Democratic Sentinel, Volume 4, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 August 1880 — Page 4
SLEEP. BY HAI.X.IE O. YOUNG. Sleep that knits up the raveled sleeve of care, Balm of hurt minds. - Macbeth. 01 how sweet 1» balmy Bleep When tbo evening shadows fall 1 Ancient, myßtic, dreamy Morpheus An elysium gives to ali. Waking hours oft bring us sorrow, We repine or idly weep, But our hopes kuow fulf fruition In the land of dreamy sleep. How should we have heart to give—’Less wafted to a purer place— The third of all life's checkered hours To the dream-god’s still embrace? And, through the shadow and the sheen, As we climb life’s slip’ry ctecp, Oft there comes an influence holy From the iand of dreamy sleep. Where we glide by tinkling fountains, Enchanted by seraphic song; Through tangles of unearthly beauty, Thinking that we there belong; Past vistas of elysian grandeur The magic way we ever keep, To the fancy-found Utopia, Our alxde in dreamy sleep. Where again we meet our loved one, Whom in youth we loved and lost; And the priest said, “Cold and darksome 1 1 the river sou's must cross;” • But my loved one sinileth sweetly, Is lovelier now than e’er, to sight, And the stream that floweth fleetly Shimmers with a golden light. And my soul, fur-reaebing, roaming, Bests within the saintly gloaming Of the land whose dimmest glory Would i laminate earth s brightest story. This e'ystum of our making— Haven reared by psichic powers— Vanishes upon our waking, But with sleep ’tis ever ours. OI.AUENDON, Ark.
HUNG FOB SUICIDE.
Poor Bob Crawley ! He would go to try his fortune in the Australian gold fields, in spite of the remonstrances of his friends and family. It was during the first tide of eager excitement which followed the discovery of the precious metal there, and young Crawley, yielding with hundreds of others to the allpervading gold fever, took leave of his family, and departed. He entertained high hopes of success, and promised a speedy return with his amassed wealth. But his success was indifferent, on arriving at his destination, and even this was not the worst of his trials. Living as he had among the upper circles at home, he had hardly been able to form u correct conception of the rude classes among which ho would be thrown in the mining districts, and of the hardships and deprivations which he would be obliged to endure. It goes hard with a man among the miners, if he has not thrown off all lingering traces of refinement and accustomed himself to the ways and manners of his unpolished associates. So our friend, who could not but retain Some prejudices in favor of a civilized state of society, and found it contrary to bis nature to mingle sociably with the rough community, was soon marked by his companions as not a congenial spirit; and he found himself held in anything but a popular regard. It was, too, Crawley’s misfortune to have fixed his quarters near those of a man for whom, from the first, he felt a strange, unaccountable dislike. This man, Hooker by name, was in partnership witli a companion of even rougher sort , who occupied the singe tent with him and who answered to the euphoneous name of Higgles. Crawley could not determine whether he liked or disliked this latter, nor could ho understand liis character. There seemed to be a sense of honor and something like kindness bidden under his rough exterior-. But his virtues were sadly overgrown with vices, and little of manhood or self-respect was left in his liang-dog air. Hooker enjoyed that popularity which a bold, bad man is apt to have among the miners. He even possessed great influence over them, owing to his native cunning and villainy, being, indeed, their acknowledged leader upon all occasions. Crawley’s dislike for this neighbor of his gradually deepened into distrust and fear. He fancied that the gleam of his dark eyes under their lowering brows portended some especial evil for himself. Ail endeavors to shake off what seemed a foolish notion were in vain ; ho continued to fear and avoid him. Strange as it may appear, he was rendered all the more uneasy upon hearing the rumor which was current of the immense treasure of gold which Hooker had gut together and secreted in his tent." Was it that he already felt the forebodings of a coming doom ? Crawley had several times thought of removing to another neighborhood, in consequence of his present unpleasant situation, and because lie hoped to meet with better success in his quest for gold, .when something took place which hastened this determination. One morning, after a wakeful and restless night, during which lie thought he neard some stealthy movements in the neighborhood of Hooker’s tent, our friend was going forth to his work rather later than usual, when he found the little mining community in evident excitement. Men stood earnestly talking together in small groups, instead of proceeding to their regular occupation; there was much hurrying to and fro; and, strangest of all, whenever he advanced to a group to learn the cause of this confusion, they all moved away in different directions, casting side-long, suspicious glances at him. This was too much. He made a rush at one smallsized man, collared him, and literally shook from him the intelligence that his acquaintance of the black eyes had been robbed of bis riches. Then it was all plain. Hooker, sus pecting Crawley of the theft, had just now been making bis suspicions generally known, which readily took root in the minds of all, as coming from their leader. This belief was strengthened by the fact of the proximity of their tents, while another noteworthy circumstance was the tardy and seemingly reluctant appearance that morning of the suspected culprit. Add to this the unpopularity and even dislike with which the poor fellow was regarded, and it would seem that it must go hard with him under this burden of suspicion. While weighing in his mind the evidence against him, Hooker passed him with such an added look of malignant hatred in his eyes, that he involuntarily turned away, shuddering at their threatening aspect. He got through the day somehow ; but his mind was constantly filled with a kind of horrible fear. Every one seemed to be against him, and he felt that this state of affairs could not be endured. So long as the guilty man remained undiscovered, poor Crawley, even though Hooker could produce no positive evidence of liis guilt, would, in various ways, be harassed and tormented by his foe, with all his comrades on liis side, aud even his life would be in danger. That night lie fixed upon what seemed a most effectual mode of escaping from these annoyances. He determined not only to leave that immediate neighborhood, but to adopt a disguise which should free him from all fear of being discovered and receiving further trouble from his accusers. Accordingly, when it was yet several hours before dawn, he transported what little luggage lie had to a place situated about a mile up the stream, and, leaving his property, he crossed by a ford and hastened to the nearest settlement. Arrived there, he went to a barber’s shop, had his face shaved clean—he hod, for convenience, allowed his beard to grow with great luxuriance—and his hair dyed. Then, purchasing a new suic of clothes throughout, ho took them under his arm and made his way back again. Directing his steps to a part of the stream hidden by a dense growth of bushes, he set about donning liis new outfit. After removing his old clothes and sinking them by means of a stone, he threw to the opposite bank the bundle containing the new ones and what personal property he wore about him, and plunged in himself,
both by way of a morning bath, and in order to gam the other side, the stream being here quite deep, though narrow. In climbing the steep bank, his foot slipped and he received a severe gash in the heel from a sharp flint-stone. Before he could bind up his injured member the ground was stained with a pretty generous sprinkling of Hood. At length, as he issued forth, disguised to his perfect satisfaction, whom should he meet but Hooker! He-could not help feeling some misgivings ; but, putting on a bold face, he passed this dreaded character without any sign of recognition being shown. His baggage was found where it had been left. He put up his tent and sat down to rest before proceeding farther. “ Now,” said he, “I will begin agam os a new-comer in tliis district, under a new name, and under better auspices, I hope. lam well rid of my persecutor, and if I take a little care there will be no danger of my recognition.” He had scarcely finished this hopeful soliloqny, when men were heard approaching without, and he caught the sound of a voice too well known to him. Presently Hooker looked in and, with a malicious grin, invited him to step outside. Crawley complied with seeming indifference, and found Diggles and several others awaiting him. ‘‘ We know wliat you’ve been up to, whoever you are,” growled their leader and spokesman, looking at Crawley’s hands, from which, in lus haste, he had neglected to wash some marks of blood. “We know the whole story. One man robs another, as every one knows, and disappears with the plunder, early some fine morning. Then this man that's been robbed goes off up stream in the direction the first man was supposed to have taken, and he meets man number three coming up out of the bushes, where we find blood-stains and a hat caught in the rushes. We put this aud that together and conclude that there’s been a murder for money, and the body sunk in the river; then we come after this third fellow and find his hands bloody, and we find a watch-chain we’ve seen before, just, hanging down in sight.” Here he clutched at the chain which our bewildered friend had not thought it necessary to conceal, or for some reason had omitted to do so, and would have pulled out the watch, but he shook him off, exclaiming with an assumption of boldness: “Your words are entirely unintelligible to me; I know nothing of this robbery you speak of.” “Now that’s no go,” said Hooker; “you’d better give up my property without any fuss, if you don’t want to be strung up on that tree over there, for a murderer and robber both.” This was terrible to the wretched Crawley. . Was ho to lie hunted down by that demon? Wlnit could he do? He looked around at the dark faces which suri onnded him, to see if lie could gain any hope from them. They all eyed him fiercely with wliat he thought was a bloodthirsty look—no, not all; what was it that made Diggles seem so ill at ease, as though he were playing a forced part, and but half playing it at that. But Crawley had noted before this peculiar manner of Diggles’, and could get no encouragement from it now. He could only disclaim all knowledge of the missing gold, and look on with gloomy forebodings while a diligent search was prosecuted under the direction of Hooker. At the end of that fruitless operation, a rope was produced and he was led, almost fainting with terror. to the tree which had been designated as suitable for his execution, and his fate was sealed by Hooker in these words, who recited them in the manner of a Judge’s sentence, manifesting a cruel delight the while: “You are hereby adjudged guilty of murder in the first degree, as well as of an act of atrocious robbery, and sentenced to be hanged by the neck at the expiration of one-lialf hour. ” The unfortunate victim knew that Hooker, without troubling himself to use his reason on the probabilities of the case, was so enraged by the loss of his gold that he would, in his mad passion, wreak his terrible vengeance upon him to the full, using the charge of murder as an excuse for such extreme measure, which charge would readily insure for him the support of his companions, who were less interested in the robbery than in the disappearance of the firstsuPDosed culprit. The news of these proceedings had spread, and there was now quite a crowd collected around the fatal tree. Some thought that of course the accused would confess the deed and denote the hiding-place of the booty before the half hour should be up; but all were eager, partly, no doubt, merely for the sake of diversion, to see him executed on the more serious charge of morder. From the pitiless determination expressed in the looks of all it seemed likely, indeed, that he would actually be put to death for murdering himself —for suicide, in fact. The thirty minutes of grace were rapidly passing. Crawley’s senses were benumbed and bewildered, so quickly had events followed upon one another, and with such short notice had he been dragged to the tree and sentenced to execution. Ho tried several times to explain matters and to prove his innocence, but in his present agitated condition he could ‘ offer no explanation which they would believe. The time had passed, and, amid impatient cries of, “Up with the murderer,” “String up the villain,” the rope was adjusted, and Hooker, grasping it with a firm hand, called Diggles, who was lurkiug among the crowd, to aid. He advanced slowly with an uncertain, almost-salt ring gait, and with eyes cast on the ground. “Come, man, be lively,” sang out Hooker. “I thought you’d be glad to help me give this rascal his deserts.” It was nbt, however, with much appearance of enjoying his duty that Diggles at last laid hold of the rope, but he seemed to nerve himself to the task, one which we would think him eminently qualified by nature to perform. The rope tightened on the victim’s neck. He was growing black in the face. Was this, then, to be tho ignominious end of Crawley, the one who had but lately left his fair home, with such high hopes of success, such bright promises to tho near and dear whom he left behind ? Ah ! it was hard that he should be thus cut off so young, and by such a eruol death. Wliat protracted anxiety would be caused at. homo when month affer month should pass and no intelligence reach his family of the absent one. Sorrowful enough would it be to conclude that he had died a peaceful death; but how much more auguish would they feel if they knew of the terrible fate which had actually befallen the missing one. While the crime for winch he was to die appears to us ridiculous from its nature, the result seemed iikely to be none the less serious. But was he to die ? No, the hanging was to go no farther, else it had never been mine to record the foregoing incidents, which were communicated to me by my friend, the subject of this sketch. Let us, then, hasten to rescue him from his now somewhat-painful situation, and set him safely on terra Anna again. The hands of Diggles dropped nerveless to his sides. His face was deadly pale; he turned away trembling from the sight of the innocent man suffering before him, and, with a faltering in his gruff tones, lie blurted out a confession of his guilt in having appropriated his partner’s possession, which he declared himself now only too ready to deliver up. He informed his astonished comrades of his opinion that the man now before them was no other than the one whom they had first accused, Poor
Diggles had since his theft been constantly haunted by the face of the wrongly-suspected, whose eyes seemed ever to be before him. And, when he looked into that face and met those eyes, disguised as their owner was, little wonder that he had not been deceived as his companions had been. Let it then be said to bis credit, and let Robert Crawley ever be thankful for it, that his nature was not so totally depraved as to be blunted to all feelings of remorse. To this redeeming quality let Crawley ascribe his timely rescue from the tragic fate of being hung for mietde. Chicago Ledger,
JOTTINGS AND CLIPPINGS.
Brick tiles—hats worn by inebriated young men. The English call our elevated roads “overhead lines.” Every dog has his day, but the nights belong to the cats. The frog is an emblem of hope; he is eternally springing. When you ask some single ladies how old they are, their rage is manifest. “Constituency, thou art a jewel,” remarks the candidate when he is returned to office. The baker’s business should be profitable; a good part of his stock is rising while he sleeps. The conductor who divided his collections with the company claimed that it was a fare arrangement. Josh Billings says: “Give the devil his due, reads well enough in a proverb; but what will become of me if this arrangement is carried out?” A great many dramatic writers are coming out with plays these days—coming out of managers’ offices with the plays under their arms. Jane Ham, in a fight with another woman, Eugenie Bristow, at Darlington, S. C., choked her and threw her against a table, smashing her skull and causing instant death. It was about a man. Oliver Wendell Holmes complains that he cannot even say “good-morning” to an acquaintance without having it telegraphed all over the country as humor. T. A. Brecklebabk estimates that in a single decade 500,000 persons engaged in agricultural pursuits in Great Britain sustain personal injury or are killed; in mines, 300,000; in railroads, 70,000; and in factories 180,000. At a dinner given in Pont street, in London, the other day, the decorations of the table and dining-room consisted of real fruit trees in full bearing—peaches, nectarines aud cherries. The guests could eat their dessert from the trees. Snow is largely used for packing fresh fisli for transportation, instead of ice. One dealer at Carle ton, N. 8., had three houses filled with snow, which was packed hard, so that none of it has been lost since warm weather came. The cost of putting up fish by this means is greatly reduced, while the labor is less. Means were found by the clericals at Antwerp to elude the bribery law at the last election there. Wagers of from 300 francs to two francs were offered by clerical electioneering agents to doubtful electors on the success of the Liberals; and the election is said to have cost the clerical party more than 1,000 francs. The Scientific American says that it is a well-knoAvn fact that fish always return to the same ground each year to spawn, but that it lias recently been discovered that they always follow the lefthand side of the river on their trips to the spawning grounds, and returning take the right side of the river. The rate of mortality in Liverpool for a recent week was equal to 23.3 per 1,000 of the estimated population. There were, altogether, 244 deaths, which represents an increase of 30 on the corrected averages of the last 10 years, and of 11 on the corresponding return for 1879. Zymotic diseases occasioned 51 deaths and lung complaints 53. An Englishman hired a vessel to visit Tenedos. His pilot, an old Greek, remarked with an air of satisfaction as they sailed along: “It was there that our fleet lay.” “Wliat fleet?” asked the Briton. “Wliat fleet?” rejoined the pilot in astonished tones. “Why our Greek fleet, of course, at the siege of Troy.” Fishekmen engaged in the Greenland fishery say they never experienced anything like the terrific ice blockade which now extends down to the 52d parallel of latitude. The field ice lying to the eastward of Newfoundland, the southern extremity of which now bears 120 miles distant from St. Johns, is of the heaviest flow description. Thousands of icebergs are to be seen. Many persons are under the impression that England stands at the head of all the continental nations as regards the number of its periodical publications. Such is not the case. Germany heads the list with 3,778; England follows with 2,509; and France comes next with 2,000. There is then a great falling off. America boasts 9,129, being more than the three nations above named put together. Mr. Fambro, of Sandersville, Ky., has a large rattlesnake, about five feet long, which he captured on the 9th of last October, and which he has kept in a bob with a wire-net front ever since that time. Though he has had it nine months, the snake lias never eaten anything at all since it was captured. It “lives on air,” and if it could be converted into the (jams homo, retaining its natural habits, it would make a splendid newspaper man.
Mirth at Home.
A merry heart doeth good like a medicine, but a broken spirit drieth the bones, declares the wisest of men. A swift appreciation of the ludicrous is the happy birthright of some fortunate people, but there are those who never see a joke quickly, and who cannot comprehend why it makes others laugh, even after it has been duly explained. If, as the proverb says, laughter is medicinal, they are much to be pitied. They are not cushioned against the sharp comers and hard knocks of life. There is a coarse wit that is allied to buffoonery and may decend to indecency, and the less we have of that the better. The brightness and buoyancy which makes the day cheerful; which lift the wearied and the ill from their depression, and which impart courage when disaster seems imminent, are priceless gifts. The merry making the best of things, seeing the silver edge along the thickening clouds, remembering how much worse misfortune might have befallen, and being cheery when others are discouraged, how noble are these qualities when put in practice and how brave they may be. I agree, in a measure, with the brilliant French woman, who said that “the joyousness of a spirit is an index of its power,” words true for all time. It Bliouldbe a matter of conscience with us to maintain serenity of outward appearance at all times.
His Square Meal.
One day recently, as one of our prominent business men was about to enter his favorite resort for dinner, he was accosted by an individual with a decidedly careworn expression, who begged that he would assist him to get something to eat. As the man looked like a worthy object of charity, the gentleman told him to go in, and directed the waiter to give him 25 cents’ worth of food and charge it to his check. After finishing his own dinner the gentleman was proceeding to settle for his check, when, noticing a humorous look on the waiter’s face, he asked him what the hungry man had ordered. The reply was: “.Five glasses of lager. ’’—Boston Advertiser.
FARM NOTES.
A correspondent of Vick’* Monthly says that one spoonful coarse-powdered saltpetre to a pail of water will destroy potato-bugs, squash-bugs, and other insects. For roses it is uiuiaißapsed. For maggots that work at the foots of squash vines, pour about R ‘pmtr'of tile liquid at the root of each vine as soon as the pests indicate themselves. A whole afternoon of the recent convention at Lansing, of the Michigan Sheep-breeders’ and Wool-growers’ Association was given up to a debate on the question of washing sheep, and the result was an almost nnanimous verdict to the effect that the practice is not opjy useless and barbarous but unprofitable, taking into account the often fatal effect on fine animals thus shocked by being forced into the water. A Massachusetts farmer says ttat he has planted the following crops, all with good success, after the early peas have been marketed and the vines pulled : Squash, horse-radish, cabbage, ah kindd of turnip, sweet com, tomatoes, sfnhKch,’ rye for fodder, clover to plow under, com fodder and string beans. By getting two crops from the land the peas do not cost much,* except the cost of the seed, picking and marketing. The second crop is the profitable one, as' there lsDuf one coat of manure applied for both crops. ‘ v *• ? i Sowing Rye in Corn. — If farmers will - sow one-half bushel of winter rye to thp acre in their com, and plow it ih the last time, it will not only have a tendency t® choke out the weeds that start up afterward, but there will be no danger of dry murrain among cattle from eating too freely of dry stalks, as the rye will remain green through the winter, and will be eaten by stock in preference to com fodder. It makes a desirable feed for all kinds of stock, and aids materially in the quality and quantity of milk produced, besides proving a saving of from one to two tons of hay for every acre sown; and last, but not least, it affords a green crop to plow under in the spring, which will renew and enrich the land.— Rural World. Working the Soil. —The working of the soil, in connection with the application of manure and special fertilizers, works wonderful results. The great universal solvent is the oxygen of the atmosphere, and while but a small per cent, is free in the atmosphere, the earth is full of it, while that which is free in the atmosphere is ever ready to enter into and J make new combinations in the soil. Hence, one great object of tillage is to let in this oxygen, that it may produce those changes necessary for the production of plant food. Cultivation also aids in the escape of water, where there is too much in the soil, for, while a certain amount of water aids in the decomposition of the soil, too much water shuts out the oxygen and prevents decomposition. Stagnant water is antagonistic to plant growth. Water in a state of motion not only conveys food to the plant but conveys heat both to and from the land, equalizing the temperature. Prof. Stockbridge. To Cure Foot Rot In Sheep.— The preparation of the foot is just as essential as the remedy, for if every part of the disease is not laid bare the remedy will not effect a cure. A solution of blue vitriol, as strong as can be made and as hot as you can bare your hand in, even for a momont, having the liquid three or four inches deep, or deep enough to cover all the-affected parts; then hold the diseased foot in this liquid ten minutes, or long enough to penetrate to all the diseased parts; put the sheep on a dry barnfloor for twenty hours to give it a chance to take effect. In every case where it has been tried it has effected a cure, and I have never given a sheep medicine internally for foot rot. This remedy I call a dead shot when the foot is thoroughly prepared, but a more expeditious way, and where you don’t hardly hope to exterminate the disease, but keep it in subjection, is this: After preparing the feet as for the vitriol cure, take butter of antimony, pour oil of vitriol into it slowly until the heating and boiling process ceases, and apply with a swab. This remedy works quicker, is stronger than the vitriol, and is just as safe, but its mode of application renders it less sure. —Ohio Farmer. Destroying Weeds. —The remedy for noxious weeds is thorough cultivation. If a piece of ground is full of briars, milk weed, couch grass, Sodom apples, Canada thistles, sorrel, toad flax, or other miserable stuff that so often tries the mettle of our good farmers, let them put the ground in com a couple of years or so, keeping the cultivator going continually, and especially going in the earliest parts of the season, and the toughest character among these weeds will fail to stand the ordeal. If the hand hoe can be spared to go in among the hills of com occasionally, where the teeth of the harrow canhot reach, or to cut off here and there one which the harrow may miss, a bad case may be cured in a single season. But, if this cannot be done, a couple of successive years with a sharptooth cultivator among a com crop will generally do the business for the worst case that ever was. Let any one who has a weedy field* before him resolve, another season, to put the whole tract m com and keep clean, and he will soon give up all the common ideas of smothering out with deep layers of earth, cutting up in the full of the moon, putting salt upon their tops, or the many other recommendations started in the interest, it is believed, of laziness, but which really call for more trouble and hard work than a thorough and systematic cleaning, such as we have indicated, does.—Ocrmantoivn Telegraph.
DOMESTIC RECIPES.
Wet a flannei cloth in kerosene, dip it in dry whiting, and rub the plate ware. Let it dry on it, and then polish with a chamois skin. Chalk, or magnesia, rubbed on silk or ribbon that has been greased, and held near the fire will absorb the grease so that it may be brushed off. Paste for hanging paper should be made about the consistency of cream, perfectly smooth, without lumps; a little size will add to its tenacity, and a small portion of powdered alum will help it to dry. Cranberry Jelly. —Two ounces of isinglass and one pound of sugar to three pints of strained cranberry juice. Make a strong jelly of the isinglass; then add sugar and juice; boil up and strain into your glasses or molds. White Wine Jelly.— Take one pint of cold water and pour it on six sheets of isinglass. Let it stand until dissolved. Then pour a pint of boiling water into it, and add the juice and grated rind of one lemon, one pint of sugar, and one wineglass of white wine. Let it stand until it hardens. This is excellent in sickness, and makes a delicate dessert, to be eaten with cake. Strawberry Conserve.— Prepare the fruit as for preserving, allowing half a pound of loaf sugar to one pound of fruit. Sprinkle the sugar over the fruit at night; in the morning put it on the fire in a kettle, and boil until the berries are clean. Spread on dishes and put in the sun until dry, after which roll the fruit .in sugar and pack in jars. Preserved Strawberries.— Pound for pound of berries and sugar. Put them in a preserving kettle over a slow fire until the Sugar melts. Boil twenty-five minutes fast. Take out in a perforated skimmer, and fill a number of small mn« three-quarters full. Boil and skim the syrup five minutes longer, fill up the jars, and seal while hot. Keep in a cool, dry place. Fish Pudding.—Three pounds of
boiled fish; » large lump of butter; a tablespoonful of flour; two caps of fresh jfe&k. When boiled ft must cool a little. Add to it the yolks of seven eggs, the whftes beaten,,*mul stir it around; th^n broth and capers. This will be found an -excellent and toothsoiae dish. t vine with a sharp kCife or shears, leaving about an inch of the stein, on the cucumber. Use sorobum or any good cane ‘ molagies, as the other sirups will cause them'to become soft. Keep watch of them while g&thering, and if they do not keep good add moreQniolaßses and you will havs piekles iihajt will be good and our.
A Letter in Blood.
chant’s office at Liverpool, England, some years ago: The cashier, while holdit up to the light to test its genuinepess, noticed some faint marks upon it, which, proved to be words scrawled in blood between the printed lines and upon the ilii—b Extraordinary pains were t%ken to decipher these al®*st obliterated characters, and the following sentence was made out : “If r fhp3,note should fall into the hands of ,J<JbA Dean, of Long Hill, near Carlisle, he will learn hefeby hi 3 brother is . languishing a prisoner in Algiers.” Mi*. Dean was promptly communicated with, and he applied to the British Government for assistance toobtain his brother’s release from captivity. The prisoner, who had traced the above sentence upon the note with a splinter of wood dipped in his own blood, had been a slave to the Dey or Mohammedan ruler of Algiers for eleven years, when his strange missive first attracted attention in a Liverpool counting-hpuse. His family and friends had long believed him dead. He was released and brought home to England, where, however, he did not long survive, his constitution having been irreparably injured by exposure, privations, and forced labor in the Dey’s galleys. ■ ”
Useful Memoranda.
' Morning’s milk is richer than that of evening.' • Wood ashes form a good lye for softening water. Green bay leaves allay the inflammation of bee stings. Old clothes should be saved to weave -ifltb' door-mats. Apple pips impart a flue flavor to tarts and dumplings. All linen pieces should be saved and kept for domestic purposes. Kettles and stew pans should be washed outside as well as inside. Soap-suds and soapy water supply the manure for garden soils. Sage leaves in small quantities make an excellent addition to tea. Lemon juice will allay the irritation caused by gnats and flies. An oyster shell put into a tea-kettle will prevent it getting furred. Cold green tea, well sweetened and put into saucers, will destroy flies. Cold potatoes, mashed with peas, make an excellent pudding. TriE most troublesome and dangerous effects sometimes arise from the slightest cause, and often the Baby’s serious sickness could bo prevented by promptly lining Dr. Bull’s Baby Syrup at the beginning. Price only 25 cents a bottle. A young lady showing an elderly woman a beautiful cluster diamond ring, a present, when the old lady dropped her spectacles to the end of her nose, and exclaimed, “Lor’ sakes, I thought it was an old seed wart. ”
PERSONAL.
[Sandusky (Ohio) Daily Register.] Mr. H. Lulay, Suffield, Ohio, writes: Fifteen years my wife suffered with liver disease. I paid an immense amount of money to the doctors, but without any benefit to her. Last year she began to use Hamburg Drops, since which time we have had no occasion for doctors. It anybody is disposed to be harsh on Tanner, he should remember the following scriptural precept from Homans, xiv. 3 : “ Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not; and let not him which eateth not judge him that eateth.” [Peck’s Sun.] “We are going to do something we have never done before, and that is, deliberately and unsolicited to puff a patent medicine. Wc want to say that we indorse, personally, all that is said of St. Jacobs Oil. We have tried it for rheumatism and neuralgia, and it has given instant relief.” The press has had much to say lately against the ice-box for the preservation of the dead. The New York Sanitary Company are demonstrating the fact that the ice-box is no longer necessary for that purpose. Science is answering many knotty questions and solving all sorts of problems; Teachers, authors and others of sedentary habits highly prize Malt Bitters. Judge —“ How comes it that you dared break into this gentleman’s house in the dead of night?” Prisoner—“ Why, Judge, the other time you reproached me for stealing in broad day. Am I not to be allowed to work at ail?” Faintness before eating, pain and distress afterward, prevented by Malt Bitters. In his speculations on the stars, Professor Proctor lias , made $15,000 in the United States. It is a fine thing to have the confidence of the people. Another man might talk about the stars all night and never make a cent.
A Miracle.
Anthony Atwood, a retirod minister of the ;M. E. Church, 809 North Seventeenth street, Philadelphia, Pa., says : “ Hunt's Remedy has cured my wife of Dropsy in its worst form. All hope had left us for months. All say that it i 8 a miracle. Water had dropped from her right limb for months. Forty-eight hours had taken all the extra water from her system. All other pienns had been tried. None succeeded but Hunt's Kennedy. ” Trial size, 75 cents.
Are You Not In Good Health? If the Liver is the source of your trouble, you can find an absolute remedy in Dr. Sanford's Liver IimaoBATOB, the only vegetable cathartic which acts directly on the Liver. Cures all Bilious diseases. For Book address Da. Sanford, 162 Broadway, New York. Dr. C. E. Shoemaker, the well-known aural surgeon of Beading, Pa., offers to send by mail, free of charge, a valuable little book on deafness and diseases of the ear—especially on running ear and catarrh, and their proper treatment—giving references and testimonials that will satisfy the most skeptical. Address as above. Vegetine is. not a stimulating bitters which creates a fictitious appetite, but a gentle tonic which assists nature to restore the stomach to a healthy action. Hypochondriacal condition from an overtasked brain requires Medetur to revive the nerves Correct your habits of crooked walking by using Lyon’s Patent Metallic Heel Stiffeners. The Frazer axle grease is the best and only genuine. We know it. Wilhoft’s Fever andAgueTordo. Skis old reliable remedy now sells at one dollar.
DTBULL’S m SYRUP
The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to the afflicted upon thirty days’ trial See their advertisement in this papa, headed, “On Thirty Days’ TriaL" HOFMANN’S HOP MLM, > qwcUecn* for Fever and Ague. Biliousness and Malarial Potoooin* of tbe Blood. Fifty pill, for GO cento. BMfhtcH, Wltm ui Mother*. DR. MARCHISrS UTERINE OATHOLICONvrfD pmdtively cure Female Weakness inch as Falling of the Womb, White*. Chronic Inflammation or Ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful, Sop pressed and Irregular Menstruation, do. An old and reliable remedy. Send postal card for a pamphlet, with treatment, cures and certificate* from physicians and patients, to HOWARTH ft BALLARD, Utica. N. Y. Sold by all Druggists—*L GO per bottle. McLAIN’S VERMIFUGE BONBONS for Worms in Children are deUdons and never fail to cure.
Vegetine Purifies the Blood, Renovates and invigorates the Whole System. ITS MEDICINAL PROPERTIES ARE Alterative, Tonic, Solvent and Diuretic. ■ Via mss is made exclusively from the Juice* of carefully selected barks, roots and herbs, and so strongly concentrated that It will effectually eradicate from the ay stem every taint of Scrofula, Scrofulous Humor, Tumors, Cancer, Cancerous Humor, Erysipelas, Salt Rheum, Syphilitic Diseases, Canker, JFaintness at the Stomach, and sD diseases that arias from Impure blood. Sciatica, Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Neuralgia, dent and Spinal Complaint*, can only be effectually cured through the blood. For deer* and Eruptive Disease* «f the Skin, Pustules, Pimples, Blotches, Bolls, Tetter, Scaldhead and Ringworm, Yiamirs has never failed to effect a permanent cure. For Pain* In the Back, Kidney Complaints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, Leucorrhcea, arising from internal ulceration, and uterine diseases and General Debility, Vsqitihb acts directly upon the causes of these complaints. It invigorates and strengthens the whole system, acts upon the secretive organs, allays Inflammation, cures ulceration and regulates the bowels. For Catarrh, Dyspepsia, Habitual Costiveness, Palpitation of the Heart, Headache; Plies, Nervousness, and General Prostration of the Nervous System, no medicine has ever given such perfect satisfaction as the VMBTUtm, It purifies the blood, deansei all of the organs, and possesses a controlling power over the nervous system. The remarkable cures effected by Viornsi have Induced many physician* and apothecaries whom we know to prescribe and use it in their own families In fact, VxGETiNi Is the best remedy yet discovered for the above diseases, and is the only reliable BLOOD PllltlFlElt yet placed before the public. Vegeiine is Sold bj all Druggists. TJ/uTbitterF TRADE MARK AND HOPS^ THIS MATCHLESS RENOVATOR of feeble and exhausted constitutions is rich in tho elements that go t » nourish and strengthen the blood. It perfects digestion, stimulates the liver, kidneys, bowels and urinary organs, quiets the brain and nervous forces, and induces refreshing sleep. MALI’ BITTERS commend themselves to the weak, convalescent, overworked, debilitated, nervous, sleepless and melancholy, as the purest, safest and most powerful restorative in medicine. Prepared by the MALT BITTERS COMPANY, from Unjtrmented Halt and Hops. MALT BITTERS COMPANY BOSTON, MASS. CM 3f ■ Rl B Itching Humors, Scaly Eruptions, A « D lff ■ Scalp Affections, Salt Rheum, m 1 b awl Psoriasis, Scald Head. Ulcers ana m mH B S° r ® B infallibly cured by the ilnjppjjnpc Cuticnra Remedies, Ij which have performed miracles of healing, unparalleled in medical history. Send for ILLUSTRATED TREATISE, containing testimonials from every part of the Union. Prepared by WEEKS ft POTTER, Chemists. Boston, Mass. Sold by Druggists. FREE! A Musical Journal. Add’s F.Brebm, Erie, Pa. (hop a week in your own town. Terms and $5 Outfit ip D 0 free. Address H. Hallett ft Co., Portland, Me. AHIII9M Mornhinc Habit Cared la 10 to 20 day*. Sopaj till Cured. VI IVIVI Hr. J. Stki’hens, Lebanon, Ohio.
SfcOJ 141 141 A TEAR and expenses to 'jf '7 agents. Outfit Free. Address P. M M m O. .VICKERY, Augusta, Maine. $C+ /s <fc Ofl per day at home. Samples worth $5 free 90 I/O jpaU Address STINSON A CO., Portland, Me. YouncmlN 'asiaamfiMK ■ morth. Every graduate guaranteed a paying situation. Address R. Valentine, Manager, Janesville, W is. enrn A MONTH! 'Agents Wanted! \ A “ll I 7/> Best-Selling Articles in the world: a samtHUUU pie free. JAY BRONSON, Detroit, Mich. TAYLOR.— All persons of family name of Tatlor will receive interesting and valuable information tur sending address to J. KIRK TAYLOR, Jersey City, N. J. n a fa pO T Campaign BADGES, with gilt DAUvlCoi Eagle and Shield, on red, white and blue ribbon, with life-like photographs of both candidates of either party. SI.OO per doz. Sample 15 cents. Big thing to sell. Patten A Co., 43 Barclay St., N. Y. Our WELL AUGER is the cheapest, bores the fastest. We are the oldest and largest firm in America. Send for our pictorial catalogue. United States Mf'g Co., Chicago, 111. BUSINESS COLLEGE. CLINTON BUSINESS COLLEGE, Clinton, la. Firstclass facilities. Annual announcement free. NORTHWESTERN COLLEGE, Naperville, 111. Full Faculty; eight courses; expenses unusually low. Apply to Rev. A. A. SMITH, President, or Rev. J. LERCH, Treasurer. UJHIPfIPF Best Crayon Portraits, 12x15. nflllUUvlVi Each lO cts.by mail. Also, other oanfTHDEICI fl didates. Agents Wanted. GEO. bAnrlCLlf. FERINE, 100 Nassau St., New York. WAN TED—Agent* everywhere to sen our goo at by sample, to families. We give attractive present# and first-class goods to your customers; we give you good profits; we prepay all express charges; we furnish outfit bee. Write for particulars. PEOPLE’S TEA CO., Box 5085, St. Louis, Mo. « TRUTH in MIGHTY t _ Prefseeor Marlla.g, the great 6»au|«h / /jaWhN l Beer and WioH, will far Bo Ceuta. / mfll \ V With year age, height, cater *r eyes aai [ \ J lock cf hair, aend to yon a correct picture I HTJI a 1 J of year futare h us hand or wife, initial# of \ J f vsal name, the time and place where yon VnaMOdHu Will first meet, and the date of Biarriago, wWPsB^ . Addrees. Prof. MARTINEZ. 4 Previa** B*.. Bnmm. Mo*. Tkit U m kmmhm I SHAKER THEOLOGY. Script” Rntlonnl —A book that every Statesman, Logician, Lawyer, Doctor and Preacher should read. A neat steel engraving of the author in Shaker coetume adorns the frontispiece. It is neatly printed and bound, containing 222 pages vo., and sent, postage paid, for 81.00. Address BISHOP EADS, South Union, Ky. AGENTS wishing to canvass for the Uvea of GARFIELD 3 HANCOCK Should write at once for Circulars and terms of agency to FORSHEE A McMAKIN, Cincinnati. O. ' CELLULOID EYE-GLASSES. » representing the choicest-selected Tortoise-Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest and strongest known. Sold by Opticians and Jewelers. Made by SPENCER O. M. CO. 13 Maiden Lane, New York. IMPORTANT TO AGENTS. THE IjIFE OF GEN. J4S. A. GARFIELD By his personal friend, MAJOR BUNDY, Editor Y. T. Mail, is the only edition to which Gen. Garfield has given personal attention or facts. Beautifully illustrated, printed and bound. Full length steel portrait by Hall, from a picture taken expressly for this work. Active Agent* WKilled. Liberal terms. Send St 1 .Oil at once for complete outfit. A. S. BARNES A CO. 11l A 113 William Street, New York. PENSIONS] New law. Thousands of Soldiers and heirs entitled. Pension# date back to discharge or death. Time 1 imited, . Address, with stamp, u GEORGE E. LEMOfT, P. O. Drawer B*s. Washington, D. C. X ARIES ANB STOKE-KEEPKRS-Yon Ju can get Choice Goods cheap, by writing us an order on a Postal Card for our Price List, which enables you to order good* by mall the best way. and sfee the many kinds of Merchandise we keep for sale at »uf- * prisingly low prices. We send samples of Laces, Ribbons, Fringes, etc., if requested. We sell Wholesale and Retail for Cash down. Anew combination system which we have just started enables us to quote very close prices. We have sl, $2 and $5 packages of notions which cannot be bought for twice the money elsewhere, all wanted in every family. Money returned if not satisfactory for any purchase. HOUGHTON & DUTTON, 66 Tremont St ./Boston, Mass.
THE MARKETS.
NEW YORK. Beeves ....$7.00 @lO 00 Hogs 4 85 @ 5 15 Cotton 11>4@ 11?4 Flour—Superfine 380 @ 4 40 Wheat—No. 2 1 04 @ 1 10 Corn—Western Mixed 45 @ 48 Oats—Mixed 36 @ 18 Rye—Western 82 (A (-3 I’obk—Mess 14 50 @ls 00 f-ASD- 7)i@ 7* CHICAGO. Beeves—Choice Graded Steers 4 50 @ 4 85 Cows and Heifers 2 50 @ 3 75 • Medium to Fair 4 10 @ 4 23 Hogs 3 50 @ 4 85 Flour—Fancy Uhite Winter Ex.... 5 50 @ 600 Good to Choice Spring Ex.. 4 25 @ 5 00 Wheat—No. 2 Spring 90 @ 92 No. 3 Spring 80 @ 83 Corn—No. 2., 35 @ 36 Oats—No. 2 23 @ 24 Kye—No. 2. 74 @ 75 Harley—No. 2 75 @ 76 Hotter—Choice Creamery 26 @ 27 Logs—Fresh .. 12*tf@ 14 Pork—Mess 15 50 @ls 75 Lard 7 @ 7L MILWAUKEE. Wheat—No. 1 1 01 ® 1 10 No. 2. 94 @ 95 Corn—No. 2 35 @ 36 Oats—No. 2, 23 @ 24 Rye—No. 1... 71 @ 72 Barley—No. 2 72 @ 73 ST. LOUIS. Wheat—No. 2 Red. 89 @ 90 Corn—Mixed 34 @ 35 Oats—No. 2 23 @ 24 Rye 59 ® 60 Pork—Mess 14 75 @l6 00 Lard 7)* CINCINNATI. Wheat 91 @ 92 Corn 39 @ 40 Oats 28 @ 33 Rye 70 @ 71 Pork—Mess 14 23 @l4 50 Lard ’. 7 @ 7^ TOLEDO. Wheat—No. 1 White 93 @ 1 01 No. 2 Red 97 @ 98 Corn—No. 2 39 («) 40 Oats—No. 2 26 @ 27 DETROIT: F10ur—Ch0ice.:..........., 4 75 @ 5 23 Wheat—No. 1 White 96 i.i, i 07 Corn—No. 1.: 42 «is 43 Oats—Mixed 32 @ 33 Barley (per cental) 1 25 ;>t 1 75 Pork—Mess 15 00 (.113 50 INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat—No. 2 Red 90 @ 92 Corn 35 @ 41 Oats 23 @ 20 Fork —Clear 15 00 (Sl6 0 ) EAST LIBERTY, I>A. Cattle—Best 4 75 @ 5 00 Fair 4 00 @ 4 5(1 Common 3 oo 3 75 Hogs 5 00 <<* 5 25 •Ihkep 350 (<J 4 60
Perry Davis’Pain Killer * IS RECOMMENDED By Physicians , by Missionaries , by Ministers , by Mechanics, by Nurses in Hospitals, BY EVERYBODY. DIIU l#ll I FD IS A SURE cure:for r AIN KILLtn sore Throat, Chill*, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Cramps, Cholera, and all Bowel Complaint*. Dim VII I CD IS THE BEST REMr AIN MLLtn EDA known to the World for Sick Headache, Pain in the Back, Pain In the Side, Rheumatism and Neuralgia. UNQFESTIOXABLY THE Seat Xjlnlment made X Its equal having neveryet been found. tar- For Sale by all Medicine Dealer*. Aina week. sl2 a day at home easily made. Costly 3> / C Outfit free. Address True ft Co.. Augusta. Me. DONTSUFFIR From any Kidney Complaint. Lame or Weak Lark, or llarkarhe. DR. FLOYD’S KIDNEY PLASTERS never fail to cure these complaints, as hundreds will testify. Price. 170 cents each; two for Oue Dollar. Sent free to any address on receipt of price. Not to be found at drug stores. Agents, Male or Female, wanted in every town. Send for circulars. Address HOOD ib BOWER, Proprietors, Deerfield, Lenawee Co., Michigan. ITAHIVIIVI ■ We have made a reill IPP 11* U I deletion in prices on iiUl luxi i :;:;sris*,•£*.ras I,ist No. 27. Any reader of till* Paper not in possession of our Price Mat Mo, 27 should send for a copy immediately. Free to any address. Reduced price* limited to August 21st, 1880. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., 227 & 229 Wabash Ave„ Chicago, Ill.' mA n ii n reward of Bleeding. ■i a B|II 9B a Blind, Itching, or Ulcerated || 111111 l Piles that Dcßing’s Pile wßk 3 I i D H I B Remedy failstocure. Gives Isl I I I E B I I immediate relief, cures cares 1 1 of long standing in 1 week, all ■ ■■■■■■ and ordinary cares in 2 days. SB I U w w CAUTION md"«"vX"» wrapper hat printed on it in black a Ctl* of Stones and Dr. J. V. Miller's signature, rhila. Si a bottle. Sold I AGENTS MAKE *5.00 PEA DAY SELLING OUR NEW Platform FAMILY SCALE Weighs accurately up to 25 lbs. Its handsome appearance sells It at sight to house-keepers. A REGULAR BOOM FOR AGENTS. Exclusive territory given. Terms surprise old Agents. Send for full particulars, Domestic Scale Co., No. 190 W. Filth St., Cincinnati, 0. AGENTS WANTED to sell the LIFE of GEN.BARFIELDSsS Complete, authentic, loir-priced . Fully Illustrated. Positively the best and cheapest Book. None other official. ppii uA&imri# belli HANGUuK by his life-long friend, Hon. J. W. FORNEY, editor Philadelphia Press. Fully Illustrate.,* Positively tbe ablest and most truly official work. !F« grant the best terms. Send 50 cents for outfit of either book, or 81 for outfit of both. Address HUBBARD BROS., Chicago, 111. PETROLEUM ITI flllT TITTI Grand Medal If (I \ L 1.1 |U I* Silver Medal "*£s3BK*l HullilllllllE^n. This wonderful substance is acknowledged byphysioians throughout the world to be the best remedy discovered for the cure of Wounds, Barns, Rheumatism, Skin Diseases. Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains, «sec. In order that every one may try it. It Is put up in 16 and 25 oent bottles for household nee. Obtain it from your druggist, and yon will find ft snp.tior to anything yon have ever used.
YOU GAN BE CURED OF YOUR CATARRH! HOW? Send lOc to DR. 0. R. SYKES, 138 E. Madison st, Chicago, 111., and he will send by return mail “ The True Theory of Catarrh and full Information of a Sure Cure.” Name this paper, and wilt# without delay. NATRONA'S Is the best in the World. It is absolutely pure. It Is ths best for Medicinal Purposes. It is the best for Baking and all Family Uses. Sold by all Druggists and Grocers. Penn’a Salt ManDfacfim Co.,Piiila. MEDETUR. Pearls of strength, and specific cure for Headaches, Dyspepsia, Loss of Memory, Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Nervousness. Supply nerve and brain power, repair waste and revive the organic system. By druggists or mall SI.OO. THE SPECIFIC MEDICINE CO., 159 A 161 Lake St, Chicago,proprietors. The Koran. A cariosity to every one, and a necessity to nil students of History or Religion « THE KORAN OF MOHAMMED; translated from tbs Arabic by George Sale. Formerly published at $2.76; a new, beautiful type, neat, cloth-bound edition; price, 35 cents, and G cents for postage. Catalogue of many standard works, remarkably low in prioo, with extra tei ms to clubs, free. Say where you saw this advertisement. Amxkican Book Exchange. Tribune Building, N. Y. RED RIVER VALLEY 2,000,000 Acres Wheat Lands best in ths World, for sals by ths St. Pail, Minneapolis A Manitoba E.R. CO. Three dollars per acre allowed the settler for break lag and cultivation. For particulars apply to D. A. McKINLAY, land Commissioner. *t. Paul. Minn.
~ * MATC HL£ S S'*. ?T - »UNR I VALLED^ifcI AWARDED PRICES |1 vilfJlir ATALLTHEBREtt *Tossoo^ Exhibitions and upwards? fcjyil rOREASYPAYMEHrsIIfySf 1 l** is PER MONTH - NO OTHER 12MONTHS,OR$638 § W% PtR QUARTiR Foß '*i JkHAVE BEEN AWARDED MW&gmSmmn SUCH at ANY. FREE.^^yi '■’MUSICIANS OENERAHV RFFARD THEMj_A3HjHEQUAU-E D*—THEODORETHOMAS. ~| [mason BThAMLJN OROANOO?BOSTO?ffrEW-YORK'BrCHICA&cj
SWMSf MM FOB RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellmgs and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. t No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entails but tho comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cent*, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of ite claims. Directions in Eleven Language*. BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGEIiER A CO., Baltimore, McL, U. S. A.. On 30 Days 1 Trial. We will send our Electro-Voltaio Beits and other Rlectrio Applianoe* upon trial for 80 days to those tffliotod with Aervous VehiHty and diseases qf a permn l nature. Also of the Liter, Kidneys, Rheumatism, Paralysis, fto. A sure cure guaranteed or no pay. Address Voltulc Belt Co.. Hankall, Mich. SAPONIFIER Is the OrlglH' 11 ” Concentrated Lye and Reliable Family Soap Maker. Directions accompany each Can for making Hurd, Ho ft and Toilet Sony quickly. It Is fuU weight and strength. Ask your grocer for BAPONIFIEK, and take no other. Penn’a Salt Manufact’ng Co., Phila. Arc —ild by all ililrd ware and n.m.M Hpnl.r,. Tlinro is no one owning a horse or mule hut what will find in this line of goods, something of great value, end especially adapted to their wants. COVERT il’F’G CO., WestTeoy.N. Y„ Sole Manufacturers. DANIEL F. BEATTY’S ORGANS 17-Stop Organs, Sub-bass ft Oct. Coupler, boxed ft shipped, only 907.7' New Pianos s>l9s to HI,BOO. Before you buy an I strumeut be sure to soe my Midsummer offer illustrah free. Address DANIEL F. BEATTY. Washington. N.. THE AND BRICK MACHINERY. SPECIALTIES t TlflT.iny Improved Tile Machine, Sward's Patent Brick Machine, Clay Crushers with Chilled Boilers, Horizontal Tile and Brick Machine. E Sf Write for circulars and prices. H. BREWER & CO., Tecunisch, Midi.
FOR CHILLS AND FEVER AND ALL DISDABJOfI CAUSED BY Malarial Poisoning OF THE BLOOD. A Warranted Cure. Price, SI.OO. I W~ FOB SOLX BY ALL DRUGGISTS. *1
C.GILBERTS STARQa
B permanentlycure^Ti Hkidney diseases, n U LIVER COMPLAINTS,M and Piles. { ITHAB imjVDU ■WONDERFUL If til JH n power. n M BECAUSE IT ACTS ON THE II H liver,the BOWELS AND KID-H Hneys at the same time. ■ □ Because It cleansss ths system offl BSthe poisonous humors that develops M Bln Kidney and Urinary diseases, 811-H Ffiuousness, Jaundice, Constipation,n I (Piles, or In Rheumatism, Neuralgia! I yand Female disorders. I KIDNEY-WOIIT 1. .dry vegetable dam-M Ejjgpound and can be seat by mail prepaid. fl □ One package will make atx qts of medicine. U I TRY ll* NOW I | ■ Bny It at the Druggists. Price, SI.OO. fl I 1 VZLLS, BICHAEC3OM k CO., Proprieton, I I yO , Burlington, Tt U THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY, euros Lenoorrhoea, (or whites.) Painful Menstruation.Ulceration,Ova. rian Diseases, Absent Menstruation, all diseases, known as female weakness. They have been used in England for years as a periodical and regulating pilL Bold by ail Druggists everywhere. Pricesl.ooperboxorsix boxes for $6.00, sent waled. Wholesale A gents for U. 8. IWPamphletesent free. YAM SCHAAOjt. STEVENSON A CO., Agta., Chicago 0. N. U. No. 32 WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISER.**, Vlease say you saw the advertisement in this paper.
