Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 April 1884 — Page 7

The Water Lily’s Story.

When I first opened my eyes to the daylight I was in a lovely place. My home was a beautiful pond, whose waters were so clear they reflected the blue sky and fleecy clouds overhead, and where everything was still and calm and quiet; I was surrounded by fair companions each as lovely as myself. We grew fairer and sweeter every day, and we thought ourselves better than the common flowers that grew on the farther side of the pond, the Daisies, the Blue Violets, Adders’ Tongues, that queer fellow, Jack in the Pulpit, and the Wild Bose, who was so rude if any one touched her. Were we not tall and slender, fair and sweet of face, and did not our green dresses become our fair complexions wonderfully? Were we not admired by every one who saw us; and more than all, did notour mirror, the pond, ffell us we were beautiful every time we glanced in it ? Yesterday there came to our pleasant home a gay pleasure-boat with a party of ladies and gentlemen; the ladies all exclaimed, as soon as they saw us, “Oh, how sweet, how lovely I” and one, whose face was like an angel’s, reached over and took me and several of my companions into the boat with them. The other ladies gathered some of my fair sisters, and we were all carried away to our new and separate homes. The lady that I and my sisters were with took us tp a grand house on a hill, where we were again admired and our fragrance inhaled, and at night I shone like star in the raven braids of my new mistress’s hair m a ball-room. Her lover’s hand E laced me there, and as he did so, he ent and whispered something in her ear, and then kissed the rosy lips that looked so tempting. The warm bloom rose to her cheek, and I thought I never had beheld anything so beautiful. I missed my old home and my pretty mates, but I felt Bure I had fallen into good hands, and I felt proud in having so beautiful a mistress, and being so aJlmired. When my mistress came home and looked in the mirror she saw my dropping head, for the heat in the ball-room had made me faint and languid. She took me from her hair, and said, tenderly, as she held me in her hand, “Poor wilted lily, Pm sorry you faded so soon.” Then she put me in a vase of water, which refreshed and strengthened me, and this morning when she looked at me my white petals were open once more, which made her exclaim: “Ah, my pretty lily, you are alive yet, aint you.” But I lave lost some of my fragance, and I know that before the sun sets I shall be dead, for the life pf a lily is very frail. They say this is a cold world, but “my lines have fallen in pleasant places,” and I am sure that when I am dead, and all my heauty and fragrance gone forever, my sweet mistress will not threw me into the street to be trampled in the mud, but will lay me carefully away in remembrance of the night whei* her lover whispered sweet, tender words as he placed me in her shining braids of hair.— Floral World.

A Very High Fever.

All physicians recognize the power of imagination in curing disease, and a new instance of it is given in the Medical Record by a doctor living in New Jersey. Being called to prescribe for a patient living in the hills above Keyport, who had long been afflicted with epilepsy, and whose mind was now somewhat impaired, I noticed, he says, a remarkable pallor of countenance, and that the surface of the body was very cold to the touch. So I produced a clinical thermometer to ascertain the temperature. Tl\e young man evidently looked upon it as a part of the treatment. So rapt wa3 he tli at when I went to withdraw the thermometer he gave a start like one rudely assailed. “How did it affect you?” queried I. “Very well indeed,” he replied; “I think it has made me feel much better.” And then, raising his hand with an air of benediction, be added: “It had such a quieting influence.” An hour afterward [I visited a young domestic in anolher family, who was convalescing from a mild attack of typhoid fever, where the temperature had ranged from 100 to 102 degrees for several days. While here I related the above incident to her employers, who laughed heartily, but the girl, with a look of scornful superiority, cried out: “Pooh! he mustn’t ever have seen one before! Why, I have had two at a time in my mouth, and thought nothing of it.” “Why was that ?” asked I. “When I was on Bandall’s Island.” “Yes, but why ? what were two used for?” “Because —because,” blurted she in confusion, “my fever was so high they couldn’t tell it all on one!” ' This girl belonged probably to a large class of people in country towns who seem to regard diseases as accomplishments, and to think that person the most entitled to honor who has suffered most. — Youth’s Companion.

Ancient English Laws.

' Tfae following are a few of the laws of England nearly twelve hundred years ago: If any servant, by command of the master, shall do any servile work after the sun shall be set on Saturday, or on Sunday, the master shall pay 80 shillings for the task. -If a servant shall travel on either of those days, he shall pay 6 shillings, or be whipped. If a freeman shall travel on a day forbidden, he shall stand in the pillory, and the informer shall have half, as well of the mulct as of the wirgil. If a husbandman, without the knowledge of his wife, shall offer anything to the devil, he shall forfeit his estate and , stand in the pillory; but if both of them shall offend, she also shall lose all her goods, and stand in the pillory. If a servant shall offer anything to the devil, he shall lose 6 shillings, or be whipped. If any person shall give flesh to his servant to be eaten on a fast day, his servant shall be free. If any servant shall voluntarily eat it, he shall either pay 6 shillings or be whipped. If a secular man shall kill a thief, ho composition shall be mode by she kinsman of hida that is slain. If any freeman carry away anything that is

stolen, the King shall choose any one of these three punishments: Either that the thief shall be slain or banished beyond the seas, or rather his wirgil (which was the value of his head or life), and he who apprehended him shall have half his goods; but if he shall kill him, he shall pay 70 shillings. If any servant shall be robbed, and shall suffer the thief to escape, he shall pay 70 shillings, or , which the King pleases; but if any one shall slay him, his master shall have half his goods. If any stranger shall wander privily through the country, and shall neither cry aloud nor sound his horn, he shall be taken for a thief, and shall either be slain or banished.

Latter-Day Bohemians.

It was a great crowd that hung around Pfaaff’s, in the days when the famous humorist, Charley Browne, was delivering his 100 lectures at Dodworth Hall. Josh Billings used to go there then, when he was only a poor auctioneer. But Josh was not a Bohemian by sympathy—he was too saving for that. Bret Harte, Bailey, the Danbury News man, Griswold, and the celebrated humorist, Leonard, hung out there. Charley Brown was at one time a Cleveland journalist, but the proprietor of Vanity Fair took him to New York, paying him SI,BOO a year. When Vanity Fair died at the end of eighteen months, “Artemus Ward” Swore that he killed it with his ghastly humor, for Browne was a humorist of no mean merit, and w&s something of a Bohemian, and a remarkably brilliant one in conversation. Of the Bohemians of to-day, volumes may be written. Some of the finest work on the metropolitan press comes from their caustic pens. New York has Bohemians who, when they have passed away, will leave a. lustrous fame. Chicago has its Bohemia, and many of the cleverest productions that grace the pages of the great dailies there are the work of the guild. There are but one or two Bohemians in Detroit, but many in St. Louis and New Orleans, and more in Washing’ton and Paris. London, however, is Bohemia par excellence of the world, for the best writers on the press there, and the most brilliant critics and poets, are all of Bohemia.— George M. Grummond, in St. Louis Magazine.

The Greatest Religious Edifice in America.

The great building at Salt Lake, which the Saints have been twentyeight years in constructing, is approaching completion, The main walls are done. It is built of granite, which is hauled from the mountains back of Salt Lake on great wagons or trucks with wheels twelve feet high. The walls are ten feet in thickness, and eightyfive feet in height. It has cost up to this time $4,500,000, which has been collected by the tithing tax. It will require six years more to finish the work. Probably no other church building in the United States has been constructed in a way to secure such durability as is possible to this. Some of those who predict tlie early ruin of the Mormon hierarchy are wondering what use they can make of this temple. But such calculations are rather premature. The sect may endtre longer than the temple.— Alta California.

The Baby Wouldn’t Fit.

A young German woman, of ample proportions, and with flowing robes and a small baby, boarded a Third avenue elevated train, fehe selected a place with two vacant seats on each side, and, in sitting, covered with her dress the low wooden partitions separating the seats. Then she tried to make the baby lie down by her side, with its head in her lap. Not succeeding on one side, she tried the other, but each time the small of the baby’s back met the hidden partition, and it couldn’t be made to fit. The baby resisted the endeavor, and raised a noisy lamentation. The mother, after many efforts, concluded that its perverseness was not to be subdued, and snatched it into her lap, with the remark: “Yell, ven you can’t keep dot backpone straight, I tink it’s petter you sit up.” Then she looked around to see why all the passengers were laughing.— New Fork Sun.

Employment Essential to Happiness.

It may be laid down as an incontrovertible principle that no family can be happy without employment—regular, diversified, continually recurring employment. There may be the possession of wealth, there may be an ample and beautiful domain, there may be everything externally tb enjoy, but unless there be an appropriate and varied employment to occupy the body, engross the mind, and awaken the energies, there cannot be happiness. It is the active, industrious, persevering family that is the truly happy family; not the idle, the slothful, the useless — not the family that has no definite plan, no fixed and important object, no personal and collective energy. f

Arkansas Culture.

“Let me see,” said a young lady graduate to a highly intellectual friend, "was it Pope who wrote the ‘lliad,’ or was it the' ‘lliad' who wrote Pope?” “Neither” replied the intellectual friend.' “It was blind Homer who translated the ‘lliad.’” “Oh, yes, now I remember. I would give anything for ‘ Iliad ’ any way!” “Why, it is a poem telling all about an old fellow who lived in a tub of water.” “I don’t believe that a man could live in a tub of water, do you?” “Oh, no; but then - we must not question ancient mythology.”— Arkansan) Trawler.

On Good Terms with the Dog.

“Do you know the Jacksons?” asked a lady of a young man who lived in their neighborhood. “No; I’m not personally acquainted with all the members of the family,” he replied, “but I always speak to the dog at the front gate as I go past.— Merchant Traveler. Weddings often leave old familiar hearts and places as haunted and empty as funerals. They are the funerals of old associations.

REMINISCENCES OF ROCHESTER.

The Falls of the Geacaee and Sam Patch’s Fatal Leap—One of Ita Badness Homes and Its Great Magnitude. The present floods, whieh are either devastating or threatening the country in every direction, are justly cause for apprehension. No matter whether they come suddenly or by slow degrees, they are, in either case, a great evil and much to be dreaded, and yet America will always be troubled by these spring overflows. Probably one of the most disastrous that was ever known occurred in Rochester, N. Y., about twenty years ago. The Genesee River, just above the salts, where Sam Patch made his final and fatal leap, became completely blockaded by Ice, forming an impassable dam, and the water coming down the Genesee River overflowed the principal portion of the city of Rochester. This catastrophe would have been repeated the present year had not the energy and forsight of the city authorities prevented it.' The writer happened to be in Rochester at that time and was greatly interested iu the manner in which this great catastrophe was averted. Every ie .v moments, a roar like the peals of thunder or the booming of cannon would be heard, and in order to see this ice blasting process the writer went to the top of the new Warner Building, which overlooks the Genesee River. From here he was not only enabled to see the process uninterruptedly, but also the magnificent building which has just been completed. This Is unquestionably the finest building devoted to business and manufacturing purposes In America, being’ entirely fireproof, eight stories high, and containing over four and a quarter acres offlooring. Mr. Warper treated your correspondent very courteously, and in the course of the conversation said: “ We are doing a tremendous fiusiness, and are far behind in our orders. This is the season of the year when people, no matter how strong their constitution may be, feel, more or less, the pain and indisposition, the headaches, colds, neuralgia, rheumatism, dull pains, sore throats, coughs—all the I.OUI ills that flesh is heir to, come this time of year, if at all.' It is natural, therefore, that we should be very busy. This Is specially true of our Safe Rheumatic Cure, and it is crowding us very sharply for a new remedy.” “ Singular, but I had forgotten that you do not advertise to cure all diseases from one bottle, as is done generally by many other medicine men, but i supposed Warner's Safe Cure was for the cure of rheumatism.” “And so it has been until our remedy, which was especially for rheumatism and neuralgia, was introduced. We have been three years perfecting this new remedy. Study first taught us there were certain powerful elements In Waiter’s Safe Cure, better known as Warner's base Kidney and Liver Cure, that made wonderful cures in chronic and acute rheumatism, but during our investigation we learned of a remarkable cure at a celebrated springs, and put experts to investigate and found that the springs did not contain any valuable properties, but the course of treatment that was being given there was performing all the benefit. By carefully combining the active principles of this remedy with our Safe Cure, wo have produced our Safe Rheumatic Cure, and the cures It Is affecting arc simply wonderful, and 1 do not doubt it will beeome as popular as our Safe Cure.” “You seem to talk freely in regard to your remedies, and appear to have no secrets, Mr. Warner.” “None whatever. The physician, with his hundred calls and one hundred diseases, is necessarily compelled to guess at a great deal. We arc enabled to follow up and perfect, while physicians can only experiment with their hundred patients and hundred diseases. With the ordinary physician, the code binds him down, so that if he makes a discovery, he is bound to give it to the other physicians, which, of course, discourages investigation, to a great extent This is why the great iscovei lea in medieal science of late years have been made by chemists and scientists and not by physicians, and it in a measure accounts for the great value of our romedies, also for the remarkable success of aU those doctors who make a specialty of one or two diseases.” “And you flnd’that you are curing as great & number of people as ever before/” “Yes, a far greater number. We never sold so much of our medicine as now, and never knew of so many remarkable cures.” The writer departed after the above interview, but was greaOy impressed, not only by the sincerityof Mr. Warner, but by the vastness of all he saw. Mr. Warner's medicines are used throughout the entire length and breadth of the land, and we doubt not the results they are effecting arc really as wonderful as they arc related to be. There’s a silence of grief, there’s a silence of hatred, there’s a silence of dread—of these men may speak, and these they can describe; but the silence of our happiness, who can describe that?— W. 11. Jj. Murray.

The Key Note

Of half the Infirmities which mar comfort and aggravate one another is a lack of physical energy, easily remedied at the outset with a reliable invigorant. As a means of checking premature decay, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is unrivaled. The functions of digestion and assimilation, always imperfectly performed where there Is a loss of vigor and bodily substance, are aided; nervousness and falling off of appetite are speedily remedied through Its agency. Constipation and disorder of the liver are thoroughly relieved by the Bitters, and the kidneys act more effectively In straining impurities from the blood when it is resorted to as a diuretic. Rheumatic complaints are averted, fever and aguo cured and prevented, and the ailments to which the aged are specially subject are mitigated by it. Persons who experience difficulty in sleeping soundly, will find that a wineglassful swallowed before retiring will facilitate repose. 1 1 • “I herd,” is the way the cow-boy begins his conversation.

My Six-Year-Old Daughter.

Dr. C. D. Warner: Dear Sir— l received the complimentary bottle of White Wine of Tar Syrup you so kindly sent me. Our little 6-year ol<l daughter had a very sore throat, badly ul> erated. and coughed almost incessantly. We gave the medicine according to directions, and she began to improve immediately and soon got well. Please accept thanks. Mrs. Groves and I have recommended it to others. 1 shall want to get some of it at the beginning of winter, as I consider it a very superior medicine. Yours very respectfully, Hev. H. D. Groves, C.arksviile, Mo. Pastor M. E. Church.

"Put up” at the Gault House.

The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of $3 and $2.30 per day at the Gault House, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only ono block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointments first-class. H. W. Horr, Proprietor.

Cattle Wanted.

Parties having cattle for sale of any class, please address, giving grade,numbers, ago and price, John C. Abbott, Box 2250, Denver, Col For Dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits, and general debility in tbelr various forms; also, as a preventive against fever and ague, and ether Intermittent fevers, the “ Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., of New York, and.sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no oqual. Mothers, the best dressing for children’s hair Is Carboline, made from purepetroli um, thoroughly deodorized and delightfully perfumed. it makes the little one s hair soft; silky, and glossy; it also eradicates dandruff. The Increasing sales of Plso’s Cure attest Its olaim as the best cough remedy. Use the Frazer Axle Grease, ’tlstbe bestln tho world—will wear twice as long as any other. Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator—Cathartic, Tonic: will cure when other medicines fail. Pmo’s Itemody for Catarrh is A certain our* for that very obnoxious disease.

Seven Wise Men Baffled.

The New York Morning Journal says thatjttrs. F. G. Kellogg, 50 East Eightysixth street, was partially paralysed, and lay for seven days in convulsions. Physicians were engaged and discharged until seven had failed to help or cure her. She was unable to leave her bed, and was as helpless as a child. After using all sorts of salves, ointments, lotions and plasters, her case was given up as hopeless. She was induced to try St. Jacobs Oil as a last chance. She began to improve from the time the first application was made, and, by its continued use, she has completely recovered.

Typhoid in Cities.

The writer, from a long experience in hospital practice, can assert that true intermittent and remittent fevers proving fatal are not indigenous; they occur mostly in people coming from subtropical or tropical climates. For a long period he has given his attention to the place of the origin of well-de-veloped intermittent fever, and he has been surprised to see how' large a proportion has occurred in non-residents, or those having a temporary residence out of the city and in a malarious region.— Medical News. No ONE can bo 111 If the blood Is pure. Tellow Dock and Sarsaparilla root have long been recognized by physiclaus as blood purifiers. Don't be humbugged by the advertisements of the many quack bitters, but occasionally use Dr. Guysott's Yellow Lloqk and Sarsaparilla, and you will live to a good old age free from all distress of mind and body. Many of our best citizens who long suffered from bad blood, Indicated by weak kidneys, indigestion, sores, aches, etc., owe their recovery to the use of this remedy. The banks, generally meet a crisis with reserve. ,

Dairymen Prefer It

Messrs. Wells, Richardson & Co.: Since the introduction of your Improved Butter Color among my customers, it has given universal satisfaction. The leading dairymen of this section who have used it give it the preference over all other colors, of whatever name or nature. They are especially pleased with tho fact that it does not become rancid, like other oil colors, and their product brings highest prioes in market. W. S. Nay, Druggist. Underhill, Vt„ April 5, 1882. The moresuocossi’ul the hotel-keeper, the greater he shows. —Texas Sifting*. Lydia E. Pinkhah's Vegetable Compound was first prepared In liquid form only: but now It can be sent in dry forms by mall to points whore no druggist can readily, be reached, and to-day the Compound in lozenge* and pills finds its way to the foreign climes of Europe and Asia. “A model woman ’’—The Inanimate frame upon which wraps are displayed. All pain In the nervous system, wind 00110 cramps etc., cured by Samaritan Nervine. What man must have his glass before he can do a day’s work? A glazier. “Your Samaritan Nervine cured my son's fits,” writes Mrs. S. M. Parkhurst, of Girard/ Mich. “A debt Is adorned by payment,” and unadorned "by escapement.

Instantly Relieved.

Mrs. Ann LaCour, of*Vew Orleans, La., writes: “I have a son who has been sick for two years; he has been attended by our leading physicians, but all to no purpose. This morning he had his usual spell of coughing, and was so greatly prostrated in consequence that death seemed Imminent. We had in the house a bottle of Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs, purchased by my husband, who noticed your advertisement yesterday. We administered it, and ho was instantly relieved.” Fob twenty-five years I have been afflicted with catarrh so that 1 have been confined to my room for two months at a time.' I have tried all Ibe humbugs in hopes of relief, but to no suoeess until I met with an old friend who had used Ely's Cream Balm and advised me to try it. I procured a bottle to please him, and from the first application I found relief. It is the best remedy 1 have ever tried.—W. C. Mathews, Justice of the Peace, Shenandoah, Iowa; “Bough on Rats” clears out Rats, Mice. 150. ■ Mother Swan’s Worm Syrup, tasteless. 26c. “Rough on Coughs” Troches, 16c; Liquid,soc. Wells’ May-Apple (Liver) Pills, 100. “Rough on Toothache,” instant relief. 150. “Bnchn-paiba," Great Kidney and Urinary Core. sl. “Bough on Coma," for Coma, Warts, Bnniona. 160. Wells' Health Renewer cures Dyspepsia, Impotence. “ Rough on Dentist ” Tooth Powder, 150.

GEB^an^reMEDY FOR PAIN. Rheumatism,Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago. Backache, Headache, Toethaohe, Bore Th roai. » wel II n«a, Mpralae, BruUee, Burn*, Nrnldi, lro«t BIIM, ARB «U OTHKII ItOIULV FAIRS ARB,Ai'HIB. •old by DruggUu mod Dealer* every where, Fltlj Cent* a hot tide Directions In 11 Lauguases. TUB CIIAKI.KS A. VOfiKLEK CO. ewwiui. Vuusui*»oo ) gslilnSre, C.B. A.

TELEPHONES.— The best In u«e for private lines. Address with stamp Union Tkl. Co., Lfcyden, N.Y. AGENTS WANTED for the beet and faatert-selUng Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced « per cent. National Publishino Co., Chicago, HL k—— : i ; i ■ OTp make money speculate in stocks. $lO and upJL ward. Puts and ca ls. Explanatory circular sent free. NATIONAL STOCK CO., 82 Broadway, N. Y. CENI> 10c. IN STAMPS FOR SPECIMEN BEAUKJ uful and artistic honse'-old ornament to 8. KEYBER, 287 Druid Hill Avenue, Baltimore, Md. DITCUTO Send stamp for our new book on I A 1 rll I V Patents. L. BINGHAM, Patent I fl I Lll lUI La W y er , Wuakiiigton. D. 6. AND SECURE A CD ETC I I fc PAIR OF FINE SHOES, rntt J. K. BICKNKLL At CO., Brockton, Mass. ijaib seftTcttt nVilli E. BURNHAM, 71 State street, Chicago. rftHK FRENCH NOVELTY CO.. 195 and 197 JL , Fultjn St.. New York, send all kind, of JEWELRY, GF.MS and NOVELTIES for lowest cash price. Send for catalogue. /"TAKPKNTEKN AND .JOINERs.-SEND FOR V/ Saunders’ Patent Automatic Boring Machine, ICAO. Satisfaction guaranteed. WELLS MANUFACTURING CO.. Ashaway. R. I. PERFECT CAN OPKNKR (entirely new principle). Selling like Wildfire. Exclusive temt®y sold. Refusal given on purch se of sufficient goans to guarantee push. Samples mailed, 40 cents. MANHATTAN SPECIALTY CO., 1U Nassau St.. New York. ■p°vsD A TI A-iT!—TO KEEP E iGS FRESH ONE •A. Y®,AR- No pickle: no salt: no powder: will not settle: cost, less than £c. per doren. Semi recipe for|l. fcß.id at once before hot weather. Address A. N. 111,188, Attleboro, Maas. Box 277.

THE LIFE LESSON LEARNED BV A PROIHNEVT lICD- ■ SON ODD FELLOW. From Ike Hudson (K. T.) Register. Mr. John Siting, a faithful Odd Fellow (Part Grand) i "Lindenwald,* No. 4t2), and a member of the Baptist Church, aaya: *1 have been, aa most of my acquaintances in Hudson know, a sufferer from dyspepsia for ten year*. The symptoms of my malady were those which a million other sufferers in the land would recognize as their own. Beginning with indigestion, sour stomach and flatulence, I became so weak that my body became a burden too heavy to carry, and my mind was weighted down by a gloomy despondency. After eating I felt aa if I had a ball of glowing iron in my stomach; my abdomen would bloat, and I was afflicted almost constantly with a tick headache. A lady learning of my condition advised me to use DR. DA VID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY, telling me what an infinite deal of good it had done her sod others whom she knew. I began taking it in the latter part of August, and used altogether only three bottles, when it achieved in mo the most wonderful improvement. I have now gained flesh, and foe) stronger, better and happier than I have in ten years. FAVORITE REMEDY cured’my friend. R. F. Hermans, of Ghent, of the lingering remains of malarial fever and of biliousness. Mr. Harvey Thomas, the grocer on Warren street. Jnst below the Worth House, sayß that it has had wonderfully good effects upon him. Scores of my acquaintances say that having once tried it they would never again bo without it. I have given it to my children, and found it the best medicine I have ever known for regulating their bowels and purifying their blood. Tbo knowledge of this medicine I deem the greatest lesson of physical life." Dlfi DHVTo aell our robber hand stamps. Terms DID rA I tree. Taylor Bros, k Co.. Cleveland,Ohio. nruomup To soldier* and heirs. Send stamp rrNM IN.N for circulars. 001. L. BINGHAM, I UIUiUIIU Attorney. Washington, D.C. YWANTED—LADDS TO TAKE OUR NEW FANCY V V work at their homes, in city or country, and earn •0 to #lt per week, making goods for our Spriug snd bummer trade. Send 150. for samplmand particulars. HUDSON MiG. CO.. 386 Sixth Avenue. N. Y. GOUHTRYIIEWSPAPERS Supplied witti partly-printed ahedts’in the most satisfactory manner. Send for samples and prices to THE NEWSPAPER UNION, NoS.lm and 2T3Franklln Street, Chicago, v ■ , i, SOjWBftSS Slae.9% x 10& By mail on receipt cf 100. East Side Agency £. 0. Burt's Fine Shoes, 981 Grand St., New York. Please tnention this paper. 5 TON WAGON SCALES, Iren t**ir., St*.l Br.ri.fi. Brut Tare Bum .nd Bum Box, S6O .nd JONSBh. p»y« th.fr.iiht—ifor fri. Frioe Lilt inenttnn (Ml pap.rand .dam. JONES OF BINGHAMTON. Boreambaim Causes no Pain, tthvs Keller at Once. Thorough Treatment will uld or Snuff. Apply with Flneer. Give it a Trial. 60 cent, at Druggist.’. GO cent, by mull, rote titered. Send for circular. . . „ ~ m KI iV MUOTHEUB. Druggiatr, Owogo, N. Y-

B B ja fa R*M Crick, Sprains,XVranches, Rhcu- i H gC matlsm, Neuralgia, Sciatica, “" ZmZmZm. Pleurisy Pains, Stitch in the 13 A R M Side, Backacho, Swollen Joints, r #%*SWW Heart Disease, Bore Muscles, Pain in the Chest, and all pains and ache* either local or deep-seated are Instantly relieved and speedily cured by the well-known Hop Platter. Compounded, ae It Is, of the medicinal virtues of fresh Hops, Gums, Balsams and Extracts, it Is Indeed the beat pain-killing, stimulating, soothing and strengthening Porous Plaster ever made. Hop Platters are sold by all druggists and country etoreas K cents or five for 11.00. ** f* Mailed on receipt of I*l price. Hop Plaster 00., M hihbm Proprietors and Manu- E# |_ A $2 T b D factnrers, Boston,Mass. ■ la>AV> 1 Bil% QTOoated tongue, bod breath, sour stomach and lives g|ireMOured^^awley|sßtotnachMadUverPUls^ota jj jgflM ftllsis Liver and Kidney Remedy, U Compounded from the well known B Curatives Hops, Malt, Buchu, Mani drake. Dandelion, Sarsaparilla. Cas- m earn Sagrada, etc., combined with an V agreeable Aromatic Elixir. ■ THEY CUBE DYSPEPSIA & INDIGESTION, A Act upon the Liver and Kidneys, ■■ regulate - the" BOWELS, U They cure Rheumatism, and all Url- B / nary troubles. They Invigorate, i nourish, strengthen and Quiet m the Nervous System. V As a Tonic they have no Equal. A Take none but Hope and Malt Bitters, i FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS—- BB Hops an<l Malt Bitters Co. H DETROIT, MICH. E 9 ■ Baa-* E 9 I • . : *>f • v. For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve Battering, and save the lives ot men and beasts than All other ». liniments put together. Why? Beeanse the Mnstang penetrates through skin and flesh to the very bone* driving oat all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restoring the afflicted part to sound and snpple health.

: The Mast Popular Medicins Eflant. Alim’s Lie Balsam, 1 KDUDI THAT WILL CPU CONSUMPTION, BOUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA, CROUP, All Diseases of the Throat, Lungs and Pulmonary Organs. The lung balsam Has cured Coneunintion when other remedies and physicians have failed to effect a cure. The lung balsam Contains no Opium in any form. The lunc balsam la strictly pure and harmless to tbe moat delicate person. The lung balsam la recommended by Physicians, Ministers snd Nurses. + The lung balsam For Group is a safe and snre Remedy. Mother*, try it. . , ... The lung balsam Should be used at the first manifestations of a Cold or Cough. The lung palsam Aa an Expectorant lias no equal. CAUTION.—Bo not deceived. Call for ALLEN’S Lung Balsam, and take no other. RSf Directions accompany each bottle. J. N. HARRIS&CO. Limited, Cincinnati, 0. PBOPBIETORS. Oar SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS.-®*

. J<^ERFAg>^ c®so ■- iii I -i . i i nil r i —| —i —n - The only known tptdfle tor Epileptic Flts.-fftL *9*-Also for Spasms and Foiling Sickness.-®* Nervons WcoUncss quickly relieved and cured. Equalled by none In delirium of fever.-®* *9-Neutrallsc» germs of disease and sickness. Cores ugly blotches and stubborn blood sorea. , Cleanses blood, quickens sluggish oircnlation. Eliminates Bolls, Carbuncles and Scolds.-®* *ar Permanently andproraptly enres paralysis. Xos, It la a charming and healthful Aperient. Kills Scrofula and Kings Evil, twin brothers. Changes bod broath to good, removing cause. rerßouts biliousness and cleara complexion. Charming reeolvout and matchless laxative.-®* It drives Sick Headache like tho wind.*®* f37“Contaln»no drastic cathartic or opiates. Promptly cures Rheumatism by routing it.-®* Restores llfe.glvtug properties to tho blood.-®* Is guaranteed to euro all nervous disorders.-®* t3Tßellabto when all opiates fall.-®* Refreshes the mind and invigorates the body, i Cures dyspepsia or money refanded.-®* tay Endorsed in writing by over fifty thousand Leading physicians lu U. 6. and Europe.-®* Leading clergymen in U.fl. fqd Europe.*®* Diseases of the blood own It s conqueror.-®* For sale by all loading'druggists. |1.60.-®* For tcstimonlaU and cli'milaks scud stamp. The Dr. 8. k. Richmond Med. Go., Props.* St. ToaopYx, 3x£o. (12). Lord,Btoutepbty;gh Chirac", 11L

WONDERFUL yydtf CURES OF iff}''] weagiggsasss <p u LIVER COMPLAINTS. 5 Because It act* ou the LITER, BOWELS and | KIDNEYS at the same time. Because It eleansee the system of tho poison- * ou* humor* that develop* la Kidney and Uri- 111 nary Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundice, Constipation; Piles, or In Boeumatisra, Neuralgia, Nervous Disorders and all Fomalo Complaints. vr SOLID PROOF OF TIIIB. TV WILL BUBBLY CURB OONSTIPATION, PILES, and RHEUMATISM, By oausing FBEB ACTION of all the organs and functions, thereby CLEANSING the BLOOD restoring tho normal powor to throw off disoaeo. THOUSANDS OP CABEB of the worst forme of these terrible diseases have been quickly relieved, and in a short time PERFECTLY CURED. PRICE, *l. liquid OR Dity, SOU) itv druggists. Dry can be sent by snail. WtfT.Tfl, BICHAEDBON Sc Co., Burlington, Vt. 9 S S«ml ,l»mp for Dlsry Almonss for JSB4. B gfCTBBffyHrBWfIWWTSImCBiiI Vm .mw Mil a m learn Telegraphy and earn TOU llg Iwl Cll big wages. Situations furnished. Circulars free. Valentine Bros.. Janesville, WieJBBB! OARDS&GfIROIOB. Wo will send free by mall a sample set of our large German, French ana American Cliromo Cards, on tinted and gold grounds, with a price-list of over 204 different designs, on receipt of a stamp for postage, We will also send free by mall, as samples, ten of out beautiful Cbromos, on receipt of ten cents to pay for packing and postage; also inclose a confidential price-list of our largo Oil Cbromos. Agenta wanted. Address , F. GLEASON & CO., 46 Summer Street, Boston, Mssr. to speculatorsT ■‘•S-RffiSSS 00 - M -.waK.«* Commerce, Chicago. New York. GRAIN * PROVISION BROKERS. Members of all prominent Produce Exchanges IB New York, Chicago, St. Louts and Milwaukee. XYe have exclusive private telegraph wire between Chicago and New York. Will,execute orders on our Judgment when requested. Send for circulars coutaioIng particular*. ROBT. LINDBLOM A CO.. Chicago. D» FOOTE’ 8 Original METHODS Al H CVCC Mud* New withoftt doc- of ULU tl tO tors,medicine or glasses If A MO RUPTU RE £fSS,'a®:EHwlwl!' DUIUnQIQ Cured Without.cutting;f|]nGf rnimUdlu new.painless,safe.snre. I J- It lb J NERVOUS CHROHIC?»«SjS,'-KS£) Address Dr. E. B. FOOTE, Eoi 788, N. V, ttty. TONSUMPfIONr I have a positive remedy for the above disease; bvlts use thousands of cases of the worst kind and of long standing have been cu red. lafaerf, eoatroMf In its Afflnacv that I will send TWO BOTi LEs FKEF, together with a VALUABLB TKBATIBB<m jiff dl»«a«e,ta C.N.D. < No. 17—S4. WHEN tVItITING TO AOVKiMIBKitA It please say you saw the udvertlse.ueat In this paper.