Bloomington Progress, Volume 15, Number 11, Bloomington, Monroe County, 29 June 1881 — Page 4

VII E LAV OF THE POKE. tithe' De lance; reigned a quean Of highest (octal station ; title Mil the fashions, and, I wean, She tt h.T jealous sister green With envious pecta.-batioa. Ethel Op Lace bail a beaa, lierteit Fitsherbert Uevereaux; Ho! ho! A beaa. TSxr'j in Lent (his be le bespoke A di-axlng liatler lnnct. And. as the master-stroke, Slio .lelguares the specie poke, With all the fixing on It It -a nit ; with !ee so earefuUy Site lattenfd to tin glaee to we; "He: he!5' Quoth she. The pi she took that pokJtoprc ArJ ahaneit to her fane

No inexperii need man coutd I

bo at upt"i it. more or !eM,

Into canning; Mi- De Lnncey, Ami iimmtml it for man; a Jay, And Slept In it, her narrate say; "Hey! hey!" They Bay. One morn she strolled, as iron aha night, V tlMUt the teaM compunction, To 1 ara-vzw the ex on sight, And all "oar set, you know," to nolle From Smith street to the Junction; The ladle Mgh, the hones thy, Xhe canxins in the Rotter gay; 'Hi! hi!" They cry. Under (he old ancestral oar That tiYeMmr, calm and tfeeflent. Sat Ethel, on her bead ti poke. A strong, nuspioiou saw 1 of emoke Proe:im FUaberbert piesa-t. Aroand herirawt hie arm he threw That awful poke shuts ont the View; 'Heal 11011!" She too. Farewell their Httle dream of -men, The lken cord ia parted ; The c-nel poke forbtde the kiss, "Lb, Ethel, has It cone to thiT I perr-e broken heare-d!" And Ethel shrieks, '-1 die, papa; tide u interred vita, xreat ecsatr ' " In! hap They are, Kontu Cirj Ifmes-

My Little Sweetheart, "Uncle Harry, may I be your sweetheart ? " asked Maria a Stating; lifting iiur big brown eyes to mine, with all the innocent frankness of her 8 years of rrtaUHnhood. . Indeed you may," 1 cried, stooping to lift Iter to my knee. " No," sbe said, drawing back; "if I am your sweetheart I mustn't sit on your lap, bat beside yon. Yon may kiss me, tlioogb, all the same, and call me Miiy, bnt I will call you Harry. Mamma sari you are not our really, truly uncle, bnt we cull yon so because we love yoo." . "That is so," I answered; "bnt if yon are not to lore me when you are my sweetheart, I shall back ont. " Oh, but I will ! You see Agnes has Tom Irving to love her, and Janey has Tracy HilL" I winced here, as I had tnea very hard to fill Tracy Hill's place. "It makes me dreadful lonesome," continued Hay, " but then I thought "f you, and perhaps yon would bring aw flowers and tell me 1 added to their beauty by wearing them, and sugar plums, and say that my lips were sweeter than sagur'akuonds, and take me to walk and to ride, and always, always be lovelvtonml" "Bnt, I asked gravely, "what are yon to give me?" " Oh, I will work yon a pair of ..Uppers when I am big enough, and I'll kiss some of the sugar plums and let yon eat them, and I'll wear the flowers, and if there is any song you like very much, I will practice it and leant it. if the accompaniment is not too hard." "All right. It's a bargain. You are my little sweetheart and I your devoted adorer from tins day," I cried. " Bat it seems tome, May, that for a lady of your age yon are pretty well posted on the sweetheart question." "Well, yoa see, uncle no; you're not my uncle any more.' " Dear Harry," I suggested. "Dear Harry, yoa see there is the sitting-room and there is the parlor, and if Tom Irving conies while Agnes is in the parlor she says : ' Knn up stairs, May; that's a good g!rl ; ' and when I get tc the (sitting-room I see Tracy Hill kissing Janey, and he mutters : 'There's thatpeft of a child again ; ' and I run into the kitchen, and Molly has John McCoy there, and I can't help seeing them all," she said, piteously. "Exactly. And I think you are a very sensible ehfld to start your own flirtations. Will yon allow ma to drive you to the Point this afternoon, Miss Marian?' I idded, with my very best society bow. ' "Thank you, dear Harry.'' she said, with demure gravity. "I'll go with pleasure." 80 we commenced our flirtation, and never had any man a more piquant, lovely little sweetheart than L Harry Montgomery, had for the three years 1 remained at Maxwell Station, the village in which the Sterlings were leading people. Mr. Sterling aid my father had been friends for many years, and, when I finished my law studies, Mr. Sterling let me know there was a good opening for me at Maxwell's Station, and a warm welcome at his house, where Mrs. Sterling and the three gals made me at once "like one of the family." Mr calf-love in it, entiretv and devo

tion was given to Jauey, and I was dol

orously weeding oxer the tact wnen Marian generously came to the rescue.

" What a lovely time we do have, dear Harry," she said to me, when we were picnicking in the woods; "ell the girls think I have the nicest beau in the

world. And nobody guesses who it is

wn Helps me with ray .French and tierma 1 and shows me i ll about my Latin.

and I no up over their heads because too

mak all my lessons so easy. It's not cheating if I really study ail the same

ana aoau my sums laid exercises myself, is it?"

"No," I said, tmthlully, for the child's own eager thirst for knowledge

and bard work gov me only the pleasure of simplifying; some of her lessons

and -leaning some of the "hard words." But when I had been nearly foar years

at Jtnxweit's station my lamer obtained for me a diplomatic appointment in Germany, and there was a hcart-brtaking

Parang.

"It is not tne drives and rides, and rowing and flowers ami candies I'm crying for," sobbed my little sweetheart, "Hit neb Acnes pretends it is. ' It is

because I ant going to lose you. Ton

(ion 1 neiieve I love you just lor those

toiBga, do yon, dear .Harry T

" No, my little love," I said ; "I be- . neve you love me with alt yanr pure

voting news 1 "Idol Idol Ton will come back."

Yes, but I shall find you a gxown-un lady with dozens of lovers." "No. Ill have no other lover. If

you marry I shall lost die ! And here is,

my ivorytype and a curl of my hair, and I want yours."

I readily promised the exchange, and went to Germuty, the ivory tj pa and curl set in a locket the face promisiug rare beauty of tho golden hair, browneyed type. Wc xrrc8pondel, of coarse. At first the cfrresprjndence flourished, then it grew languid ant' Anally died. I was engrotsed with business and society; May was working through school, through society amd as a belle. Agnes and Janey, middle-aged matrons, left Marian the solo home daughter, and society was exacting. I heard of her ss a briUiaut beauty, a musician of great talent, and a bright, sparkling conversationalist. I tritd to fit this to my little sweetheart and failed. I had lust my childish adorer. Bnt I was not frad of society nor davoted to the duti. 3 of a cavalier. Perhaps Janey had left too deep a wound to lieal, though 1 did not think when, ten years after our first meeting, I found her 'with a party it tourists "doing Euros," lotul-v iced, red-faced woman of fnr-hion, who hud left three little children at home while she difcj-'laye l coa' ly dr. asea and hum lo French and German

abroad. Tracy evidently preferred tho societv of tho babies, as he was not one

of the traveling party.

"Marian!" she said, when I inquired

for all tho home circle. " Why, Marian is in London. Didn't you know ultout Marian? Ahl Mrs. Agnew good evening."

"Tell me," I entreated. "What

about Marian ? Is she married ? "

" Bless me. no 1 Hasn't even a beau,

as far as I know. May is so prim cut out for an old maid. And she'll be worse than aver now. Excuse me. Mrs. Maitland is moving to the dressingroom, and I go in her carriage, flood night. Do come and see us." And her escort came up, and she sailed away. It was not until ten minutes later 'l remembered that I had not asked for her address or Marian's.

I tried to repair this omission the

next morning by visiting all tho hotels and examining " their resistors. Tho

only result was the assurance that tho

wnoia party had litt the city that morning.

Bnt tho fates favored me. I dropped into a nice leaner, ouito sufficient for

the wants of a family of modest wants,

and 1 determined to go to America, home 1 It was n year since I had mot Mrs. Hill in Germany. Was Marian still in Europe? My littlrs sweetheart! Strange how she had linfcered always in

my memory as the ideal woman of my

bachelor fancy I I determined to go to England, and accept long-standing invitation to visit my friend, Lord Loringer, at his place, lioringer Hall. I met with a most cordial welcome; and, arriving just before dinner-honr, Lord Loringer hurried his own preparations and came into the room assigned to me. What good wind," ho exclaimed, "blew you into England ? " I told him of my legacy, my resignation of my position, and my return homo via England. "Bnt yon arc absolutely your own master for the present?" he asked, "Yes. Nobody expects me at homo, as I was returning on that most idiotic principle a surprise." "Join us, then. Wo all start nt-.xt week for a jaunt through France, Spain, Italy, perhaps up the Nile. We are not bound by any route, by any promises. We start, a party of fourteen, everylKidy at liberty to leave if he prefers another route. We are-to be joined by a party of Americans in Paris, Mr. and Mrs. Eiglewood, Dr. Smith and a Miss Marian Temple, who will probably prove the bore of the parly." "Why?" "Oh, she is an old maid, a blue stocking and a poet I forgave her her no vel, Irraine,' but deliver me from a woman who writes verses and calls them ' Water Lilies.'" " Now I should enjoy all the pleasures of novelty in meeting her," I exclaimed, "I have not one old maid on my visiting list, and I never had an hour's converse with a novelist ft it novelistess? or a poetess. You don't happen to have her books about yon', do yon?" "You will find them on the library table, unless some ono is reading them. There ore several copies about, as most of our guetta brought them." I found them, as promised, on the library table, and after I got to my own room I opened the poems. The more I read, the more I was convinced that no old maid penned them. They were full of the fire, the genius, even tho faults of youth, and some of them I seemed to have written myself. The leading one, "Water Lilies," brought back to me the iake where May and I had floated upon the transparent water, gathering the rrcat. white, snowy treasures in profusion. I saw her sweet face dip into a great heap upon the floor of the boat and come up langltiug, far sweeter than the most glorious blossom there. Then I saw her in the soft, white evening dress, with the white lilies trailing from her soft curls upon her pretty, dimpled, elirdish shoulders, dancing gleefully, the only little girl in the room, and with an admirer wearing a mustache her devoted admirer. And here it was all in musical verse, with a refrain of regret for the child-love gone forever. It was far into the night when I slept, with the volume of "Water Lilies" tucked under my pillow, and at the first daylight I was picking ont once more litijle scraps of memory a drive we took to Marian's Falls, which Marian gravely

assured me were named "years and years " before she was born ; a walk we took, when 1 tacked up her curls in womanish fashion and twisted in sweet brier, being piteously reproached a few hours later with making her " pull every hair out with those horrid thorns;" a ride we took to Horsashoe Pond, where we pledged mutual faith and love in cups of lilies, and vowed eternal constancy. Page after page brought my sweetheart to me, til! I fished my locket out of my dispatch box and put it round my neck, ready for any emergency ready to swear with as much truth as most lovers' vows that it had never left my heart since her white hands first placed my treasure round my neck. To Paris! We were en route at last. I knew my darling's verses by heart I had read her novel twice, dreadfully disgusted both times by the fact that the heroine, who had brown eyes and golden hair, married a hero who bore not the slightest resemblance to sic. The American party had engaged rooms for us at the hotel they patronized, and one general drawing-room was to serve the entire party. Hero, after making my dress an object of most especial study, I went on tho wings of love. A lady stood by the window looking out, and I went forward timidly. She must be ono of our party or she would not be there Her dress a Parisian marvel of taste and simplicity was that of a jeune fille; her figure was tall, graceful and slender, and her golden hair was dressed with till modern abominations. Hut she never stirred or turned until . I sood beside her, when she turned her full face to me. My darling's face, with all the little btiby curls on the forehead, all the sweet innocence in the big brown eyes. It utterly unmanned me. For a moment I could not speak ; then I held out trembling hands, almost whispering : " My little sweetheart J" Hereyes grew soft, lustrous, dewy. "Yon" have not forgotten? " she said. "I have never forgotten. No other

has taken fdr one hour your place in my

bears, xsut you, beautiful and famous, with your talent "

"Hash!" she said, softly. "Who gave me any of the gift you out talent?

lou, wno taught me tuat liooKs were not merely dreadful repetitions invented

to torment school-girls, but preparations for future power of intellect ; that lessons were not strings of words to bo

committed to memory, but stores of

Knowledge to be garnered and cherished. You roused my ambition, my hope, what power I have of expressing what my brain suggests." May," I said, gaining possession UMl'll rtt limirla all, t,l(-l wttnnen.1

WM "u ...1.. ..j uu.. .,(1.1. 4 CJICKJW,. "you have traveled, seen tho world, had your conquests ; can I, daro I, hope- I

may suu cau you She nestled into my bosom, her big eyes raised frankly fe meet mine, and said; "Your little sweetheart, now and ever 1" " How I meant to torment you!" she told me, later, when, her i;oft. loving emotion over, her sauciaess regained sway. "I iut ended to win you back by all the arts of coquetry, of jealousy for I havo a lover or tvo, sir but my heart betrayed me when I saw your love in your eyes and knew that you had been faithful all these long y-saiK Dear father and mother will be dblighted, but, peirbt.pe, I ought to tell you Janey it a widow."

Then yon guessed that secret, too ?" " You great goose, you wore the family liiughiiig-Btock until I took pity on yon." "I'll believe as much as I please of that," I retorted. " You can never deny that you made the first advances." THE FAMILY DOCTOR.

Fob Fk-oh. Take equal parts of gum camphor, gum opium, castilo soap and brown sugar : wet to a paste with spirits of turpentine. Prepare it, and apply a thick plaf.ter of it. FonSpRAtN. Bathe with arnica diluted with water, and bandage with soft flannel moistened with tho same. A sprained wrist thus treated will grow well and strong in a few days. A Suns Cwi. poit CinxBLAiNS. Throe applications of vaseline will cure the worstcaae of chilblains. For ordinary cases one or two applications will be sullicient. Although vaseliue is made from petroleum, it is far more rapid in its work of healing than kerosene. Tatewobm. Salicylic acid, given at intervals of an hour for four hours, and followed by castor oil in full dose, succeeded in expelling tapis which had resisted all other remedies. One case reported had resisted all other medication for nine years. LouUvillc Medical Herald. Fob Oascer. Gather wood-sorrel hen in blossom (that bearing a blue flower is better than the yellow-flowered), pound and press ont the juice, put it iu a plate and cover tho whole plate with glass ; set it in the sun until a paste is formed, then cork it tightly in a vial. When applied, it should be spread on cloth or wash-leather, and placed over the cancer only in the daytime, so that the patient may sleep. If properly gathered, prepared and applied, it will draw out tho cancer in about four days. Meantime tho patient should drink much yellow-dock tea. The newspaper correspondent who furnishes the reci)e adds that it is vouched for by Mr. S.imuel Baker, of New Hampshire, and Mrs. Warren James, of Deerfseld Center, N. Y. Atpi.es. A more extensive use of apples as food at our meals, remarks Dr. J. H. Hanaford, will do much to diminish dyspepsia and biliousness. They are "loosening,' and therefore tend to remove constipation a prominent cause of digestive derangements. The acid of this fruit one of tho very best known in aid of digestion acts favorably on the liver, causing it to secrete the bile, which is nature's cathartic, thus preventing this constipation. While eating thorn between meals must derange the stomach like the use of all food at that time they ore reaHy a very valuable food, demanded especially in warm weather. They may be too cooling in the coldest weather, while the more-acid berries are better in the spring aud summer. QoASTrxr of Food. If children are very hearty eaters their food should be of the simplest kind, and thus prevent eating Snore than tho system really needs. The first reason for consuming food should be necessity, and the second may be the gratification of the appetite. Usually children have appetites so strong that they need no stimulants, no condiments, as spices, pepper or mustard. These articles should be reservod for the failing appetites of debility and age. They are useful only by way of increas ing the appetite and promoting the dull digestion of what is eaten. They may stimulate the nervous system, and should be avoided in all inflammatory tendencies of the system. The excessive use of sirups, sugar and molasses may induce fermentation in tho stomach and long canal. In moderate quantities they are useful, and sometimes are strongly needed. Articles preserved in sirup should bo sparingly taken, as they are uscallj not easy of digestion that health and growth demand that the amount of food should vary with the amount of cxeicise; the kinds of food should be such as may supply the needs of the system; the amount of food should be no more than can be easily digested.

The Oldest City in the World. Damascus is the oldest city in the

world. Tyre and Sidon have crumbled on the shore ; Baalbec is a ruin ; Palmyra is buried in a desert ; Nineveh and Babylon have disappeared from the Tigris and the Euphrates. Damascus remains what it was before the days of Abraham a center of trade and travel an isle of verdure in the desert ; " a presidential capital" with martial and sacred associations extending through

thirty centuries. It was near iiamascus that Saul of Tarsus saw the light above the brightness of the sun ; the street, which is called Strait, in which it was

said " he prayed," still runs through the

city. The caravan comes and goes as 11 did 1,000 years ago ; there is still the sheik, the ts, and the water-wheel ; the inerchai - of the Euphrates and the Meditern ai-cn still occupy the streets "with the multitude of their wares." Tho citywhiehMohommcdsurveyiKl from a neighboring height, and was afraid to enter, " because it was given to man to have but one paradise, and for lus part ho was resolved not to have it in this world," is to-doy what Julian called the "Eye of the East," as it was, in the time of Isaiah, " tho head of Syria." From Damascus camo the damson, our blue plums, and the delicious apricot of Portugal, called damasco; damask, our beautiful fabric of cotton and silk, with vines and floweis raised upon a smooth, bright ground ; the damask rose introduced into England in the time of Henry VIII.; the Damascus blade, so famous the world over for its keen edge and wonderful elasticity, the secret of whose manufacture was lost when Tamerlane carried the artist into Persia, and that beautiful art of inlaying wood and steel with gold and sUver, a kind of mosaic, engraving and sculpture united called damoskeeni ng with which box es, bureaus and swords are ornamented, (t is still a city of flowers and bright n aters ; the streams of Lebanon tmd the " silk of gold " still murmur and sparkle iu the wilderness of tho Syrian gardens. Exchanrje.

PARAGRAPHIC FOOTS.

Swimming. Every boy and girl should be taught to swim, and lie trained to it. Most boys learn of themsolves, while the revet so is true of most girls. This latter fact is a grave mistake. The mistake is more serious than formerly, because so large a portion of our population spend weeks or months every year at our watering places, and because travel on river, lose and ocean, and sailing in boats aud yachts for pleasure, havo increased to such nu extent. For these reasons as v.eU as others, a knowledge of the art has become a necessity. The lives that were recently lost in consequence of the collisions and burning of steamboats might most of them Iinve been saved, had all the passengers known how to swim. Tho mere consciousness of ability to swim, and the feeling of familiarity with

deep water that it creates, would either ! prevent or greatly diminish the panics

that are so disastrous in cases ot accidents 011 the sea. Beside this, the inability to swim of persons who aro in the water when a disaster has occurred greatly imperils tho lives of those who C4in swim and iu'0 abundantly able to take care of themselves, for tho swimmers are often overpowered by tho wild clinging to them of tho lucklesB persons who are drowning near by. The time to learn to swim is in childhood pud youth, and every parent should see 1 j it that all his children become experts in the art. It is on easy art to learn. There are people who live in boats whose babies even swim like kittens.

It is not often that u pig will let a pen holder! Soars of the best dressed men carry the worst looking pockotbooks. Schoolmistress "What is tho dative of donum? What? Next? Next?" Dunce " Do' no," Schoolmistress " Correct Go to th' head!" NiTRo-ar.YOEnniE is recommended by a medical journal for certain affections of the chest Particularly those in which the chest resists tho drill or the jimmy. The New York Hne says drinking beer does not refresh the memory, whereupon the Keokuk Vanitution man lisps: "That delicate matter is ono of tho unpleasant duties of the bar tender." The three eras of a woman's life : When a child, scream; when a maiden, ice cream; when a wife, scrimmage.'). Philadelphia Chronicle. When it widow, more scream; when she dies, scream ation. Esta:imshi a newspaper is liko pouring water into a leaky cask if you have grit enough and water to keep t ho vessel full, possibly the staves may "swell up and become water-tight Jiloomingington Cye. The Baltimore Nrws put tho cost of Solomon's Templeat almost $78,000,000,000. Don't believe it. Had old Sol. had any anch amount of cash ho would hnvo hod an ulster, a muting horse, a lottery tioket and a poiuter dog. lklroil Free Pres. Neat phrase by Alexandre Duuas to whom a lady said : I shall die before you I know I shall." "I hope not," replied the author; " I hope I shall dopart before you. It is tho only case in which it is permitted to a gentleman to precede a lady." A tkakscenpestai, preacher took for his text: "Feed my lambs," As ho came out of the ohureh a plain farmer said to him: "That was a very great text, but you placed the hay so high in tho rack the lambs couldn't reach it, nor tho old sheep either." "How to train tomatoes " is the suljectof an agricultural disquisition. It is cosy enough. All yon havo to do if a tomato misbehaves itself in company is to "mash the stuflin' out of it," It may look a little seedy for a while after, 'but this course of training will bring it to its pulp in a hurry, "Let mo see your tongue," said Dr. Calomel to Mrs. Jones. " For heaven's sake, doctor, what are you thinking of ?" exclaimed Joues. "Don't do it, love?" he added appealingly to his helpmate; "it would be no curiosity to us, you know." And then she gave him a piece of it The editor of the Washington Republic chats thus with his subscribers: "If any of my readers know a flavor which surpasses the fragrance of a turkey filled with small oysters boiled iu tho essence of trullles, he or she will please invite me to breakfast or dinner, and prove it" Henry Vim.ard, tho railroad manager, was born in Speyer, the capital of Rhenish Bavaria, in 1835. He came to this country when twenty-one years old, was among tho first: of tho Pike's Peak emigrants, and aft.crwaud acted as a newspaper correspondent At the close of the war ho pawn-d a year in Germany, came back and married a daughter of William Lloyd Garrison aud then went to Germany again for two years. There he formed business- connections out of which his conirol of transportation interests has sprung. Tub old lady kept a private liottle from which sh refreshed herself from time to time, as she felt the need, though

none of tho family knew it. One even

ing her daughter, iu rummaging through tho pantry for doughnuts for her beau, spied the bottle and had the curiosity to draw the cork and apply her nose to the aperture, at which moment the old lady hove in sight and angrily demanded:

"Well, are you any wiser tutvn you were! What do yon suppose it is?" "I don't know whit it is, mamma," answered the shrinking maiden, "but it smells jusl like Charlie's moustache." From the Springflcld (Maw.) Republican. Eixiak T. Pge. Esq, diufgist, writes us from Ch!ctice Falls, thai Air. Albert (jtiienther, under Wi Id's Hotel, has used Hint remarkable remedy. Si. Jacobs Oil, tor si severe case of rheumatism and il cured him as if by magic, lie nlse used il with great success among his horses, iu cases ul sprains, sores, le, and it cured every lime. Yacant far Fiitcen fe&rs. There are in Broadway three five-story marble-front buildings which have stood idle for fifteen years. This property should be cood for 850,000 a year at the

very least It has not produced adollar during the long period named. Tho taxes on it amount probably to $10,000 a year. Tho interest on the money invested in it must- be at least as much more. H it were rented like other property, it would have yielded at least $750,000 in the time named. Instead of that it has cost the owners in taxes and interest not loss than $600,000. Why is it not rented? Nobody knows. There it stands, ye&r after year, a monument of vacancy and heavy loss. "To let" bills are on it all the time, but it des not let I am told that it belongs to a wealthy family in France, who sent money' here many years ago for investment They have never seen it, and its control is erithely in the hands of an agent He watches it closely, and is always polite to persons making inquiry about it; but from some inexplicable reason he never strikes a bargain with any one. A gentleman told me recently that during a visit to Franco a few years ago ho tried to see the head of the family that owns it for Iho purpose of negotiating for it. but the Frenchman, a gruff old Count, would not give him an interview. The properly is going to decay, in the heart of tho busiest part of New York. Jiete 1 'rk Cor. Hartford Time. From the l)etMoliei(Iowa) Stale Register. We kotice the following in nn exchange : Mr. G. 11. Hnverer, foremau N. Y. & N. II. 8. B. Co., suffered for eight days with terrible pain hi the back,aliuoiUodi.traction, until he heatd of and used 8L Jacobs Oil, one bottle o:.' which cured him completely.

Tho Terrible Tragedy. The thick thunder threatened torrents; thin tempest tossed the trees, throwingtlieir teomblmgtnuiklets topsyturvy. .... m Tripping toward the town, Theresa thought " To-night Theo lore treads the tiresome thoroughfare, thinking thing, that" Thud! The terrified truant turns to trace tho threatening turmoil. There, toward the toll-gate, tramped Theodore, trying to throttle tiwo thieves. " Take to the timber, Theresa !" thundered Theodore. " Tell that to timid things," thought Theresa, treading tiger-like, tip-too toward the trio. Then, tolling Theodore to throw the taller thief, Theresa, taking t'other's toga, tied through the thickness tho thief's throat Thus terminated the terrible trouble that threatened the twain. They t urned triumphantly to town, there to toll tho tale. To-morrow ties them together. Cotton Manufacturing in (he South. Probably tho one great industry r.i which thc Sonthorn man takes most interest, however, is the raising und manufacture of cotton. This is tho royrl plant that was the glory mid wealth ff the South in the past and that is, no doubt, destined to work out its liunnciiji salvation in the future. By all the signs of tho timo3, King Cotton has como to his own again. So profitable is the cotionmanuftictuTUuj business that in ceftaia

sections Northern capital goes begging,

tho home corixirations navinir ueconio

wealthy enough to carry on tho busi

ness. The culture ot cotton is resumed, but with a difference. Instead of merely raising mid selling the raw material Southern men see tho policy of manufacturing, both f r home use and export They are filling sheir mills with the best Lowell-mado machinery, and are already producing goods of excellent quality. They perceive the bad management of sending the raw fiber to New England to be manufactured and then buying it back. T'.e day is not far distant when the finest fabrics will l! manufactured in the South, and, in tho meantime, tho demand for wh it they already produce is so great that the mills have orders for nil they can furnish for months to come. Washington Pot. TfMMllea At war Kept rt Corf in In bis honso. Hnd ho lived now he would have kept Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure.

Wash for the Hair,. Several years ago I copied the following receipt, from the Country Gentleman, I think: "One largo handful of sago, steep it in a pint of boiling water, and add a half ounce of borax to it; put a dozen old

iron nails into a iiowie, ami wnen cool

enough not to break the glass, turn in tho mixture. In four days it will be readv for use. Put on two or three

times a week."

I asked a ekillful physician 11 there was anything objectionable in the receipt Ho said not, unless it was the borax, which sometimes gave one the sense of falling. I put in Jess, and finally discarded it. I put in two large handfnls of dried sago, and double the number of old rusty nails into a quart bottle; when sufliciently steeped, strain, and wliou cold put iu four tablespooufulH of alcohol (it will keep longer) and keep in a cool place. Shake well boforo using. My sister ttcd I haf e used it for tho past'fivo years. We ai elderly people. Her hair is gray, mine brown, though younger. The color of each has remained the same. 1 wet my head with it thoroughly once, in four weeks sometimes not as often. It is not a dye, but the hair loofc darker for a few days after wetting, and seems ralhcr dry, but by brushing and combing it becomes soft und lustrous, I have never in tho five vcurs put a drop of oil 011 iny hair; it has not been necessary. It strengthens tho roots of the hair. It does not como out, and less dandruff accumulates. 3t is an admirable wash, A Farmer's Daugliter in the Country Gentleman, Headacitc, bilious attacks, dizKinosw, and loss of appetite, are cured by Kidney-Wort. Cosmetics and Cutting. Paint yons faces, girls, bnt first let the undertaker have your measure. Such at least is th-s lesson so often found in the reports of our medical practitioners. We thna lotmi that poison is poiuon, whether it-reaches tho vitals through the stomach or the skin. A well-known pantomimist who was wout to set the audience in n roar, became paralyzed by the paint iiiecessantly applied to his face, and he died in an asylum in untimely dotage. Such 'as the fate of the ouco popular G. L. Fox, and now we have the case of Fanny Bianchard, whoso death was nlsj due to covsetiesi. Her physician made a prolougod effort to effect restoration, but it was too lire. The poison had become fixed in iu the system and the poor girl died by unintqitional suicide. Ulica Herald. A Boot-Biitloner. "Please draw upon the blackboard an interrogation point," said a teachor to

one of her pupus. 'Can't make a good ono," replied the boy. "Draw R boot-buttoner," said the i.l,or . "flint, will answer."

The boy took fiq-crayon and drew a hair-pin. Sharp rebuko by tho teacher. Other pupils smi'e, " Honirli en Bali.'' Ask Druggists for it. It clear out rate mice, roadies, bed-ougs, Hies, veruiiu, insects. 15c. Eilzrt's Extract of Tab and Wild Ciiekst has been used for t trinity year, aiidduriiy that time has saved mail) very valuable lives. Do not neglect a cough or cold until it is ton Into. Try thu excellent remedy, and wo aro sure you will be convinced of its merits, Clironis Coughs, and even Consumptives, are cured by following the directions. Every bottle is warranted to givo satisfaction. Prepared by the Emmi'rt Proprietary Co., Chicago. Sold by all good druggists. Ihoioestiox, dyapepus. nervous prostration and all forma of gene -al debility relieved by taking Meksmas's Pi ptoxized Beef Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nntritious properties. It contains blood-making, force-peiierating and life-sustaining properties; is invaluable In all enfeebled conditions, whether tho result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, overwork or acute disease, particularly if rosnitin from pulmonary camplaints. Caswell, Hazard & Co., proprietors, New York. TJxcXjE Saw's Cosnmos Powdem are recommended by stock-owners who have used them as the best Horse and Cattle Medieino to be had. If I he animal Scraggy, Hpiril less, or has no appetite, these Powders aro an excellent remedv, anderery owner of stock will do well to try them. They, aro prepared by the Emmert Proprietary Co., Chicago, 111., a very reliablo firm, and sold by all good druggists. Have you Kidney troubles ? The case is very far gone that does not yield unto a portuaueut euro, nd in a rapid manner, under the use of Ds. Holmas's Kknai, or Kidsev Pud sud AusownvE Pi .asters. Have yon Bisb, Itch, or auv special of skin diseases V Way not remove the causo Mood Poinonbf absorption through the n-se of the only commou-feose remedy, X)b. Hoi.MlN'S LtViB AND STOMACH FAOV WhatU lioautiful? Why, Csrboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, as now improved and pcrfechd. Clear as spring water, delightfully perfumed and will net soil the finest huen fabric n perfect todet preparation and absolutely makes the hair grow on bald heads. BoscHTHj x, Bbos., Chicago, make the diamond boots sad shoes, the best made. Ti-y them, IIENIIY'FI CARBOLIC M.U.VE fs the BKST SALVB for Cuts. Braises, Soros, Ulcers, 8lt Klleum, Tetter, Clupped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, nndaU kinds of Skin eruptions, Kiecklej and Pimple. Uot HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE, as all others aro counterfeits. Price, 'JUenU. V. UltEltVS OXYUENATBIl BITTEIW Is the best itroedy forPspepiU, Bilfcrosness, Maliria, Indigestion, and Diseases of the Blood, Sidnoyj. Li, Skin. etc. DUKSO'S DATA RRH SNUFF cores all affection, of the raucous n-tembrsne. of the head and throat. DR. MOTTO LIVER PILLS are the nest CatharUo Regulator.

lard Collectors!

1st. Buy seYcn bars DOHBINS EU.ECTKIC SOAP of your GroJ 3d. Ask him to gtv yon a bill of It, 3d. Wall as bit bill and your full address, 4Ui. Wo will mall YOKf FREE oven beautiful cards, In six colorsand ffo'd, reprcseullmg Sbakpcaro's Seven Ayes of nan.''

I. L. CRAGIN & GO., 116 South Fourth St., PHILADELPHIA, PA.

PERRY DAVIS'

A SMC AND SURE REMEDY FOR Rheumatism, Neuralgia,

yngjil Cramps, j jw Diarrhoea, Si ife spfans i Wm I Bruises, II (f fe Scalds, jjf ((f J I Toothache WmJ Headache. FOft SALE B ALL IHtUUmSTS.

IRON TONIC Is a preparation of Protoxide of Iron, Peruvian Bark mi'! the Phosphates, associated with the Vegetable AromaHtn. Kudnrsed tr uie Medical Profession, and reeommended by them for Dye peitata. tienrrnl Trcbilttr, Female Diecasts, Wssttr Vitality, Verv.o. Pre. tratton, Coavnleseeuce from Fevers) anal Chronic hllla ana Fever, ltserres) every purpose where a TON to ll necessary. laigfutirca bj The Dr. Barter HeakiM Co, St Irak

nr testlmo-

The following Is one of the very

suais nc are iixtiwuj. uu) - Gtnt'tmm: Some three months ere-1 began the use of l)ti. IlAitTisH". Ibon Tonic. npoB the advice of many friends who knew Its virtues. 1 was suffering from general debility to snch an extent that mylaborwasexceediiigly bunlessometoDW. A vacation of a uiontli did not give me much roller, but on the contrary, was followed by Increased prostration and sinking chills. At this time I began the use of your Ikon Tonic, from which 1 realized almost Immediate and wonderful results. The old euergy returned and 1 found that my natural force was not pernianeuUy abated. I ha re used three bottles of t'.e Iomc. Since using It 1 have done twice the labor tluit 1 ever did in the same time du-tiij; mv illness, and with double tho ease. With the iranull nerve and vigor or body, has come also u. clearness of thought never before enjoyed. If tho Tonic has not done the work, I know cot what. 1 give it the credit. Host gratefully yours, J. P. WATSON. Troy, O , Jan. 2, 1873, Pastor Christian Church. Ftf Sals by Druggists and General Outers Everywhere

few. S" HjfiaW Sitters

XI. c Traveler who wlselr lroTldc

mfi.In't the rintincenry of illncM by taking with him lioBlter'Sioiu.icli Bitters, hns occasion to congratn Ute himw f m his fores gUt when be e ntbero, who b-tro ucected to do s. r ufaVr!ii (row norae ono of the maladies for wh'ch it i a remedy and prerentlre. Anion j; th,s aio fovv and ague. iMllouanesa, constipation and rhRUtnatitun, duAur-e often attendant- upon, a U(U) of cllmato or nnwonted diot. 9ST For amio by all lroggiM,s anil Dealers eneraHy.

$72

D

outfit free. Addrea Tjioa A Co., Auiuata, Mm.

It. III'M'HU. HIS St'te St.. Chicago, treats suo-

cesstoUT Throat ana Lung ureases or inhalation.

J- hnf per day at home. Beraplea worth gStrsv. 90 10 P&U Address Stinsos Alio. Portland, Ma.

Vniltie MEN UaruTslssrraphTt Kamesstoma UUrlU nlCn month. Gradnataa fnarantoed par in onto.. Audrwa Vaucmtikk UbuJ.iimt1!1,Wh

$66

a week in your own town. Ternu and $ft outfit fret. AUdreaa H. Hallktt k Co., Portland. Me.

FINE CHINA, JAPAN & A88AM TEA8. Will sond sample of anv kind wanted on recent of 3c. postage stamp. Cheap tor cash. J?taoa.Ai ttf-ltl. CAi&iDY 4 CO.. l3jProntSt..NewYork.

00KS IN THE TTTORID

runt-

KrifHir)

ft HEAPEST

I dacwunVsUls- If Tllno's DUnury of

Uiorv oi r.UKiauu. eng. i,!h!nuuro. i rce 3 lTi?) liio volii. I I unto rl. hanilsomcly clotn:oulv es.oo-a bound, for out; su .u.

MANHATTAN BOOK CO . IS W. lh 8t, N.X. P.O. Bex IMS. AGENTS WANTED QUICK to sell the REVISED NEW TESTAMENT Vovrmttt fr Airrma. 3fot dtviratrte fttititm. Xaow J triced. 'JtfiW'W aro wmili 3 for it. iranl harvest itr Aiitnts. Paritcwlnrs . Outfit. &On. Act ulcfc. Addruu miiiUAllD 11ROS., ClitcatO, UL

For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT, has dono more to assaage pain, relieve Buffering, and save the lives of men and beasts than all other liniments put together. Why! Because the Mustang penetrates through Hkin and flesh to the very bone, driving out all pnin and soreness and morbid secretions, and restoring the afflicted part to sound and supple health.

A IJKNT.1 WAM'KU lor the Best anil l'utost. V Selling Pictorial Books and Bibles. l'rio rvdnaea K psr t. Ratio a CvsLumita Co,, (jutosfoi lu

CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED 1 mHALLS

FOR THE LUNGS.

Heree Consumption. Colda. 1'iiiMiiiionlii, In. Ilnt'iizn, llranehlitl IXOJeulliiK, liriiiiehliis, l!onVHT.e!, Anluim, Croup, W boo pus tduuli, ami nil IHsriiHmt el the Ureal bins Orami". It soothes iimiI heat ihe Membrane el" Iho L,iiiikh, il Ha "! ami iinUani'd by Hie (IIhciihc, nii.l prcveiiiH I lie niiilil mi nus ana ilauinriuincroiM lUe lnl which nreomimiiy h, t'ananiiiplian in not mi incurable- malady. HALL'S llAI-SA"!! trill vara you, even

lliouirh proiewHiuiini niu inn.

ALSAIV1

TKU 1 t Mj" rw'.M.iiriNr.fl? Bmhuo fie.? anl V.vt t J .W With -, Cjl,.i,t.i. !- . aw re 0 lal.. eeud """"J 1 TT7-..a m.,r rumts hliabaaA at . MI'iMiilMnll'! . '

rtatet. woe, &" H ' saata ef (aerriM. Men irsrsi4 U a.11 awl tellaBeJ.

n C A I C stock of Hardwire, Tin f- J IT 9ALR vote. Tinners' Tools. Toners' SUickamlAarrleulturallmptimsnts.tiimjthetK'UiStoi'e, Building and Two Lots; bosl uoiuor In town for business. A siilcniild opening lor anj one- itanlltlB to CJ1. Hagoin this llneol businus?, a there Is a need trade

isiabllshiKl. Reason foi sciuni laiuiia nn'JHSPMUUlaratrMl . . B. O. BWEBT,

rr ausns, vrewtero. veunv, aao

THE MARKETS. NEW YORE. limtx , s y rn no ioas S 90 6 M Cptro n ,a njr I i.ouk -Superfine. 4 00 S 1 15 WitBAT No. a fipring. 1 at (A I 12 No. 2 Red 1 2o (it 1 27 Cobn Ungraded 61 87 Oats Mixed Western. 42 43 1'ork Mesa ..I8 60 0S17 OH lMo n iia OHICAaO. Bfeveb Choice Graded Steers 6 70 II Cows and Heifers. 3 00 C4 i 75 Medium to Fair S as I!on 6 00 (a 25 Fiona Fancy tvhfto Winter Ex... B TO c 6 H ... food to Choice Spring Ex.. K 00 (4 50 Wheat No. t Spring 1 10 will No. a Spring l ot) ut 1 Jr. OOBS-No. a 4G (I 47 )at-No,2 30 o 37 IlYK No. 2 04 ,g 8S Barlkt No. 109 (AIM Hitter -Choice Creamery. 18 ra 23 Eons-Fresh. 14 IS Pour Mess la 00 (ftlli 25 Ln KVtA II MILWAUKEE. . WHEAT No. 1 1 13 1 1.1 N- 1 10 t 13 Cons No, 3 44 S 43 Oats -No. as ,i 37 ItVE No. I H (4 tw liAULEY No. 2. 102 (5)103 Pobk Mess 16 00 W Ih" W.Vd 11 8T. LOUIS, Wheat No. 2 Red. 1 14 43 1 iff Cork Mixed 45 6 Oath No, 3 ; ji 35 BtB..- - 81 ft 82 1'ork Mesa id 60 16 7S WK 11 OINOINNAX1. WnAT 1 20 1 23 COUN 48 ft 47 Oats 39 ft 40 Rv 39 fit 1 00 Pons Mess 10 25 (3)6 60 aobd lojr 11 TOIiSHO. Wheat No. 1 White. 1 19 1 30 No. 2 Bed 1 SO A 1 21 Conic No. 2 47 48 Oats 38 30 D1JTK01T. Floob Choice... 6 75 at, 7 U. Wheat No. 1 White 1 20 ft 1 21 OonN No. 1 49 ft Stl Oat Mixed 40 ft 41 Barley dr cental) 1 50 3 3i Poaa Una 17 23 OA.1 60 INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat No. 2 Bed 1 16 ft 1 18 Cork No. 2 44 ft 45 Oats 38 ft 39 Pork Mess t8 00 ftl6 50 EAST LIBERTY, PA. Cattle Beat 8 10 ft 8 50 Fair 6 00 ft fi 00 Common 4 50 ft 4 75 Heos 8 75 ft 8 40 ar.r.r 3 00 ft 4 (W

HOLMAN'S PAD

Simply;

CURES Moot

BEOICIHEIIwJAIlsoratia

TRAtasiAax. The Only True Malarial Antidote. Da. nn.MA."'' Pad It ao guess-woik remedy ae feeble 14 Uve experiment nt purloin bodge podire t some -other inventor's Idea ; It as the orlgtitnl and only urcnntiac vara at! ve Pad, th only remedy that has an boa estly-acquired righltousetlic title-wcrd "a-aaTr In connection with a treatment fnrchronic diiieesAas of the fllemaeA, Xltxr and fpltent By a recently perfected improvement Da. HetU mam has greatly increased the scope of th Pact) usefulness, and appreciably augmented ita active curative power. This great improvement (Ives nousaa'a Pa (with lu Adjurants) inch complete and unfailing control over the most persistent and aovieldifag forms ci chronic Disease ef the atotuacb and Liver, as well as MMbf rial Hlood-Polsoiiltla', as to aropiy Justify the eminent l'roftttor Xoomts' Kigh ea co-niom: "It 1 s HRAsaa a t'prvaaaAi. Pa-yAjCRA than anything ik AlxoiciNal" Tiie aurceas of IIolman's Pads has inspired lmhttors wtm offer Pai! similar in forra axac odor to the genninc ROLHAN PAD. Beware of tbec Bokyas and laatl. tatiotn Pads, gotten up to atell oat the repatatloia of the CKNl'INa IIOLJKAM PA IK Each Genuine Hoiraan Pad bear the Private Rewenne Dtamp of taw HO I.MAN PAD COMPANY with aha eheva Trade Mark printed i green. ' FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS, Or seat by mall, peat-paid 00 receipt ef ti,taa HOLM AN PAD COIP. O. Bum 2112.) 7M Uroilwa.r, a. w.

TO FARMERS AND THRE8UEBMEN. If yon want to bny Thresher, r. rir Suiter, Ilortt-thnctr or JSnfin (either Portable or Traction, t nee lor thrrahintc, aawinc or for iral Suntoeea). boy tliw "htarred I-Uxm-ir" gooda. "Ti J5tf( r (A Cfitapeat." For Frice-Lis. ami D lustrated Pamphluts (tHsnt ive, wrile t Thk Aultmu AT.OteOa COXPAMT, Manafic-ld,0

Orn 1,000,000 AcrtM

mo aear vwoavc

arms

TAifmr ItanlH. Tnwa.

Branch Office. 83 Randolph. St, ChlcagB, Dla.

M ?'

II atm ia

For sals by trio II Iowa R.R. Land Co. U

FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Beat In the Wei Id. Get the aesmla. Cvmry parkaas bna eor Trttdo-snarU end le snarCed Fraur's. MUl.Is tVKK VM HSitat.

T AGENTS WASTED FOE BIBLE REVISION Tbe beat and rbeaiu-it tT'tntrats! editinief ttwaWriaed New Testament. MiUiona of people are walUnc for It. DonctMdnceivrd by tie Cheap John piibihhtjte of inferior editions. Bee that ttte copy yoa btiy ooetoaM 130 fine eitcravlnsv on aient and weed. .Ueole aaV coinlnc money aelUnii Uiia edition. Send far -Mixmien, Aidme NATIONAL POHLli HDfOCoT;

-t-aifi,WTS WANTKO FOR Oim CENTENNIAL PAN,

tap-speia innc nnora t

For

CELLULOID EYE-GLASSES.

Representing the choicest-selected TortiiisoShell and Amber. The ItRhtest, handsomest, and strongest known. Sold ly Oittctans ana Jewelers. Made by the SPENOEK OPTICAL M'FG CO., 13 Maiden Lane, New York.

dowltla atit, Priae 6e. AJb oar UrnMii1! I'AAYrnfS

Hiirinl. l4sr. t. new, ncneL m In, rafid-eeli or tuntele. Prtc 3fo. j, rare pportnntcjf to bete t fforcd AeitiM to nmke mawe)'. Siwl fiffowrf iftfl'rf CtVcalera and in ima'-oiHy literal temw. DOMICST1C AIaK 194 We; i'luh ht.Caulntaa.O,

cvii. icr ic ir Ma

era

fds.

For Olt-llles and Fever AND ALL DISEASKS Caaed by Malarial Poisoning ef the Blsied. A WARBANTED CUBE. Prioe, fJfl.OO. Tor sal ay an Drala

US. LVDU E. PiNHaH, OF LVXI, WSS.,

LL who are tronhl-sd with Peafheos. Csttarrh, 4a

ma,tonaamp.ior. May rerer. 0ronciins,iaina, Is. NervousriM.. Isif fSleea. Aaralaiu Haadaifaa.

Diseases of the Liver and Kidneys. Drsneptls and Affaettons oi the Luna suit Air Passa-.-es. o ' ra. mattar bew

tons standinc, snocld try Dr J UIK.K tl.tj-Myarts. aenate.1 Air. All dis.ases treatod. Send for pamphlt with home referances, and owetiona toiukwar. Not-hir e forcon: uit--iUHi by mall.ar in parsoti. Patl.nts t reated eqnally well at a dtstaate. Dr. i. D. JUIHiE t CO.. 79 Boat at . Boston, Mae.

Battle Creek, Michigan, MAKra-aoxirsiats or rrat oaxr oKBrrjm

THRESHERS, Traction and Plain Englnea and Horse-Powers. esC)aapletci ThreaherKaetetT i EtaBBetd In the VVoria. S 1348 yCADQ v'eeaMavrmaiwoafsAlasi

ems know sea., w.uiout csauiao I rmuiao-ieiiptit- 11- tnealiosi. i " lar

broad tiirrn(y irca cm ail oarjonrfa.

LYDIA E. PlNKHARsPd VESETASIsE COMTOUND. Is a Pogltive Care ferall those Painful Ooaaplalnt asal Weetaesse siineimre teMrbest fccsal BassilaUea. It will cure entirely the worst former itonnie Complaints, an ovarian troubles, inflammation and Ficsratlon, FsJlInfr and Dtraccmenta, and the consramnt Spinal Weakness, and is particubrly aiapted ta the Chanre ef life. It vill diasolTe and expel tttmors from tte uttTWifn an early stae of development. The tendeoHy octncerous humorn there Is cheeked very apecdDy by loj oao. It lemoTC taintnees, flatulency, destroys nil eravlac forstbnulants, and relteveawealinea of fhastomaeb. It cures Bloating, IToadaches, Nervous Pmst ration, Ocneral DebOitr. Bleeplessaeas, tXptualoa and todlsestisa. That fealms; ofbearmrf down, eanstmr pain, -wefirnt nrH iw'fa", t.lwyaprmanUv cured by its us. It will at all times and under all circumstance, act In harmony with tho laws that govern Uc temtue syatera. For the cure of Kidney Compbuata ef either HZthll Oemponnd is urisurpasscd. LYDIA E. rlNEIIAMU VEOKTABLK 4X!POlINDls prepared at 333 and 33S Western Avemm, Lynn,lbva Price U 81a bottles fort. Sent: by mill tn the form of puis, lao lathe term of loatiigea,oa receipt ot price, 31 par box for either. Mrs. 5mslu:n freely answers all letter of Inquiry. Head for panrrislet, Adaresaa aoova. MtmUat tVf Kyer. Ms family should bo without I.TDIAE. PlItKBAll'S LIVER PILLS, They care eonstlpatlon, bUloasasss, oil torpidiry of the liver. 3b easts per boot, 8tr Hold by all Drtsaxiata. "S

STUAMf-FOWKR 8KPAKATOKB std Cemplni) t-lnua Oatltso cA'inW. riit-Ml Ti-axtioc Kngiacaand Plnin FaahlflS eve seen in the American market.

A muauwu oj ipecuu rtrars craa '.pre for IS&I, togethar vlit aajMwiorvaa'tr. a tint, n.j.f n ..n., -.it. 1 rll W-d nf i V O ' h, 1- r

Fnnr aha of &paiatotv, from 9 to 13) 1

CaitKKV.ior ar m. or aorpfl www.

comparable -oad.oi& of our machinery.

TRACTION ENGINES Ani.Best.fraMf 'Ium&?SLivtd srScjeateasr

, at. if axskrae a-srwew.

ehfl1

spsas null Jimiienj

dnrihinecy

VitlMtatsa sasul fltaeber-AMaSiaaBB I

Juvmttfrato this n. sickle Tirarhltw

eVPCTUaavn erotism. Aiuirraa NICHOLS, HEPARD A CO. Battle Creek, mahWm

O.W.O.

31. )W

rWKN WKIT1SK TO ADTEKTISKBSS, I clnuA tfe. na aw aha a ill in ll. siaaftaS

In thta paster.

mm

o

Or. MKTTAriK'S HEAHACBCU PU.LS euro most vondertUlly to s mf Short time both SICK and NQt l OCS U-KVDACIIE; and wtiilo actlni; oa the nerrnu syatciu, cleanse thu stonaavcla of exacts of bile, producing; a resalsr heisltny action of the towels.

o o

ilil In

A fan alro box of these valriablo I'TXLS, with fall airwotions for s

pleto euro, mailed to nny address on receipt cf nine thre-eewc

tamp, iror sate Dy au aratnnsts at 3e. tsole rroprionu-s,

33KOWN CUEMICAL COJir.'Jr, Unlttmore, 3M.

o o

lFii!L

AGITATOR! AGITATOR! AGITATOR!

ll3saaiL

THE M08T PERFECT THRESHER AND SAVER MADH.

1. 1. CASE THBESaiNO MAOKllVB CO., lUCUfS, WIS, lUtomW&WMmV-VUiobWlWtotoyi!zl. M fWtr--ll. as'lla