan, "for the horrid man
He just talked ou and on.
The more I hinted tho more ho stayed ;
I knew you were wakeful, too,
And I told him so ; but he would not go
And what could a jioor girl do V
"It was very late when you retired !''
"Yes, papa !" I frankly said,
Tor the man, you ecu. just talked to me,
Though I yawned till my eyes were red ;
And I went so far, when the eloek struck twelve,
As to count the strokes all through ;
But tho stupid ho wouldn't see
And what could a poor girl do ?"
"It was worse than late when you retired !"
"Why, I tell you, pa !" I cried,
"If I hinted oneo to the tiresome dunce,
'Twas a hundred times beside I
Why, I even said you'd been in bed
For at least two hours, I knew ;
But he tipped his chair, and still sat there
So what could a poor girl do ?"'
"Well,the jeemses-gosh! was you up all night?"
"Why, papa !'' I humbly plead,
"Don't thunder so ! there's a man below ;
And he's sent you his card, and said
That the reason why he stayed all night
Was, he wanted to see you, too,
That ho might ask for the hand I gave
Tor what could a poor girl do ?"
FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Confectionery Recipes.
Lemon Drops. Upon half a pound of
finely powdered sugar pour just enough
lemon juice to dissolve it and boil to
the consistency of thick sjiup ; drop
this on plates and put in a warm place
to harden.
Boston Caramels. One pint bowl of
Baker's grated chocolate, two bowls of
yellow sugar, one bowl of New Orleans
molasses, one-half cup of milk, a piece
of butter the size of a small egg and
vanilla flavor; boil about twenty-five
minutes ; this should not be so brittle
as other candies. Tour in buttered tins
and mark deeply with a knife.
Euerton Taffy. In a shallow vessel
melt together one pound of brown sugar
and one-quarter pound of butter ; stir
them together for fifteen minutes, or
until when the mixture becomes brittle
when dror ped in cold water. Lemon
or vanilla flavoring should be added be
fore the cooking is complete. Butter a
flat plate and pour the taffy upon it to
cool. "When partly cold mark in squares
with a knife.
Chocolate Cream Ditors.-Mix one-half
cup of cream with two of white sugar.boil
and stir full five minutes ; set tho dish
into another of cold water and stir until
it becomes hard. Then make into small
balls about the size of marbles and with
a fork roll each one separately in the
chocolate, which has in the meantime
been put in a bowl over the boiling tea
kettle and melted ; put on brown paper
to cool ; flavor with vanilla if desired.
This amount make3 about fifty drops.
RuetMinii Mulberry.
This valuable and ornamental tree
was first brought to this country by the
Russian Mennonites, and trees, the
seed of which was planted five years
a?o, are twenty feet in height and six
inches in diameter, and have borne full
crops of fruit since they were two years
old. Color of fruit red and black, flavor
sub-acid. In Russia they are used as
we use raspberries and blackberries.
Large quantities of this fruit are
sold annually in the markets of
Russia. The tree is, as near as
we can learn, a cross between the Morus
Nigra or black mulberry, and the native
Russian variety. The tree crows very
large, frequently reaching a height of
fifty feet. The timber is hard and dur
able, and the fence posts made from it
have the lasting qualities of catalpa or
red cedar. A part of the tro s have
beautiful cut leaves, and some of them
have as many as twelve lobes. Some of
the trees were shipped to James Vick
last autumn, who speaks of the beauty
of the leaves in the Floral Guide for
1881. Tho bark is grayish white,
branches drooping. The Russians also
use it as a hedge plant, and it stands
shearing as well as any tree on the list.
It also grows readily from cuttings as
cotton-wood or willow. Last-year cut
tings made trees from three to five feet
in height. The tree is perfectly hardy.
Mercury thirty degrees below zero and
not even the twigs injured. Fruit
Record.
Akrienlturul Items.
Now is the time to destroy weeds
they are growing rapidly, and germinate
about as fast as cut down. A piece well
cleared this year will show the good ef
fect next year.
The Agricultural Department esti
mates that four per cent, of the acreage
of Texas can produce enough cotton to
supply the whole world.
There are few farmers who are thor
ough cultivators of all crops. They
give the best attention to those for
which they have a preference.
They have black peaches in Japan.
When cut the flesh is a reddish brown.
The flavor is excellent.
Mr. Joe Beasley, an experimental
gardner near Columbus, Georgia, has
succeeded in raising some melons with
a delicious lemon flavor. He makes an
incision in the vine a short distance
from the root, to which he attaches a
lemon, and by means of absorption the
juice is taken into the melons.
To Destroy Hugs.
To destroy bugs on squash and cu
cumber vines dissolve a tablespoonf ul
of saltpeter in a pailful of water, put a
pint of this around each hill, shaping
the earth so that it will not spread
much, and the thing is done. The
more saltpeter the better for vegetables,
but the surer death to animal life. The
bugs burrow iu the earth at night, but
fail to rise in the morning. No danger
of killing any vegetables with it ; a con
centrated solution applied to beans
make them grow wonderfully. Ky
Live Stock Rec,
Coloring Batter.
Mr. Hawley, of the Onondaga County
(N. Y.) Farmers' Club, finds that Indian
meal fed to a Jersey cow will give both
the color and aroma of grass butter.
Buckwheat bran and oil meal both
would make tho color white. Mr. Ter
ry said it was absolutely necessary to
butter in the market that customers
would take; they wanted colored but
ter, and it must be colored or the dairy
man would tako tho consequences. If
tho market says color, you must color
by artificial means or by feeding. Mr.
Overacre urged tho farmers to adopt the
method of natural coloring. First se
lect good cows then feed them well, and
you will get good colored butter.
A Life and Death Struggle Tvilli a
Grizzly.
A prospector by the name of H. A.
Johnson came down from the mountains
on yesterday morning's stage. From the
crown of his head, to the soles of his
feet ho was the worst'patched up and
" bent " prospector we have looked upon
for many a day ; in fact, he was but the
wreck of his former self. A News re
porter interviewed him and learned that
since he left Bellevuo he had visited a
great deal of the country north and was
prospecting on the Middle Fork of Sal
mon river. Lato last week he started
out mining with his prospecting tools,
his partner going in another way, and
fell in with a fellow from Bonanza or
Challis, who called himself Barber, or a
similar name. They were passing
through a littte park when a monster
grizzly bear was seen a short distance
off. Barber recommended that John
son take a shot with his Rem-
iugton rifle. Johnson jumped from his
lorse and with a rest over his knees
turned loose. The grizzly caught it and
started for the party, when Barber
straddled Johnson's horse as quick as a
flash and darted away. Johnson
shouted his protest, but he had no time
to fool away, and kept upon his knee,
pumping shots into the advancing griz
zly at a lightning-striking rate ; in fact,
the grizzly got five shots into his car
cass one between tne eyes and one
through his heart and still he kept
coming.
When the bear was about twenty-five
feet off Johnson gave up experimenting
and dashed for a tree. He sprang high,
but the bear caught him by his left hip,
tearing away clothing and flesh and
bringing Johnson down to the grass.
As he fell the bear caught him by the
scalp, tearing the whole business loose
from near his forehead to the back of
he crown. With his right hand John
son fastened to the beast's nostrils and
hung there for a moment, but he was
getting weak, and soon lost his hold.
By this time the bear's eyes were get
ting glassy, but when Johnson at
tempted to move from him he was
roused to three severe attacks, once
catching Johnson in the left shoulder ;
next iu the left forearm, breaking both
bones, and again above the elbow of the
left arm, causing a serious flesh wound.
That was the last nip of Mr. Grizzly,
and he rolled over dead upon Johnson's
gun.
Now was the pluck of the hunter
tried. His left arm and leg were lac
erated and bleeding ; his shoulder was
bare and torn open ; his left aim was
broken in two places and seriously
ripped open in another ; his right hand
was split by a tooth of the savage beast,
and his scalp was hangingdown on his
shoulders, and he was alone. He had
about two miles to walk to his camp,
and then to find his partner away, in all
probability. He was getting dizzy, but
roused and went to camp ; splintered
his arm, put snow about it. and started
for Bellevue, accompanied by his part
ner. Johnson is now under the care of
Dr. Thiele. and owing to his remarkable
care for himself in all the days of travel
between here and Middle Fork, the doc
tor predicts a speedy recovery. From
the scene of the fight to Bellevue it
cannot be less than 170 miles, and this
had to be traveled over by the
wounded man on horseback. Middle
Fork affords not at all a health? climate
for Mr. Barber, and at the rate he was
travelling when last seen, no bear will
ever catch him. The bear would weigh
about 900 pounds, but Johnson carries
the beast's scalp in his pocket to-day.
Wood River Ore.) News.
A Wonderful Lake.
The Bodie (Cal.) Free Press publishes
the following description of Mono lake,
a remarkable body of water :
Notwithstanding the steady influx of
five large fresh water creeks and innu
merable small streams, its bitter but
pellucid waters continue to give a sedi
mentary analysis of forty-five parts soda,
forty parts salt and fifteen parts borax
and lime ; that the lake is twenty-nine
by nineteen miles.in diameter, and more
than 200 feet deep in places ; that it con
tains two large and several small tufa
islands, the first in magnitude having
an area of 2,200 acres and the second
1,500 acres; that upon the second island
is the crater of a volcano that was in ac
tive eruption as late as 1858, that upon
the larger island and out 100 feet .from
it, in seventy feet depth of water, are
boiling springs of asphalt, and that no
living thing exists in the waters of the
lake except the Piute shrimp, a pink
eyed worm which attains a length of
about three-fourths of an inch.
The valley, commonly called a desert.
surrounding the lake is about thirty by
fifty miles in diameter, and has at some
not remote period of the past been
wholly submerged by mineral waters
similar to those which now occupy the
deep portion of the basin, as the water
mark along the western wall is nearly
1,000 feet above the present surface of
, the lake.
HUMOROUS.
The trained dog has a purp-pose in
life in fact a number of 'em.
In love making the young people
believe that ardor is heaven's first law.
The clock strikes without stopping
work. This keeps the hands employed,
and enables them to go on tick.
The scales used for weighing gold in
the assay offices are so delicate that one
glance from a squint-eyed man will
throw them off balance.
Notwithstanding the malaria s:iid to
surround Washington we have never
yet heard of a man who shook so much
that he couldn't draw his salary.
Jay Gould controls 7,000 miles of rail
road, valued at $140,000,000, but any
athletic schoolboy in the land can throw
him down, and give him underhold at
that.
The Chicago News thinks that the
reason women never die of lockjaw is,
"That they never give the disease a
chance to catch on." Wonder, now, if
that is it ?
"Chinese barbers shave without
ather." This reminds us that our old
schoolmaster used to lather without
shaving. One is said to be as painful
an operation as the other.
With the thermometer 95 degrees m
Columbus, the Ohio State Journal ec
statically launches forth in the following
effusion :
Oh, the snow the beautiful snow !
Filling the sLy and the earth below, Ac, &c.
The following would be more appro
priate :
Tho heat, the heat, tho beautiful heat !
How bakes the tin roofs and the bricks a' vour
feet,
How it melts dowu your collar and musses
your hair,
And makes the air thick with full many a
swear.
TUG ROME DOCTOR.
A poultice of fresh tea leaves, mois
tened with water, will cure a sty on the
eyelid.
For earache, dissolve assafcetida in
water ; warm a few drops and drop in
the ear, then cork the ear with wool.
The true physiological way of treating
burns and scalds, is to at once exclude
the air with cotton batting, flour
scraped potato, or anything that is han
diest. Refined benzine will dissolve the dis
agreeable odorous oily substance which
is secreted in some people's skin, after
which plenty of soap and water will
remove it. This persevered in will
make the skin inodorous.
To cure buuions, use pulverized salt
peter and sweet oil. Obtain at a drug
gist's live or six cents' worth of saltpe
tre ; put into a bottle with sufficient
olive oil to dissolve it, shake up well,
and rub the inflamed joints night and
morning, and more frequently if pain
ful. The following drink for relieving
sickness of the stomach is said to be
very palatable and agreeable : Beat up
one egg very well, say for twenty min
utes, then add fresh milk one pint, wa
ter one pint, sugar to make it palatable ;
boil and get it cool ; drink when cold.
If it becomes curds and whey it is tuse
less. Dr. F. P. Atkinson believes that jout
may be prevented in this way and the
prevention of this troublesome and often
dangerous disease is far more easy than
its cure. His method of arresting a
tendency to gout consists in : (1.) Lim
iting the quantity of nitrogenous food ;
(2.) Taking regularly a certain amount
of out-of-door exercise, in order to help
the proper tissue changes being carried
out. (3.) Avoidance of lato hours and
everything which is likely to unduly
excite or depress the nervous system.
(4.) Keeping up the action of the skin
by warm clothing and the occasional
use of Turkish baths iu short, it con
sists in living as far as possible a nat
ural life.
Taken In.
Uncle Pleasant Batkins, of Richmond,
Va., is sixty and his wife seventy-two
years old. The other day a friend said :
" Uncle Pleasant, why in the mischief
did you marrv a woman nearly old
enough to be your mother?" And this
is the way he explained it : "You see'
boy," he replied with a sigh, "I was
wurkin' for Long John Freeman in
Hanover, when I was jest 18, and Susan
Ann Russ, old Mrs. Russ's oldest daugh
ter, was thirty if she wur a day. At
every quiltin' she used to chuse me foi
her partner, and everybody said it
'peared like she wur a courtin me. Sht
gimme four pair cotton socks and a heap
of things, but still I didn't have no no
tion of her. Well, one Christmas eve.
went to the old woman's, and had
hardly sot down before Sary Ann
brought me some sweet pertato pie,
which she knowed I was monstrous fond
of. While I was eatin' it I heard the
old woman up stairs a countin' silver
dollars. Now, thar was no plaster to
the sealin, and tho up stairs floor had
cracks in it as wide as my finger. So
you see I could hear the jingle of the
money just as well as if I had been up
thar myself. When she had counted
906 I drawed up to Sary Ann and pop-
pea tne question. In course she said
she'd have me, and the next Thursday
we was married. Now, what do you
think I found out the next day ? Why,
mat tne oia woman didn't have but
thirty Mexican dollars, and that she
counted 'em over and over jest to fool
me. Don't marry for money, boy,
specially for silver dollars."
Mrs. Dominis, a sister of King Kala
kua, and the wife of an American ship
master at Hawaii, acts as regent of the
kingdom in her brother's absence.
We are compelled to intimate to
mountain resort correspondents that
snakes under twelve feet in length can
, get no puffs from this paper.
Bananas and Plantlns.
A pound of bananas contains more
nutriment than three pounds of meat or
many pounds of potatoes, while as a
food it is in every sense of the word far
superior to the best wheaten bread. Al
though it grows spontaneously through
out the tropics, when cultivated its
yield is prodigious, for an acre of ground
planted with bananas will return, ac
cording to Humboldt, as much food
material as thirty-three acres of wheat
or over a hundred acres of potatoes.
The banana, then, is the bread of mil
lions who could not well subsist with
out it. In Brazil it is the principal food
of the laboring classes, while it is no
less prized in the island of Cuba. In
deed, in the latter country the sugar
planters grow orchards of it expressly
for the consumption of their slaves.
Every day each hand receives his ration
of salt fish or dried beef, as the case
may be, and four bananas and two
plantains. The benana it should be
called plantain, for until lately there
was no such word as banana is divided
into several varieties, all of which are
used for food. The platino mauzadito
is a bmall delicate fruit, neither longer
nor stourter than a lady's forefinger. It
is tho most delicious and prized of all
the varieties of the plantin. 1 platino
guineo, called by us the banana, is pro
bably more in demsnd than any other
kind. It is sub-divided into different
varieties, the principal of which are the
yellow and purple bananas we see for
sale in our market ; but the latter is so
little esteemed by the natives of the
tropics that it is seldom eaten by them.
El platino known to us simply the
plantain is also sub-divided into vari
eties which are known by their savor
and their size. The kind that reaches
our market is almost ten inches long,
yet on the isthmus of Darien there are
plantains that grow from eighteen to
twenty-two inches. They are never
eaten raw, but are either boiled or
roasted or are prepared as preserves. As
our beloved southland becomes more
densely populated the problem of "how
tho people are to be fed" will gradually
assume more serious proportions. Meat
is becoming dearer and dearer, nor is
it at all improbable that the time is not
very far distaut when it will not be as
often seen on the tables of our poor as
it is to-day. Nt tc Orleans Democrat.
Why i hildren Die.
Commenting upon the great mortality
among children, an official of t he Brook
lyn health board says: "The fearful
mortality is often due to ignorance and
carelessness on the part of mothers and
nurses as to diet, clothing, and habits
of person of the child. Frequently in
digestion occurs from the poor quality
of milk furnished by the milkman,
which from fermentation in the stomach
becomes converted into indigestible
curds, inducing vomiting, diarrhoea,
and other symptoms of summer com
plaint. Proper nourishment for the
little ones is a prime necessity. Chil
dren should never be nursed after vio
lent exercise or emotional excitement.
Those reared by the bottle or hand can
not be too closely watched, and with
them the most scrupulous cleanliness
should be practiced. Then, again, in
digestible food and over feeding should
be guarded against, and regularity of
diet should be established. Barlev
water is the best drink for children in
summer. Ice-cold water should be
avoided. They should have plenty of
out-door exercise, but the intense heat
of the sun should bo avoided. Rides
on street cars and ferryboats and river
excursions are very beneficial to health.
The fresh breezes of the bay and river
are very refreshing and invigorating,
and the air is most healthful. The
smiles and good humor of the sick child
will repay the poorest for the trouble
and trivial expense. The practice of
overdressing and tormenting the bodies
of children with flannels and heavy
wearing apparel in warm weather can
not be too vigorously condemned, for it
is a prolific source of summer complaint.
As long as warm weather prevails the
children should be dressed lightly and
made comfortable, both in and out of
doors. All sudden exposure should be
avoided, and the extremities should be
kept warm. But above all mothers
should practice cleanliness in the care
of their children, Water is cheap, and
not only keeps the little ones clean, but
cooL
How the James Boys Operate.
Jesse and Frank go into a farming
community and become acquainted with
the men, and pick out certain ones, af
ter a careful study of their character, to
join with them in a particular robbery.
They carefully broach the subject to
them, and if they are willing they egree
to give them all the way from $100 to
$500 each. They are required to hold
the horses and fire off guns and raise a
racket while Jesse and Frank, with per
haps one or two experienced trusties,
do the robbing. Immediately after the
completion of the job the farmers are
paid the stipulated sum, whether the
haul is large or small, and then they
ride to their homes, while the James
boys strike out to a place cf safety. The
men who have been inveigled into the
job are never asked to go into a similar
undertaking a second time, but they
ever afterward remain under the power
and fear of the noted robber chieftains,
upon whom they dare not squeal, for by
so doing they would give themselves
away. They always stand ready to pro
tect and secrete the James bo a when
they are hard pressed. This explains
why the James boys have so many
friends in Missouri, and why it is so
difficult to catch them. It is as hard
to find them in Missouri as it would be
to find a needle in a haystack. Oma
ha Republican,
Indignant Postal Clerk.
An indignant head clerk in the Balti
more postoffice wants the newspapers to
convey to the public his emphatic protest
againt the latest popular mania con
fined as yet to sentimental writers of
billet doux namely, the sticking of
postage stamps upon unusual and out-of-the-way
parts of envelopes. There is,
it seems, a " postage-stamp code of
flirtation, and each position of a stamp
expresses some particular sentiment.
Now the law allows the stamp to be
put anywhere on the envelope the
sender may please. But its position is
a matter of importance to the cancelling
clerks. " As long," says the Baltimore
official "as the stamps are in the ortho
dox place the upper right hand corner
they can work away like bees, and get
through quickly, because the motion
from the ink-ptd to the envelope is a
continuous one ; but just as soon as they
have to hunt around over the letter to
find where the stamp is wafered, why,
they can't get along near so fast. Please
hint through your paper that every let
ter that comes here not stamped with a
single stamp on the right hand upper
corner we use to make paper chickens
out of."
Heard a Lecture.
" How did you like the lecture?"
" Oh, it was beautiful 1"
"What did he say?"
"Oh, he said so many beautiful
things!"
"Tell us some."
"Oh, he said he said but I can't
tell it to you as he said them."
"Tell them as you can understand
them."
"Well, he said he said oh, I
can't!"
"Tell us one thing he said."
" Well, he said that the icsthetics of
existence enabled us to to oh, I
can't !"
" Tell us what you think he meant."
" Oh, go along ! Why didn't you go
and hear him yourself V" Fx.
There aie a dozen opium smoking
dens in Virginia City, Nev., and young
girls patronize them.
(Miis-;itin- (Iowa) Daily Journal.)
Messrs. J. 11. Bennett & Co., Muske
gon, Mich., thus speak : St. Jacob's Oil
is the best liniment around here. We
sell more of it than of any other pro
prietary medicine we have in our store.
Our customers are continnally praising
its effective qualities ; and we think
that it is the best remedy for rheuma
tism, neuralgia, etc., we have ever had
in stock.
You can't impoverish a musician. For
tune is always his. Cincinnati Musical
People. Even if it wasn't he has no
difficulty in issuing notes.
(Troy (X. Y.) Press.)
Editorial Approvnl.
Mr. W. J. Melvin, editor Warren,
"Has., Herald, was cured of severe Neu
ralgia bv the use of St. Jacob's Oil.
A cook can tell an egg when it is bad,
if it should happen that any person
would like to have conversation with
an egg of that kind.
Kalamazoo, Mich., Feb. 2, 1880.
I know Hop Bittern will bear recommenda
tion houoHtly. All who use them confer upon
them the highest encomiums, and give them
credit lor making cures all the proprietors
claim for them, i have kept them since they
were first offered to tho public. They took
high rank from the first, and maintained it,
and arc more called for than all others com
bined. So long as they keep up their high
reputation for purity and usefulness, I shall
continue to recommend them something I
have never before done with any other patent
medicine. J. J. Babcock, M. D.
The Woonsocket Eejwrtcr inquires:
" Who says it is unhealthy to sleep in
feathers? Look at the spring chicken,
and see how tough he is."
Traveling Men
find it hard to keep in good health, owing to
the constant change of water, diet and tho jar
ring of the cars. All these things injure the
kidneys, while Warner's Safe Kidney and
Liver Cure is certain to counteract them.
It is appropriate to refer to the
spanker boom when a whole primary
school is whipped for some general mis
demeanor. Veoetine is composed of the best vogetabli
ingredients tho dispensary of nature furnishes.
The juices are extracted in a way which pre
se rvos their undiminished medical properties,
making it one of the greatest cleansers of the
blood that can be put together.
It takes a cook to do things up
brown. Syracuse Standard. True, but
the organ-grinder does things to a turn.
THEGREATrtlf
BDNBEtm
FOR
Heuralaia, Sciatica. Lumbaao.
PEilili
EE
EUMSI.
7
Backache, Soreness of th Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell
ings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil
a a safe, sure, simple and rheap External
Remedy A trial entails but the companttirelr
trifling outlay of 50 Ceats, and erery one suffering
with pain can bare cheap and positive proof of it
claims.
Directions in Eleven Languages.
BOLD BY ALL DBUGGISTS AND DEALERS
15 IfEDICIHE.
A. VOGELER & CO.,
JBaUimort, MO., U. 9. jU
The Ameer of Afghanistan has been
defeated again. He begins to realize
the force of the poet's words: "The
best laid plans of mice Aid men Afghan
agley." m
Hoopskirts are to be revived, and
there is a great deal of bustle in the
feminine world.
Unhealthy or inactive kidneys cause gravel,
Bright's disease, rheumatism, and a horde of
other serious and fatal diseases, which can bo
prevented with Hop Bitters, if taken in time.
It is safefor women, it is said, to use
toy pistols, for they are never known
to have lockjaw.
Fob Dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of
spirits and general debility in their various
forms, also as a preventive against fever and
ague and other intermittant fevers, the Febbo
Phosphobated Elixir of Causa ya Babk, made
by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, and sold
by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for pa
tients recovering from fever or other sickness
it has no equal.
The market is flooded with worthless and
vile compounds for the rejuvenation of the
hair, but Carboline, the great petroleum hair
renewer and dressing, as now improved and
perfected, still takes the front rank as the
best preparation.
" Rough on Hum."
Ask Druggists for it. It clears out rats, mice,
roaches, bed-bugs, flics, vermin, insects. 15c.
II KN K, Y ' CAR BO LffV H A 1 V
Is the BUST SALVE for Cuts, Cruises, Seres, Ulcers,
Salt Rlumm, Totter, Chaiied Hand, Chilblains,
Corns, au-1 all kinds of Skiu Iruitions, Freckles an
jrimmes. ubiumjh'o uaiuuliu SALVE, as all
Others are cqiMt. ffiK Prion 25 cents.
DIt. KREEVS OXYGEN ATED BITTERsj
the bost remedy for Dyspepsia, Billiousness. M
lam. Indigestion and DieaseH of the Blood, Kid
neys. Liver, Skin. -ty
DURIIOS CATAUUU tiXUlW cures all affection
of the mucous m i r-une, of the head and throat.
DR. MOTTS LIV12U PILLS aro the best Cathartlt
Begulators.
WARRANTED YOU. 34 VKAEX
AND, NEVER FAIL1SD
To CUKE Croup, Huasms, Diarrhoea, Dysentery jMid
Hea Sickness, taken internally,' and GUARANTEED
perfectly harmless ; also externally. Cuts, Bruises,
Chronic Rheumatism, Old Sores, Pains in the limbs,
hack and chest. Such a remedy is Da. TOBIAS
VKNETIAN LINIMENT.
No one oncn trying it will ever be without It,
over WW physicians use it.
When the river rises one foot what
becomes of the other ? It remains tide,
of course.
For Chills, Shakes, Fevei
and Ague.
T.uiBKiio, N. C, 1873.
Int. H. R. Stevens:
Hear Sir 1 feel vi-r. j;r.V'!'nl for what your valua
M" ni'-iliciin', Vkoktink. lu done in my family. 1
wish to .-xprf-is my iii.mk b-.- iutoi'iiiiu: you of tin'
wonderful curt of my son: also to 1ft you know that
VKtiKTiXK is the best medicine 1 eversaw lor Cliiil.
sfiUf. Fi-rer mi. I .-iff. Mv son was sick with
mi asl-sin InT.J, which jell him with Hip-joint disease.
My sou suffered a n-at deal of pain all of the time:
the pain was soreat he did lioiliin;.' but or. The
doctors did not help him a particle, he cmud not lilt
his foot lrom this floor: he could iiot move without
crutches. I read your a Ivcrtiseiucnt in the Iouis
ille fourirr-JoHrii'il ih.it Vkuktixe was a jreat
lilood Purifier and Blood I-'ood. I tried one I'oltle,
which waagreai benclit. He kept on with themedi
cine, fjraduall. Kaiuiii;,'. He ha taken eighteen bot
tles, and he is completely restored to health, walk
without crutches or can", lit: is twentv years of ajre.
I have a vouim r son. tiiteeu ears of ajjc, who is sub.
joet to t'iiillx. Whenever h" feels one coming on he
comes in, takes a dos- of Vkuktisk .and that is the
last of the t hill. Vkoktixk h aves no had effect tij.on
the system, like most of the lu-'dicincs recommended
lor Chills, l cheerfully rec-'min -n I Vkokiink foi
such complaints. I tipnk it is the j;rcato:;t mediciuj
i u the world. ItcspectitilK.
MliS. J. W. LLOYD.
Vegetixe. When the blood becomes lifeless and
s'acuaut.cith-T :r-iu ch u-jjeof weather oroi climate,
win! of exercise, irregular diet, or friu anv oihe?
cause, the Vkoktink will rcii' the blood, carry oil
the putrid humors cleanse t he tomaeh. regulate tin.'
howels, and inn art a touj of vier to the whole body
Druggists Testimony.
.Mr. H. R. Stevens:
Dear Sir We have been sellin:T your remedy, th
'EiKTiXK. for alntiit three years, and take pleasuri
in reeomiuciidiiijr it to our customers, and in no in
stance where a blood purifier would reach the case,
has it ever failed to effect a cure to our knowledge.
It certainiv is the tie lux itlti-a of renovators,
lies peel f nil v,
E. M. SHEPHERD. Drnspists,
Mount Vernon, 111.
Vegetine
IS SOLD BY;ALL DRUGGISTS
CELEBRATED U
Malnrln 1st an I'nwcrn Vnporonn
Poison, spreading disease and death in nianv locali
ties, for which quinine is no Pennine antidote, but
for the effects ot which Hostetter's Stomach Bitters
is not onlv a thorough remelv, but a reliable pre
veutive. To this fact there is an overwhelming ar
ray of testimouv. extending overaieriod of thirty
years. All disorders of the liver, stomach and bow
els are also conquered by the Bitters.
1 or sale by all DruKKista and Dealers
cronnrallv.
Boofcfaiier Emmie,
Compact. Substantial. U
and Easily Managed.
UUARANTKED TO WORK WBU
ANT) OIVK FTTJ. POWIB
CLA1MKD.
See onr low prices for
gi ne and 1 toiler romplet
Home Power, 9240
I '"t u5
itSYL
m a .1 i w.,w,. . J" "r ". new uajnpniw
u..j iz
wng. UMratara. 1 IV
liMuo rot. hau.loinlj
E!1? Jf.OO UW. nth st, H.T
TDM TU IHT. Tn rr1(tinl M
V 1 ?" .MARriNIZO,OlM
SpUMh g.r l Wiu4 will for : ceata vith u
hcifht. eolnr of ejTM. inrt Inek nf hair. nenl a cotfttcT
ricTORi at ymt fn'ora hiuhmil or wife. pa.fholocKiIlT
!i '2 W'h "" time P1" "f wwwtinr, and
Aitim. I" I. Martinet. r Mont'j HI. Bonon. Man.
uegetine
r.Ot t 4et
Dr. JEETT AUK'S HEADACHE TILTS euro most rocdcrfxiUy In a very
short time both SICK and NERVOUS 112 AD AC HE ; and tvhiio acting on
the nervous system, cleanse the 6tcmach of excess of bile, producing a
regular healthy action of tho bowels.
OO
A full size bo of these valuable THIS, with full directions for a com
plete cure, mailed to any aJdress on receipt of nine tlirce-cent postage
tamps. For sale by all druggists at S5c. Solo Proprietors,
BROWN CHEMICAL COMT ANY, Baltimore, Md.
PERRY DAVIS
SAFE AND SURE
REMEDY FOR
Rheumatism,
Neuralgia,
Cramps,
Cholera,
Diarrhoea,
Dysentery.
1
AND
Scalds,
AND
Headache
FOlt 8 A LIS BY ALL DHKJt;iMX.
Card Collectors,
1st. Bay seven bars DOBBIN8"
&L12CTB1C SOAPofyourGrocei.
ad. Ask him to give you a bill
if it.
3d. Mail 11s his bill and your fall
address.
4th. We wih mail' YOU FItEH
seven beautiful iirds, in six col
ars and gold, rM'?',i,,Slk&
peare's Seven A gen of Man."
I. L. CRAGIN & CO.
116 South Fourth Street,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
you are
In tho Inquiry WIi ich is tho
best Liniment for Man and
Beast 2 this tho answer, at
tested by two generations : the
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI
MENT. Iho reason is sim
ple. It penetrates every sore,
wound, or lameness, to tho
very hone, and drives oat all
inflammatory and morbid mat
ter. It 4 goes to the root " of
the trouble, and never tails to
core in double quick time
3
Cyclopedia War.
Tli e CTP;ii l.ihrnrv of I'liivtirmii K nnivlfMlsf
now comi'loteil, litrxe typ eilitioj, warty ".'"
tomes in e.ve.rv il'ii:irln:rnt. nf lir -nan kliowlt '!)-'.
about 4)icr cent, lajw-r than Chambers' Kutv.rlniiv
tlia, 10 ier cont. laifM'r thau A'ltO!i'n. 20 it -'iit.
lamer than Johnnon's. at a iwtr' lravtioii oi their
cost. Filteen large Octavo Volumes tit'arly W'l
lat?es, conii'lete in cloth biiirtinp, 1 5; in halt K'is
sia, gMO ; in full library nheep, inarblcd clws, M.
Social terms to clubs.
$10,000 REWARD rKsj.;iy
md August. Sentl quick for Kiwinun inuri aiirt
full iiarticnlarx to AMEMCAN HOOK KXtrHAVfK.
John B. Aijen, Manager. i J!roalw-. rK.
TRIBLE REVISION
U CONTRASTED EDITIONS.
PnntaiiiiTicr tli Old and Xi-sik' Version". ill p:irHi
colli ill 11 h. The best andrlicHii-st illustrated ei!it:m
of the ltevised Testament. Millions of vei'l'1'' ale
waitinpr for it. Do not e deceived by the inis-ri!j'-lous
publishers ot iiiferioreditions. Seetliat tliecef
voubuy contains 1 OO line cii.trravinp on steel sum
vood. Tlim is the onlv large tve com i n" "
lion, and A pouts aro cominp money selimi- n
AIJENTS VANTKI. Send for circulars aii'l
emis. Address National Fcb. ;.. Phila'UJpMutjj
AMERICAN AND FOREIGN
PATENTS
GEORGE E- LEMON, Atfy at Law,
WAXIIIMiTOX, l.
T?fonnc. .riv,.,i t ucttial clients in nearly ever
County iu the IT. S. CorrosH.iidoiice ,u,.t : .s
Hketch or model for opinion as to I liJ-r
charee tor services unless su.-c-sslul. Kst blish l
'325 Every Day
Can bo easily maae
Well Augers & Drills
One man and one horse rcquie&?
are the only makers of the limn
Boring and Koek-DriUing Machine.
Uuit of onr customers make from HO to $40
Book and Circulars FREE. Address,
LOQmiS ft nimAn, iirrin, umw.
HI I MR MClULeiurfl -leifcsraf.ii I Earn i "J;
lUUrcU WlNa month. Graduates puarauter'
paving oftiow. Adrs.VALKvriNB w..Jaiiw-ille.
4Tt RlAK1fl' Revolvers, SlioVOuns, PistK
jlllMX Ammunition, Heines. Hshiuir Ta
UUIVV Catalogue Iree.- Address .1 n micj. 1
Jphnniuii. Great Western Gun W'kK.Pittsbiuvh.t
It N IT 31
A la.KN'S Bratn Food Cures Nervoiis letiliij
jL &. anil weakness ot tienerative tirvans. f 1 "'5,
ri8tK.aond.lorlCirTrrto Allen's Phar..:tl 3 lwt avOJL
A ENT WANTED for the Bent and 1
fX Selling Pictorial Books and Bibles. Vri'.r'"
duced 33 per ct. National Pub. Co.. Philadelphia, ij
M
C C9
Marl
IH. H'fl IN Burns
1 II is UWt I Moolhach.3
PBtli