Greencastle Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 July 1886 — Page 2
THE STARS 0 * e OIJ V.
TU. B.-’
- out and gild the fU.t,
uJL r ht winds breathe nmlflph; Uie world fades from my al^ht, . feel the prosenec of the 1,i^ht
^ rapped In its strange deep mystery.
Thtrk Tapers rise—their fingers lie Coldly upon my brow, but I
Lift up my i-:urtled gaze, and bright
The stars shine out.
Trust on, sa 1 heart, nor question why The shadows and the night draw nigh. The mist of doubt will melt iu light, God’s f.u-e w ill put them all to Hight. TUI then, look up, for still on high
The stars shine out,
—11 a ter T. Field, in the Current
Sandorf's
Pieverige.
A SEQUEL TO MATHIAS SAVDOKF AND
DOCTOR ANTRKIRTT.
T5j r Jules 'Vei'iio, ArxtlOTt 07 “ JOtmNET TO TI1K ORNTB* or THU RARTH,” “TRI MOO “ AROUND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY
•ai a," '■ m
“ TWENTY THOUSAND LEAOtrtS UNDER THE SEA," ETO., ETtt
TraiulatUm copi/rlghted by G. T" Hanna, HSS.
CHAPTEH IX—Continued, "Drunk! Dntuk! After drinking., bottle or two of this washy wine, when •ire am accustomed to gin and whiskey |d the Mnnderaggio !” 1 “And who are you ?” asked Zirona That is little Peseador 1" answered jCarpena. ‘‘And who are you?" asked Peseador. “That is Zirono !’’ answered tho Spaniard. Zirouo looked attentively >at iha young bandit whom Curpena liad praised so much, tind wlto introduced Dim self in such a free and easy manner. Donbtlo- s he thought ho look- I intelligent and daring, for he gave an approvdng nod. Thou lie spoko to Peseador. “You hnvo been drinking like the ^thers ?" , “More than the others.” “And you have kept your sonsas?” “Bah! It has not hurt mo in the least, ” “ Then toll mo tit s, for Carpena says you may give mo some information that 2 want!” “Ch-atis?" “Catch !” And Zirono threw him a half-piastre, which Peseador instantly slipped into Jfin waistcoat pocket as a professional fagglor would a ball. J “ He is obliging!” said Zirono ■ “Very obliging!" replied Peseador. ^ And now what do you want ?” “You know Malta ?” “Malta, Italy, Istria, Dalmatia, and jfche Adriatic," answered Peseador. j “You have traveled !" “Mticlt, but always at my own ox(Arpense. ’ “L'il see that you never travel otbor^tlso, for when it is tho Government that pays-" “It costs too much !" interruptedresoad or. “Exactly," rojdied Zirone, who was delighted to have found a new cornpan on with whom he could talk. " And now ?" asked Peseador. “And now, Peseador, iu your numerous voyages did you ever hoar of a certain Doctor Antckirtt ?" In spite of nil his cleverness, Point Pescude had never expected that; but he was sufficiently master of himself not to betray hissurprise. How Zirone, who was not &t Bagnsa 4u‘ ‘:ig tho stay of the Savarenn, nor at Malta while the Ferrate wasthere, could have heard of tho doctor was a puzzler. Butvith his decision of character he jww that his reply might be of use to him, and ho did not hesitate to say nt once: “Doctor An tekirtt! Oh! Perfectly! People talk of nothing else throughout tlie Mediterranean!" “Have you seen him ?” “ Never.” “But do you know who he is?” “A poor fellow, a hundred times a millionaire, who never goes about with4>ut a million in each pocket, and lie lias at least six! An unfortunate who is ^educed to practise medicine us an amusement, sometimes on a schooner, aomotimes on a steam yacht, a man who j)ias a cure for every ono of tho 22.000 [maladies with which nature has gratified [the hnmauspecies." ( Tho mountebank of former days was •gain in his glory, and the fluency of 81 ie patter astonished Zirone. and none Aho lens Carpena, who muttorod: “ Whnt a recruit 1" Peseador was silent and lighted a cigarette, from which the smoke seemed ho come out, of his eyes, his nose, and Ibis ears as he pleased. “ Yon say that J10 Doctor is rich ?" tasked Zirono. “ Hieh enough tohnv Sicily and turn fit into an English garden,” replied Posendor. ' Then thinking the moment had oomo for him to inspire Zirone with the idea |Of the scheme he had resolved to put jlnto execution, ho continued: “And look bore, Captain Zirono, if I have not seen Doctor Antokirtt, I have ^oen one of his yachts, for they say ho lias quite a fleet to sail about the sea in V’ “ One of his yachts ?” “ Yes, the Ferrate, which would suit me nicely to go for a sail ia tho Bay of Naples with a princess or two." “Whore did you see the yacht f" “At Malta." “ And when ?" “Tha day before yesterday at Valettn, as wo were going on board with Bergount Carpena. Bho was then at hor moorings in the military port, but they said she was going out four-and-twonty hours after us." “Where to?” To Bicily, to Oatania 1” ^/Xo Catania?" asked Zirono.
The oolnoidence between the depart. t c> ' Doc.or Autekirlt and the warning he had received from Saroony to bowaro of him could not but awake Zirone's suspicions. I Point Peso,ado saw that some secret j thought was working in Zirone’s brain, but what was it? Not being able to pu a ho re.,1 dved to press Zirouo more 1 directly, and when he had asked: r «ant in I'e \!y, ! and at Catania more especially ?” “Eli ! Jlv .SaintAgatha, ho is coming to visi t tha town ! li e is going to ascend Mount Tv mi! He is going to travel like tiro rich traveler that he is!" “Peseador,” said Zirone, with a certain amount of suspicion, “you seem to have known this man some time." “Not so long as I would liko to, if I had an opportunity.” “ Whnt do you mean ?” “ That if ! toctor Antckirtt, ns is pr liable, comes for a walk in our ground, wo might ns well make Ins Excellency pay his footing.” “Indeed !” said Zirone. "And if that only comes to a million ! or two it will lie good business.” “You are right. ” “And iu that enso Zirouo and his two friends would not have been fools." “Good," said Zirone, with u smils ; “after that compliment 3'ou can go to sleep.” “That will suit me, for T know what I shall get dreaming about,” “What?" “Tho millions of Doctor Antckirtt— dreams of gold I" And then Pe.-cador, having given his cigarette its lost puff, went off to rejoin his companions in the barn of tho inn, while Carpena retired to his room. And thou ho set to work to piece together all that ho had said and heard. From the lime that Ziiouo, to his great astonishment, had spoken to him of Doctor Antckirtt, had ho done the best for the interests tliat were Intrusted to him ? Lei us see. In coming to Sicily, the Doctor hoped to again meet with Sarenny, and perhaps Toronthal, in case lie accompanied 1 bun, which was not improbable, considering that they had left Itagusa together. Failing Sarcany, be reckoned on capturing Zirone, and l>v bribe or threat making him reveal where Sureany and Toronthal could be found. That was his plan, and this was how ho intended executing it. Iu his youth tho Doctor had several times visited Sicily, particularly the district around JElna. He know the different roads by which tho ascent is made ; the most used being that which passes by a house built at the commencement of the central cone, and which is known as the “Casa Inglosa.” Zirone’s gang, for which Carpena had been recruiting at Malta, was then at work 011 tho ./Etna slopes, and it was certain that the arrival of a personage as famous as Doctor Antckirtt would produce the usual effect at Catania. If the Doctor were to put it about that lie was going to make tho ascent of Hkna, Zirono would be sure to hear of it— especially with tho hoi)) of Point Pes--■'mle. The scheme had begun well, for Zirone himself had introduced the subject of the Doctor to Pescade. The trap which was to bo laid for Zirono, and in which there was a good chance of his being caught, was tho following : Tha night before tho Doctor was to make the ascent of the volcano, a dozen ! well-armed men from the Ferrato were i to make their way secretly to tho Casa Inglesi. In tho morning, tho Doctor, accompanied by Luigi, Pierre, and a gsiule, would leave Catania and follow the usual road so as to reach the Casa Inglesi about eight in the evening, and then pass the night liko all the tourists do who wish to sre the sun rise over the mountains of Calabria. Zirone, urged by Point Pescade, would doubtless endeavor to capture the Doctor, thinking ho had only to do with him and his two companions ; but when lie reached tho Casa Inglesi he would be received by the sailors of the Ferrato, and resistance would be impos-
sible.
Point Pescade, knowing this scheme, had happily profited by the circumstances that presented themselves to put tliis idea of capturing the Doctor into Zirone's head. It meant a heavy ransom, and would also work in with the message he had received. If he was to bo careful of this mau, would it not bo better for him to seize him even if he lost the ransom? And Zirrno decided to do so and wait for further instructions from Sarouny. But to bo certain of success, as ho had not his whole gang with him, ho resolved to make the attempt with Carpena's Maltese—much to the comfort of Pescade, ns tho dozen ruffians would be no match for tho Ferrato men. But Zirone trusted nothing to chance. As Peseador had told him that tho steam yacht was to arrive in the morning he left Santa Grotta early, and walked down to Catania. Not being known he could go there without danger. In a few hours tho steam yacht arrived nt her moorings, not near the quay which is always crowded with ships, Vuit nt a sort of entrance harbor between the north jetty and a huge mass of blackish lava which the eruption of 1609 sent down into the sea. Already at daybreak, Cape Matifou and eleven men of the Ferrato's crew, under Luigi, had been landedat Catania, and separately had started on tho road to the Casa Inglesi. Zirono knew nothing of this landing, and as tho Ferrato was moored a cable-length from the fliers he could not even see what was passing 1 n board. About six o'clock in the evening the C : 3 brought, ashore two Dassonget*. These were tha Doctor and Pierre Bathory. They went up the Via Stesiooro and tho Btrada Etnea towards the Villa Bellini, a public garden perhaps one of the most beautiful in Europe, with its masses of flowers, its varied slopes, its terraces shaded with largo trees, its running streams, and tho superb volcano plumed with mist rising in tho background. Zirono bad followed the two passenger , doubting uot that one of thorn was
this famous Doctor Antekirlt. ITs evc^t! FA 15'I NOTES. j ate return to the limestone diet would managed to get rather near them in th< | . set things straight again in a short time, crowd (hat the music h.id attracted t< ' Raspberries throw up a great many Mr Heanevadds- Amuowthoroughtho Villa Bellini, but lie did uot do this suckers, and the.-e should be thinned out, , ^ ^ wiihout being notice,1 by the fiocto, | h aving not over four canes to the hill so ‘ y COnvlnce < ^ ^ ” “ 0 n «‘ of and Pierre. If this suspicions fellow ' plen(y of room . j "'J P e "° n °smg chickens by cholera, were tho Zirone tih-y wi re looking for, I m. x* k i who will seduloubly attend to the matter, j here w.is a fine opportunity for enticinq | e prac i.ee o pegging down over-1 aud furniah them r|I the ]i me stone, him st ill furlhcr into tho snare that they blooming roses so that they will cover ; br keu (jmaH ^ of j had laid 1 1 completely the surface cf the bed la T , , T - • And so about eleven o'clock in tbs known to produce very pleasant results. f ee< ‘J 0 1 * * " i eve “ in * wl “’“ they were leaving the J It iig li d that pegging down dablias | ^ mill, when l am break,ng the stone. I gardfii to return on boar l, the J> >ctoi r .. ° | reply re, in a loud t id; 1 ,r -‘ ITwo whims «»r 1 10 without work.
“Yes, it ia understood! Wo atari j 1 be most Ireqi.eut cause of failure in New York sun. to-morrow, and will sleep at tho Casa ! tbe case of flower seeds is that they are Inglesi." covered too deeply with soil, in which
o f water or want of air, or the feeble germ is unabe to overcome the weight of the soil it has to move before reach-
ing the light.
Whenever rhubarb throws out a great
t many leaves, and the stalks are small ISext day about one nclock in the 1 .v, , , , , I afternoon the 1 )octor and Fierro Bathory ‘•“'I worth ' e83 - ^ dug up completed their preparations to go ■ transplanted, dividing tiieni so that ashore. only one thrifty bud is left to each piece The gig received its passengers; but of root. This should be done early in be.oio ho left the Doctor ordered Cup- 1 t be spring, as soon as the newly formed bun Kostrik to watch for the arrival of I buds are ready to push through the soil.
Use plenty of whitewash in the poul-
bo wanted, for a moment afterwords La
Lad disappeared.
CHAFTEK X.
Tnil CASA DEGI.I IXOIiEEI.
Electric No. 2, then hourly expected, e 11 r o bey, ind I he Farriss-
lionis, otherwise known as the rocks of j !r - v huus0 now - "'arm weather lice ap-
Polyphemus. If the plan succeeded, if Sarcany or even Zirono and Carpena were taken prisoners the launch would be ready to convey them to Antekirtta, where ho would have them in Lis power. The gig put off; in a few minutes it reached tho stops at tho wharf. Doctor Antckirtt and Fierro had assumed tho usual dross of tourists ascending tho mountain, who may have to end 1110 a temperature of fourteen degrees below freezing, while at tho sea level it stands at fifty degrees above that point. A guide was in waiting with the hois's, which at Nicolosi were to be replaced by mules us more untiring and surer of foot. Tho town of Catania is of Httlo width compared to its length and was soon crossed. Nothing occurred to show that the Doctor was watched aud followed. Fierro and he, after taking tho Bolvi- | dore Road, began to ascend tho earlier slopes of b o mountain to which tho ■ ■ ■ “ f Mo gibello, and of which the diameter is not less than twenty-fivo miles. The road is uneven and winding; it turns aside frequently to avoid the lava streams and basaltic rocks, solidified millions of years ago ; the drv ravines filled in tho spring timo with impetuous torrents ; mid on its way it cuts through a well-wooded region of olivo trees, orange trees, carol, trees, ash trees and long-branched - inos. This is the first of the three x n \s which gird tho volin of the smithy," the Fhoenician translation of the word ./Etna—.“the spike of the earth and tho pillar of tho sky" for the g.'ologists of an age when geological science did not
exist.
After a couple of hours’ climbing and
a halt of some minutes i mro needed Heave the vigmous young shoots. Let
by the horses than the riders, tho Doctor and Fierro boliel 1 at their foot the town of Catania, the superb rival of Palermo. They could look down on tho lines of i!s chief streets running ,'anile! to tho quays, tho towers and domes of its hundred churches, tho numerous and picturesque convents and tho houses in the pretentious stylo of the seventeenth century—all enclosed in the belt of green that encircles the ci y. In the foreground was tho harbor, of which -Etna itself formed tho principal walls in the frightful eruption of 1(569, which destroyed fourteen towns and villages aud claimed IS.OfiO victims, and poured out over tho country more thau a mil-
lion cubic yards of lava.
.Etna is quieter now, and it has well earned the right to rest. In fact there have been more thau thirty eruptions since the Christian era.' That Sicily has not bean overwhelmed is a sufficient proof of tho solidity of its foundation. It should be noted, however, that the volcano has not lornud a permanent crater ; it changes as it pleases. Tha mountain falls in where one of the firevomit ing abysses opens, and from the gap there spreads the lavio matter accumulated on tho flanks. Hence the numerous small volcanoes—the Monte Rossi, a double mountain piled up iu three months to a height of four hundred feet by the sands and sconce of 1G69; Frumonto, Simoni, Btornello, Crisineo, arranged liko the turrets around a cathedral dome, to say noth - ing of the craters of 1809, 1811, 1819, 1838, 1852, 1805, 1875, whoso funnels perforate tho flanks of tho central cone
like the cells of a bee-hivo.
After crossing the hamlet of lb ■Ividere the guide took a short cut so as to reach Kumortieri road near that from Nicolosi Tho first cultivated zone extends almost from this town to two thousand one hundred and twenty feet above. It was nearly four o’clock in tlie afternoon when Nicolosi appeared, and tlie travelers bad not mot with a single adventure along tho nine miles from Catania, and seen neither boars nor wolves. They had ntiil twelve and a half miles to go before they readied tho Casa Dogli
Inglesi.
" How long will your excellency stop hero?" asked the guide. “No longer than necessary,” answered the Dootor; “let us get iu to-night about nine o’clock.” “ Forty minutes, then ?" “ Forty minutes be it!" And that was enough to procure a hasty meal in one of tho two inns of tho town, which—be it said to the honor of the throe thousand inhabitants of Nieolosi, including the beggars who swarm in it—has rather a better culinary reputation than most Sicilian inns. A piece of kid, some fruit, raisins, oranges, and pomegranates, and San Placido wine from the environs of Catania—there are very few more important towns in Italy in which au innkeeper would offer os much. [TO BE CONTINUED.] F.r man ran dress lilgbty fine and yet lmv| a migt y shabby mlnd.|--lW, iaiaic Traveler.
pear unless precautions are taken to avoid tho vermin. Clean up the poultry house and yards, dust insect powder into all the cracks aud crevices, put tobacco rek se in the nests, coal-oil the roosts aud whitewash the walls of the poultry house, first adding a tabhspoonful of carbolic acid to each bucket of
whitewash used.
Geese can be fattened cheaply, as they will eagerly consume chopped turnips or any other kind of cheap material at this season; but to get them very fat they should have corn al»o. A goo^e should not be too fat, as such is objectionable, but they should be kept fat enough to present au excellent market appearance. The young geese that have not completed their growth, however, cannot be fed too liberally, as they will not become extremely fat until matured. Some persons in cutting their asparagus leave the small shoots that are not large enough for u>o. This is bad practice. The better, wray is to cut all off clean, until the middle of June. Then all cutting should cease and tha plants bo allowed to make their summer growth. The old practice of planting the roots deeply below the surface and cutting the shoots as soon as they pushed through the ground, with barely a green tip is exploded. Green, and not bleached, is the asparagus for flavor. To Lave a fine crop ol large, rich currants, enrich the ground, make it clean and mellow, and thin out the brush, (^ul away the old, stunned wood and
We find in John Sa inton's Paper a very interesting article about the first report of the National Bureau of Labor. The writer finds that the bureau is greatly mistaken regarding fome most
important facts.
For instance Commi.‘8 : oncr Wiight concludes that during the year ending July 1, 1885, cue million of people were “possibly unemployed iu the United States,” and that of these li)8.75i> belonged to the group of manufacturing and mining industries. By a careful examination ol ail the facts in the case Mr. Swinton’s writer concludes tliat during the year in question 400,(XX) people remained w ithout employment from previous years,and that 500,000 agricultural laborers fell out of employment, as did 200,000 clerks, sr rvants and domestic laborers, while of manufacturing and mining laborers those who lost their occupation were at least 900,000. This makes in all h total of two million of people capable of useful industry who in 1885, by causes beyond their own control, were kept iu a siats of idleness, or
its equivalent!
Whether those figures he accurate or not, there can he no question that the army of the unemployed in this country has now assumed enormous proportions, and there is no present prospect that it will be niucu diminished. The cause, j which in every part ot the world has brought about such a condition of things, still remains in operation, and we can see no reason why it should be interrupted. This cause is, in cur judgment, tho maintenance of the gold standard of money. There is no doubt that a new discovery of gold, such as that which occurred in California and Australia iu 1818-9, would put an end to this suffering and restore prosperity. But can such a miracle be expected? Nr,voI Views of Mormoxilftm.
Indiana pc lid News.
Attorney-General Hord, who has returned from Utah, contributes some interesting views on the Mormon question. He thinks that the present anti-polyga-my laws serve only to solidify Mormon sentiment. All who are under indictment because of these laws are looked upon as martyrs to the Mormon church. “The Mormon women,” he says, “are sincere believers in the revelations to Joe Smith, and they enter into polygamous matrimony as a religious ast. The only way, I believe, that Mormonism can ever be reached, is to enact a law enabling a woman who has been‘sealed’ to a Mormon to recover a proportionate share of his possessions and to obtain a divorce whenever she becomes dissatisfied. Tnen, encourage a few adventuresses *0 go to Utah, become sealed to the wealthy Mormons, and in a few weeks, as a purely business transaction, become dissatisfied and demand a division. You .can reach them through their pocket-books and through their stomachs quicker than any other way.” Judge Hord says further that the Mormons confidently count upon obtaining
Chicken Cholera Preventive. the balance of power iu national poliMr. John Heaney, of Iroquois Co. 111. ; ics in a few years. They are proselytsends ITairie Farmer an account of his * n F rapidly in Montana, Idaho, Nevada, experience in preventing the appear | ^ r *® ona Rn< ^ fcven ^-' <l ^'f <,rn ^ a > an< ^ a f r ® a ^y auce of chicken plague among his fowls. ,lave things their own way in Utah.
them occupy equal distances from each other, and give the bushes in some degree a regular form. No fruit is more neglected than the currant,the bushes being allowed to become eveloped in weeds and grass, and the enfeebled bushes allowed to grow in a mass of brush. The difference in the size of the berries raised by the two modes is as one to four. A good hint for growing cucumbers, squashes or similar plants is to put old sawdust or rotten wood about them Tiiote who never tied cucumbers on strong, bushy stakes, like pea sticks,will he surprised to note how they enjoy it. Tomatoes do better trained to stout stakes than in any other way. The raspberry, gooseberry and currant, especially the latter, thrive with applications of
rotten wood.
FASHION NOTLS. Hair-line stripes crow in favor. Feather fans are the most fashionable. Moasq • taire gloves are preferred to all othera. Cordurette Is the new material for infants ’cloaks. The hair is worn de ri,.ueuer on the top of the head, Red straw hats are worn by little girls at tho seaside. Mikado handkerchiefs are novel, nobby summer fancies. Japanese fans remain in favor for decorative purposes. Crepe lace goods are in favor, particularly embroidered crepes. Infants’ cloaks of cordurette are aiade iu Mother Hubbard form. Plaids and checks are worn, but are not near so popular as stripes. Guimpe frocks are popular for girls over 5 and under 12 years of age. Ribbed silk high-uecked shirts are the best for babies midsummer wear. Cordurt tto has corduroy stripes, s'gzag lines between. As it is of cotton, it washes well. Tho latest fancy in ribbon bows is the windmill, with four loops sticking out at right angles, and a tight strap in the middle. Lillie girls of 3 years or over wear pretty muslin caps elaborately tucked, and with high Normandy crowns and plitfly bills around the face. Sets consisting of a collar, plastron epaulets, aud cuffs ot fine black jet heads are -old for dressy accfi'-'orics of a plain waist, black velvet, silk, or satin frock.
CURES All. HUSiORS, from a common Blotcli, or Eruption, to the- worst Scrota In. S» fs-vli/ it «i, '‘Fever-sores, ,J Scaly or Uouuti Mi in. In short, nil disi-iiHi-i caused by Lral Mood are conquered by Ibis powerful, purifriiur, nrd Inviiforntlns’mcdii-ln <»i-(iit Dai■ up i j. cor* rapidly heal under its bcnlfpi mtluonee.
cere . „ Especially lias it manifested its pnlcm v in curiiiir Tetter, Ifoac li.iuit, lioil-, c .-irbtim lcN, Sore Dj om, S< i oItt(<. 11 - -.ores mni Nil o t Uiu. .. EHip-Joltil UiM'iixc. IVJiltc Sivolll!!!*.i, lioitro, or Tliicti Neck, and l.ni :i t;< <l t.luixls. : n 1 p-u cents fn stamps for a I tn atiso, witli oolorod plates, on Skin iJi.i'v-..- , or the nih-.o amount lor a treatin' on Sirofiilovi Aiii-ctions. “VMK «S V'iiS. M Thor.anjiiiv ci'w -■ it 1-v utoir . r. SMeree’w f.o , d< :i 'liedIc:i 1 Jl»li < in <-1-1, >in<l good
-oil-.
tin, l! : ( ■itmiuSl*., ttlld ' DUillCbMOf couiiUliition, ill bo < U.lbto;.oil.
ivl-i h Is Seroful mii Oi > of me
I.iitix”, I promptly and ci r .iitily ; m uted mnl ■Hied bytiiliQoil- ivca r* iv : - , if tuken
. *— - ,11
! ’ ” ' ■ 1 • ' ' l Vrom ii wondurlul }> r tliin trn iM
kovr am
■■ i v • i 1 I . i ,; ifj
1 :>if- * lion i
• t«»*> ii i”.’ m • v hi/.’li', I'min its
' ‘ W
i'dll V
• *.. 5'i.. i-liiiioufl.
It consists of blue lime-stoue, broken up into small pieces, about the sias ol peas, aud fed regularly to the fowls, as much as they will eat. The people-of the West, ho remarks, are in the habit of feeding whole corn to chickens, and letting them grind it up the best they can. At the same time, they furnish them nothing to grind it with, in the shape of sharp grit. As nearly all the common gravel found on tbe prairies has been rounded off by the action of water and ice in the remote past, it is entirely unfitted for the purpose, and reason points to the necessity of furnishing something
suitable
About eight years ago, Mr. Heaney purchased a small bone-mill, and ground bones with it for the use of the chickens He found that as long as he furnished
liiHiBVhuM Not***. To drive away rats—Sprinkle fresh lime where they frequent. To draw out splinters—Spread turpentine on leather and apply. To polish tin—Use whiting which has Veen moistened with ammonia. To clean cane-bottom ehairs—Wash with a sponge dipped in hot water. To clean straw matting—Wash with weak salt water, and dry well. Sprinkle cayenne pepper in the resorts of rats and they will dimppear. To clean sofas.—Dip a sponge in strained and boiled bran water, and
wash.
Cheap paint for iron work—Coal tar stirred into spirits of turpentine. To ch an zinc,—Rub with clean lard
ling:, a Iterative, c •* lilood-cioiuHl pi\'*T«y,ill, hid! mil rit iv<» nmjh’i (i f, In
t.’)! only :ih 11 icniedy lou coiiHumptiott ot iho
ltm;YR, but for ail
CHRONIC DISEASES
OF TTin
■ ' . 'n, I 1 ’ vni) fW l da’), drov."'. 1: ’ fr.frd. hevo •allow color of •kin, or yi hi wl b-lirown spot* i'ri f-.n'i'it body, freqni'iit ' c iii' k Iiv ,,!■ iioss. bud Usto m nunitli, imi i nal l.i ut of chilli, c::<TimtlllK willi hot lk..*iu.i, low imm mid sl- oniy borehodiuirs, bovifNi.-u’ at ii lili’, null ( ited I niriiu. you ui'o sutlci big iroin ludl* geatlon. Dyapepuia, nml Torpid J.ivcr, if “miloiisiie»*.» hi 111:.n,■ m-. s only pin t of II - • syuipt mm la/' 1 \ • 1 ic m 1 ci. As • iciiii'dy for nil .-iicii • \ Kir. Pierce’s Doldcii Mod leal SDucovcry 1ms no
equal.
For IVeak I.on Rli 0 rlii osu ol
Severe n'oii,; lu., <011*11 in piiou,
ci asly.
Si’inl Ion cents in stamps for hr. l’lcroe’8 book on Consumption. Sold by t.'r 11 (-)» !»is. PRICE $1.00, K’./VSTJ.'S Waifs Dispttssrj Hiital isigciatlon, Proprietors, CH3 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Xftvco's LITTLE \xv<’aN,w«s vxixi. ©\\©%a tills.
ANTI-KIDJOI 8 and CA'JJi.jItTIC.
»old by if4(M. ‘Jo cents u \ iul.
, witti no: of Dllootlf
StroEK’liiKlfia
•• ( onnu laipiioiu mmI
I $500 REWARD
his fowls plenty of bones there was no ! an< * then rub diy with a clean cloth, sickness among them. Also found that! W ash boilers that are inclined to rust it was very hard work grinding the nili Y he cleaned by washing in sweet
bones, and something suggested to throw i
...d Krin d I Machine grease can be moved from
some limestone into the mill etui it. He did so and found that it was eaten almost as readily ns the bones. He kept grinding the bones and limestone and feeding them together until hi:> supply of bones gave out. Being winter, it was not very easy to get more bones suitable for grinding, so the fowls were put on a ration of ground stone alone. This has been kept up ever since, except perhaps, at short intervals of *,wo or three wreks, when his time to attend to the fowls was limited. Almost invariably as soon as he was delinquent in tho matter of feeding gi it ho was forcibly reminded of it by a case 01 cholera or
two among the chickens. An immedi- sober.
wash goods with cold rain water and
soap.
To clean a carpet on the boor.— Sprinkle with corn meal or salt, and sweep well To clean zinc.—Rub with liquid ammonia; wet a cloth with it and rub the xinc very hard. H« Would Cull Again. Contributor—Here is a manuscript I wi-h to submit— Editor (waving his hand)—I’m sorry. We are all lull just now. Contributor (blandly)—Very well; I will call again wheu some of you are
for 11 rase of catarrh which thoj
cannot cure.
If you havendischanre frori the " . • . offensive or other wise, partial loss of smell, taste or li/'iirmy. wi uk eyes, (Hill pair or pressure in hand, y. 11 have Datarrh. Thou •nods of enaes terioinuf/ in consumption. Dr. Safe's Catsintr Temcdv cures the wor« otscs of Cnlnrrb, “Doid in tlie IScail,) wvl rntarrbal tie. r.0 cones.
Plso's Remedy for c tarrh Is tho Best. I jislesi to V -e.iind Cheapest
mm
AIbo Rood for Told In tho Hend, Headache, Huy Fever, &c. 51) centa.
Jaas
How Lost, How Rkstorkd! Juit jiuhlishe.l, » new edition of Dr, Cnlvetwsil'R Celebrsled K.hsrv on the nirliesl nose ol fip*rm:itorrh(Bii or Berninal iveRlcne«s, luTohintATY Hominfi! I-IV mill Iivin stpopy^ M0111F 1 *
lit him i i irm wr DflP 1 n:»| >V ♦* t«ry Reminnl Lcses, Impde
Physical Incapieity, Impeilunsati to M» etc., also Cotisiiniplion. Epflepey and duoed hy selMnilulgeuee, or sexusl
gancc, etc.
The celebrated anth r, in this artoUm sRy clearly demonstrate* foin » twtwy Riierso/lul pruetio, that th’ alanuiug qiu nces of self ahiwe insy t« railtciily pomltiig out a mode of care at once , certain and sffeetual, by mein>. efwMeh snflerer, no mutter what hH'OndWionH ir mA^core him»elt cheaply, iriv a ely an o This lecture should be ir, the hand*., youth and every man In th* Ihu/1 p B „f sent in a plain envelope to hiiv addiv-s jjelpt °f four cants or two I usta C9 »tR m .„ The Culverwell Medical f <1 AuuStnet, Now York, t
