Pike County Democrat, Volume 11, Number 47, Petersburg, Pike County, 1 April 1881 — Page 4
PIKE COlim DEMOCRAT, PETERSBURG. .• Indiana: A MODERN MINERVA. ‘Twts the height of the gay season, nnd X cannot tell the reason. But at a dinner-party given by Mrs. Major It became my pleasant duty to take out a i In famous beauty The prult test wouiau present I was happy os a king. Her dress beyond a question was an artist's best treat ion: A mirae,* of loveliness was she from orawn to toe. Hor suiilo was sweet as could be, her voice just us it should lie— Not high, and sharp, and wiry,but musical and low. Her hair was soft and Bossy, golden, plentiful and glossy; Her eyes, so blue and sunny, shone with every inward grace: I could soo that every fellow in tho room was rc.illy yellow With" jealousy, and ^wished himself that moment lu my place. As the turtle soap we tasted, like a gallant ---ted man 1 hasted To pay some pretty tribute to this muslin, silk and gauze: But she turned ami softly asked me—and I owu the question tasked me— What were my Used opinion on the present Sutfrogo laws. I admired a lovely blossom resting on her gentle bosom; The remark, 1 thought a safe one—I could hardly made a worse; rile With a smile like any Venus, sho gave me its name and genus, fAnd opened very oulmly a botanical discourse. But I speedily reeoverod. Asher taper flngors hovered, Like a tender bonediction In a littlo bit of pifer Fur-USd.:?to Impair digestion, she brought up : the Eastern Question. By that time 1 fully echoed that other fellow’s wish. i And, as sure n3 I'm a sinner, right on through that endless dinner Did she talk of moral soionoo, of politics and law. Of natural soloctiou, of Froo-Trado and Protection, Till I came lo look upon hor with a sort of solemn awo. 1 ■» Just to hear the lovely woman, looking more divine than human. Talk with such discrimination of Ingersoll and Cook; With such a childish, sweet smile, quoting Huxley, Mill and Carlyle, It was quite a revolution—it was better than a book. Chemistry and mathematics, agriculture and chromatics. Music, painting, sculpturo-sho know all tho tricks of speech; Bas-rolief, and chiaroscuro, and at last tho Indian Bureau— She discussed it quite serenely, ns sho trifled with a peach. I have seen some dreadful creatures, with vinogary features. With their fearful store of loraning set me sadly in eclipse; But I'm ready <iuite to swear if I have ever heard the Tariff, Or tho Eastern Question settlod by such a pair | of lips. Novor saw I dainty maiden so remarkably o'erladcn From Up to tip of Anger with the love of books and men: * Quite in confidence I say it, and I trust you’ll not betray it, But I pray to gracious HeaVen that I never may again. —Cari.Ua Perry, In Chicago Tribune.
, MRS* NORRIS* TEST* A Story of Wedded Lift. It had been a painful breakfast. The room was bright with sunshine, flowering plants, pictures, statpes and the ineflable charm wealth, £ood taste and good house keeping impart ’ The table was faultless; every dish was cooked to perfection, and served on dainty china "in the daintiest way. The lady at its head was still in her * youth, with a piquant face, upon which each shade of feeling was instantly photographed. She was inimitably dressed. Worth, in his moments of highest inspiration, never devised a toilet which so perfectly bespoke sthe character and taste of the wearer. She toyed with -lu-r breakfast J'aUier -than ate-it,-Md-ended by playing with her teaspoon, balancing it upon the edge of her cup. while she waited for her husband to, finish sipping his coffee. This he dia in a most leisurely manner, With his eyes fastened upon the morning paper, which-lay beside him on the table. He was also young; but he looked old, careworn and unhappy. His forehead was drawn together in deep wrinkles between his eyes and his lips were ^ sternly set. . After he had finished his coffee and paper, he rose, pushed his ohair slowly away, walked to the window, came back to his wife, and, stopping near the table, said, coldly: “I think we have had enough of this. I shall sue1 W entworth this morning. The sooner it is all oyer the better for both of us.” “Yes.” said his wife, without turning her head or looking at him. “The sooner the better.” He left her without another word; but when he’reached the outer door he came back and said, more gently than he had spoken at first: “ Katrina, you understand fully, when Wentworth has once been spoken to there is no going back.” — , It was the first time he had called her by her pet name for months, and there was ;a little quivor in her voice as she tried'to answer bravely: ! “ Yes, I understand.” “You accept it as final?” he asked. “Yes, as final!” Bhe answered. He turned quickly and (went out again. She listened with head upraised and strained nerves. “Would he, could he go?” “ Yes, So. wont- The door between them he had closed softly, Ibut it was shut— “shut forever,” she said, with a start. Then she went to the window and watched him as ho walked swiftly away., I When he was out of sight, she sat downy still by the window. It had come suddenly at last, so suddenly that she was bewildered. Everything was in a whirl. She put her hand to her head and held it, as if by that action she could hold and steady her thoughts; but relentlessly they trooped on, faster and faster, until,, as with the drowning, there was no past or future, only the vivid present. There was their first difference, and only a few months of happy wedded life, when she wanted him to wear a pair of light brown gloves, and he preferred the dark and wore them. Such a trifle, oh!' such a trifle, as it seemed to her now; yet she was hurt and vexed, and showed it Then his refusal to go to tea with her at her aunt’s. He disliked tea-partios and he*was not cordial with this aunt. Then her refusal to g* with him to concert, on the hearing of which he had set his heart, and his coming home happy, humming one of the airs he had boen listening to. Happy!—that was the pang. Trifles, trifles all of them— such very little things that loving each other truly, as they did, they ought never ttf have had a feather's weight with them; and yet—
utuiie » iiiuic Benuus uiuuiuuce. He wanted to spend a short; vacation from a hard-w6rking life among the mountains, where he could hunt and fish; and he wanted her to go with him But she preferred the seashore; so he Went to the one, she to the other. Separated for the first time In their inarrfed life, they wrote letters daily, and the happiest hour for them both was when' the mail came in. Then Kddj, dear little Eddy was born (the tears ar e on Mrs. Norris’s cheek now), and every difference vanished. Heavens! what tie could bind them more eloselyP But heonlystaid a short time, and in the desolation they began to fall apart again. She was restless and miserable; he was disappointed, and did hot make allowance for her weakened nerves and aching heart. Now they began to look critically into each others nature and its developments in character. Very late for that;
but it is an inevitable point in the dividing lines of intelligent and thought!ol people. made a mistake F Were Had they _ __ ^ these things—obstinacy in trifles on her part, indifference and neglect on his— the outgrowth of traits which had always been there, seen by others before, by them only years after marriage? Love was proverbially blind. Surely, they v*ere not only blind; but, like anger, it had been a short madness. fir. Norris could not blamo himself for what had happened. He never wished or meant to be anything but the best an d kindest of husbands. He had not only supplied all his wife’s real, but what he imagined might be a want, with a lavish hand. He had always been proud and fond of her. He was never happy away from her, but alas! he had eonio now near' to never being happy with her. Mrs. Norris was equally sure that her husband’s home had been well kept; that she had not failed in any of the wifely duties; that she had loved him, did love him more truly and devotedly than any other living being. Whence, sorrow and then, had come alf this trouble? The immediate cause of the crisis had been Mrs. Norris’ refusal to go to an entertainment with her husband; and her determination, against his express wish, to attend some revival meetings which were then in progress. She was drawn toward these by a great want in her nature, which she could not and probably would not, if she could, explain to him. '■ Life had come to her, as she had thought, in its most attractive aud satisfying forms, and she had found it—what? If there was another that promised something different. something betters surely, she of all living beings, most needed it. Mr. Norris misunderstood her motives in going, when he supposed them to be from a, wish to annoy him, and he did both a weak and a foolish thing when he ventured to command her never to go again; nor did she do justice to her true reasons when-she answered him with a bitter and cutting sarcasm lie felt he could never forget or forgive. Ovor all these separating incidents, find many more, with a minuteness and fidelity which seemed to set at naught all the usual psychological laws, wont this unhappy wife now. That her husband would see Mr. Wentworth, as he had proposed, she did not for a moment doubt; and that the able lawyer wouia accomplish just what ho was requested she was also sure—accomplish it in that careful, thoughtful, almost tender way, the very sympathy of which she felt would be more than she eould; bear. And yjBt she would not raise a finger to prevent it all, if she could.- It was betterns it was. If she intended to bo a Christian—and back to-'this point she found herself constantly? coming—what a hindrance her husband would be. Indeed, with him, would any such change be possible? But Mrs, Norris had too acute a mind to knowingly practice self-deception. She saw, at an unwilling glance, that it was nbt a step in the Heavenward course to break a solemn vow made in tho presence bf the great God—her God, whose help and care and love she so much needed. “Until death you two do part. So help me God!” i
“ lJut this has been death!” she said, tremblingly, to herself. “Deatn of happiness, death of usefulness, death of all that is worth living for. No-cold hand ever sundered lives more effetually than ours are sundered now. God He who and inthe must see this as I do, surely, is a discerner of the thoughts teats of the heart reads mine and tnows what my true motives are.” Item by item she went over changes -in their lives which this great change must make, until she came to one little spdt no larger than artJaby V grave; and to this God’s guidance, so often evoked, had led and held her. *tViibsrwulfr ft hirffowT WBon1 fitful fever was over, and she fail down to her long sleep, suppose, ju suppose it might not be under the daisies by Eddy's side. All the strength of love and tenderness she had lavished on her boy came rushing back upon her aching heart. “Oh! not this! not this!” It would bo the one thing she could not bear. He was hers, and not his father’s, by the great right of maternity, above which God had never set another; yet this father loved liis ehild. And then such pleasant memories came to her of the boy dancing in hjs great, stalwart arms; of his gentleness and lovingness with the tiny creature; of his pride and joy when a baby - look reminded him of her; of the plans they had made together for the wonderful future of this wonderful gift. Very tender shegrew pt the touch of this little dead head. There could not have been a better moment chosen for her husband’s return. When she heard his foot in the hall, she went, as was her wont in happier days, to open the libnmy door, meeting and welcoming was not a little surprised at her "abrupt reception. “Edward,” she said, “have you seen Mr. Wentworth?” “Ihave,” he answered, briefly. “There is one thing,” she went on, “ we had better settle before we go any further. Whose will be our little Eddy’s grave?” “ It will be ours.” ho answered, unconsciously. “Ours!” she bling voice. repeated, with a trem"I mean,” he said, remembering himself, “it will bo mine, unless—” .pitying the look of agony in her face—“unless you wish it. If you do I shall not hesitate to give it to you.” “But where will you lie?” she asked, tearfully. “I don’t know,” he said, carelessly. “I told Wentworth I wished you in every respect thoroughly and handsomely provided for. I shall go to Europe as soon as I oan wind up my business matters here.” was He spoke so coolly and quietly that, it 13 not difficult for his wife to answer. I all “It has come so suddenly that hardly understand yet what it means. I Bon’t wish you to think of me. Only provide for your own happiiml nnmfr>id ness and comfort. “ Happiness and oomfort!” he repeated, with a sneer.
x<uwmu, sue oaiu, nut luoveu »3 she would usually have been by the sneer, “ I want to say further that'I am very sorry for all causes I have given you of offonse. Forgive me, and let us, at least, part friends.” “Friends!” he repeated again, contemptuously. “Yes, friends,” she answered, calmly. “The happy days of our past, when —whou we loved each other, surolv, need not all bo forgotten. I think God has been showing me wherein I have done wron®-—wrong when I ne ver suspected it. I want to say again: Forgive mo for it. That is all. “ Katrina, we have both done wrong,” he answered, looking down into the pale and agitated face beside him; “but that don’t Kelp us now. W.e have tried the experiment of living happily together, and have failed. It is of no use.” “ It is of no nso,” the repeated, absently. “ I only wanted to say I was sorry for my part of the wrong. I never could have felt easy unless! had.” “Wo are probably neither ol: us saints,” ho answered, coldly. Then, with one of his rare smiles; “ Perhaps, Katrina, in Heaven we may be mamed aga!n, when we are both perfect; only, you know that dreadful verse about neither marrying nor being given in marriage,” She smiled, too; but it was a poor ghost of a smile. “I know,” she said; “bnt I shall never want to marry again ”
"We none o! us know what may happen,” he answered. -"Ten years ago, no two. people in all God’s world, would havo less expected to 'stand where we stand now.” "Edward!" she said, abruptly. “ Well?” he questioned. “ I thank you,” shd* went on, with seeming irrelevance; "but 1 cannot take Eddy’s grave. You would be lonely away from—from him. . God will give me my boy, just tho same, in Heaven; and to you, too,” she added— her true love forcing itself uppermost with her thoughts of their child. “ • Whose wife will she be of the seven?” he answered. “ Don’t. Edward,” she said, smiliug like herself. "Isay, Katrina”—he took both her hands and held them tightly in his own —“now we just can’t. We have both been idiots. Go to meeting all day, and all night, too, if you wish. Do anything you please, only don’t do this. That’s all. Don’t.” “But Mr. Wentworth, Edward?” trembling toward him. “Wentworth’s no matter,” he said, drawing her close to him. "Katrina, I am as hungry as a bear. Let us have dinner!’” “Simply a married quarrel” was it? It was something far more serious than that. It was lituo disagreements, trivial, superficial antagonisms made much ! of, until they came near shipwrecking two otherwise noble lives. “If she knocked me down every day with a broad-ax, I could bear it like a man,” said a tormented husband; “but to be driven to death with pin-pricks is more than I can bear.” These were pin-pricks on her part and the broad-ax on his; yet. had it not been for that one little grave, shame, sorrow and a life-long separation wonld havo been the result. Moral.—Beware of differences in trifles.-- Mrs. S. S. Foblnns, in N. Y. Independent. Snaring an Alligator* A correspondent, who has been fishingun the Florida waters, tells in Forest and Stream of his adventure in snaring an alligator. “We procured.”" he says, “ a strong soven-eightlis manilla rope, forty feet long, a small halter chain (twisted liqks), eight feet long, and a piece of well seasoned hickory. The latter we cut to a length of eight inches, leaving the ^diameter one and a half inches, and we sharpened each end. At the center we girded it with a quarterinch groove, leaving the diameter still one inch. The stick of wood we securely' fastened to the link. To the other end of the chain our rope was fastened. Our snare now had the appearance of a cap T with the upright stroke -very much elongated. We now procured a ten-pound chunk of beef, Ibto which we securely fastened the piece of hickory, and then, bringing one end of tho stick parallel with the chain, We fastened it there with a bit of yarn. Repairing to the ‘ reserve’ we selected a spot, secured our rope to a pine tree growing near its edge, and then by tho aid of a canoe wo carried tho bait out as far ass the rope would permit To insure the floating of the bait near the surface of tho water, we laid the rope
across a nve-iooi strip or piantc. r.v-ei-y thing completed, we retired to-a wait developments. Early next morning we were at the reserve, and there, sure enough, we had a ’gator fast, and judging from the muddy condition of tne water, he was a whopper, and had been there some time. The rope was moving through the water in quite a rapid manner, and without unfastening it we made a pull witlvall our strength, but we might as well have tried to lift an elcphaut by the tail. After much talk, it Was suggested and agreed to that we. TFM.Ite'tTSfc'Sra small wagon and a pair of mules belonging to the party. I went for the team, and in my haste did irortRifu t; nfe urptrc - ths -trottf ~gg thr 6n, it having been removed for 'urpose of hauling wood. Hastily 'ing a plank across the irs, I seated myself and i over to where the party awaited mo. The rope had been secured by a slip—low, without passing it arouhd the tree, so we had only to fasten the^ loose end to the hind axle and drive' away, and thus slip the knot and make a direct pull on the ’gator. After securely fastening thisrope to tho axlo, I seated myself on the plank, and gave the mqles the slack. The mules were young, tiery and hardly broken to harness, and had repeatedly run away, endangering our lives on more than oue occasion; but wo had not thought of this iu our excitement. For a moment after starting the team, there was a strain on the rope, and then out came tho huge monster, covered with mud,1 and. lashing the water into foam with hu tail, the noise he made resembling. to some extent the beatings of a huge propeller. The mules both looked around; and as they did so, the monster gave a roar that made the very earth tremble. The team, alligator and your humble servant, started for home. The distance was about two miles, and I think if Ilarus had seen ns, he would have left the track with a broken heart. Tho mules left tho road—in fact, made a new one without the aid of a surveyor—and that a'ligator bounded in the air as he never bounded before. Now and then, he would rap against a tree, but he scarcely touched the ground, and I had serious fears for awhile that, in his anxiety to go ahead, ho might put a head on me; however, we reached home sit last, and tho mules, completely winded, stopped of their own accord. When we came to sum up, we found all the * run’- taken out of the mules, one tire gone, throe spokes, in another wheel broken—iu fact, the wagon a wreck. My suit of clothes was torn to rags, and my person bruised, torn and bleeding by the terrible whipping of the trees and bushes over which wo had passed. A fourteen-foot alligator with every bone broken, was almost skinnod by hisoonstant banging against the trees.”
What a Sailor Said. His Honor had before him at the Central Station Court a long-legged, bow-back man with a high-pitched voice, who said he was a sailor. “ What are you sailing around here for before navigation has opened?” ‘‘Weil, you see, my name is flint Got that down?” “Yes.” “Well, ray first namo is Sam. You can spell Sam, I suppose?” “Yes; you are Sam Flint and I can spell both names.” “Well, I was up t^e lake chopping wood. The other day I got tired <3 that work and came down to see what the prospects were. Says I to myself: ‘ Maybe there'll be work and maybe there won’t be, but we’ll glide, down fb Detroit’ ” “ And you glid?” “ Yes, and when I got here I says again; ‘’Twon’t be no time lost, for if you don't get work yon can get drunk.’ ” “ And so you got drunk?” “Yes. And when l found I was getting drunk I says to Sam Kliift: • Sam, my boy, they charge as much for a little drunk as a big one,’ and so Sam got a big drunk.” “ Anawhat else did you say?” “Well, when I was hauled in I says to myself: * Samuel, you are booked for thirty days or I'm a goat, but you will save railroad fare and be handy by when the season opens.’ ” “And did Sam say anything to thatP” “Not a word, yer Honor, but he kind ’o gdnned and looked pleased. If I were you I’d lift him for a month.” But his Honor wouldn’t IIo turned him out in the spring slush to go back : to his chopping, JPret Pres*.
USEFUL ASP SUGGESTIVE. - —Soaking calioo just previous to the first washing in a strong solution of either salt or alum is excellent to preserve the color. —Combe says, in preserving beef, the ribs will keep longest—live or six days in summer—the middle of the loin next, the rump next, the round next, aud, the shortest of all, the brisket, which will not keep more than three days in hot weather. —Farmer's Pudding.—One cup of Indian meal; one-halt' cup of Hour, onehalf cup of sugar, moisten with a little milk. Boil throe pints of milk; pour slowly on the meal and stir until quite thick; add one-half cup of molasses and a little salt. Bake in an earthen dish two hours. —Chocolate.—Put into a coffee-pot set in boiling water, one quart of new milk for a pint each of cream and milk); stir into it three heaping tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate mixed to a paste with cold milk; let boil two or three minutes and serve at once. If not wanted so rich use half water and half milk. —Pure Beef-tea Without Water.— Fill a quart self-sealing glass can with; beof cut into very small pieces, close it, and place the jar in a kettle of warm water. Let the water come to a boil gradually, so that the jar may not break, and let it remain on the range about-' three hours; then strain it off and you will have a large cup of pure juice of the beef. Then put in a little salt and cayenne popper. —Snow Pudding.—Soak one-half a paper of gelatine in just enough water to cover it; add one pint of boiling* water, two cups of sugar, and juice of a( lemon; strain it after it is thoroughly cooled, so it commences to thicken; ad<^ the beaten whites of three eggs; beat all together until creamy, then turn into a mold. The same is made with a, pint of milk and yelks of the eggs, sugar to taste, and flavor; this makes a thick1 custard.
—Ashes operate with greater or less elBcier on different soils and in different seasons, and any precise quantity cannot therefore be prescribed, the amount usnally applied being made to vary with the supply—say from ten to fifty bushels per acre. A limited and given quantity would probably produce greater results if widely and /thinly spread, than if concentrated within a narrow space, leaving the rest/ of the land without it. , r —How to Remove Warts from Cattle.—Small ones may be removed with scissors; largo ones, having a narrow base, may be strangled by means of a strong, waxed thread, such as shoemakors or saddlers pse. It should be tied tightly around their base, and if the warts do not drop off in the course of a week, another ligature may be applied. Whichever process of removal is resorted to, the remaining wound should be touched daily with some tincture of iron. As the" operation is painful to the animal, only a portion of the warts should be attended to at a time.:—Live Stock Journal. —A subscriber sends the following method of, treating poll-evil which he has found successful. Open the pipe to the bottom with a probe that wilt not break, such as a doubled wire with the loop end downward, take equal parts of bi-chloride of mercury and sulphate of zinc; put a large pinch in a piece of thin muslin cloth and tie this to a string; put the bag to the bottom of the pipe with the probe, leaving the end of the string with a ball of cotton cloth tied to it hanging out of the top. Repeat this weekly for thretMJK-fewr-wBeks until the pipe coTftWout. Then keep the parts clean with soap and water and the fistula will soon heal.- -N. Y. Times. tin and scatter sugar liberally over*the bottom; a half an inch of sugar if the apples are pretty sour. Pare the apples and cut into halves. Remove the cores carefully, then lay them, core side down, into the sugar. Add a small cupful of water and bake till perfectly tender, but do not let them stew to pieces. When cold take up in a deep dish, and if any juice remains in the tin turn it over the apples.® Add a little sweet cream in dishing them out, and with'good bread and butter this malfes as relishable a dessert as one can desire. Russets, Greenings and Belmonts are all especially nice baked in this manner. —An exchange speaks of the great value of “chip dirt” for spreading around young or newly set fruit treos, imparting to them double vigor in growth. It is simply the benefit derived from good mulching. Decayed chips, leaf-mold and dried muck are all quite similar in their nature, and they tend, strongly to hold the moisture in the soil below, and cannot form a crust on the surface, they are well fitted for t.ho purpose. It is probable that a frequent stirring of the surface of the soil about the trees would answer nearly the same purpose; but, as planters generally neglect this stirring or perform it in an inefficient manner, while the action of the decayed, vegetable matter cannot be hurt by neglect, it lias a special advantage over other modes of treating young trees.
How Horses arc Spoiled. How quick a horse becomes dilapidated and demoralized after it comes into the possession of some people. It makes no difference how young or how nice they are when they got them, they all look alike in less than two years, and alwayshave that discouraged, destroyed appearance. I havo seen men who claim to have great judgment— whom we look to as wise, prudent and shrewd in business—that did not seem ■ to hare any idea of what treatment a horse requires. If I had a boy ten years old that was no more capable and reasonable about such things than many people, 1 should think he was a helpless idiot. Many seem to think a horse can endure everything, go without feed all day and half the night, and be off on a journey on bad traveling time after time. When they get home they put them in an old dark pit-pen, throw in a forkful of hay, the first they come to, and “let them rip.” They never rub or clean them, and never take any pains to protect them from cold or dampness. They overlook dillicnlties whenQln no condition to labor. How many young stylish horses have we seen all drawn out of shape and all sagged down; their back six inches too low in front of the hips and a foot and a half too long. A horse needs feed regularly and often, as oftott'as five hours at “least, at regu-. lar hours in the day. They cannot bear fasting as well as ruminating animals; biit they should never bo crammed full of hay, ^specially after a long drive when they have been without all day, nor just before a hard day’s work or q; long journey. 1 have seen a good many horses spoiled bv cramming aud fasting. It will soon spoil their digestive organs, and if long continued it Will weaken" them and destroy their vitality so that they will never take on flesh at all, even under good treatment. And so they always remain a crooked, shapeless mass of unsightly, useless “horseflesh.” But strange as it may appear, people never know the difference its long as the animal has a paunch, hair and hoofs! It is not all work that brought them to this. There are thousands of homes that look as well as they over did. It is the general management. It is not the team horse nor the livery horse so much as the farm horse that shows bad treatment. Some pretend that the horse has a bad constitution, or is siek. Others eaii it a lack of vitality. 1 should call it a lack of common sense in the cranium of his ownw.—Practical farmer.
Bow Diphtheria Spreads. The information'possessed as to the way in which diphtheria spreads is at Present very meager and unsatisfactory, 'here is no doubt that, in some cases at least, it is communicated by contagion and infection^using these terms widely; but whether the germs of the disease are carried \n the air, and under what conditions, or whether it is at any time generated de novo in healthy persons, is a matter for discussion. Experience points to the conclusion that if diphtheria makes its appearance in a house that is situated in a nigh, exposed place, the chances of its spreading in the locality' for miles around are much greater than they would be from a house that was sheltered from the wind. The disease sometimes seems to leap with long strides from one dwelling to another, miles apart, leaving the inhabitants of intervening dwellings untouched. For nearly four hundred years this plague has been devastating the lands of Christendom, anil puzzling those whose duty it is to cope with its ravages. While families which observe sanitary laws stand a far better chance of avoiding disease than those who do not, yet it often happens that diphtheria will pass by the dwelling where neglect and nlth are rampant, and present itself in the nursery of a house where every possible attention is paid to cleanliness. It is open to serious' doubt whether fresh outbreaks, that so often trouble us, are always the relics of epidemics that have "passed away—whether the germs of the disease have been wrapped up in some corner, only to show themselves, when dis- ■ turbed. As we have hinted, it is thought by some to be possible that the disease may be generated de novo at different points, and then spread on the wings of the wind. However it, is, there 'can be no doubt that uncleahliness, whether of person or dwelling, is an important factor in the spread of this as well as many other diseases. While it r may be true that healthy persons, surrounded by conditions which are to all appearances favorable to health, are sometimes attacked by diphtheria, it is a fact that, other things being equal, such persons are far better able to ward off the disease than are those who are surrounded by conditions of an unsanitary character. Those especially who 1 have children should, in guarding gainst this ravager, keep their houses in such order that diphtheria can not be generated in thoir midst, and that there can be no unclean corners in which the germs of the disease could be stored a« ay for future work of deva-tation_ ■ Herald of Health. -• *
Relics of a Prehistoric Race. - The spot where Des Moines now stands was Evidently at onetime, says the Des Moines (Iowa) Register, the burial place of a prehistoric race. The first settlers of Des Moines found many a mound where houses now stand, and their curiosity often led them to make excavations. Many a curious .specimen of art work was found deep down beneath the outside covering of muck, which would seem to denote a _skill not possessed by the savages, who "were then as plenty around Des Moines as they are now on their Kansas reservations. A very remarkable relic was found in a mound some eight feet below the surface, whiqh, under a magni-fying-glasa, reveals a curious and delicate piece of either fine inlaid woodwork of different colors, long since pet.rified, or of peculiar metals or stone, arranged uniquely, resembling the border, molding or chasing on monogramic jewelry and bearing an inscription in partly effaced letters, under winch is a row of numerals, the whole conjectured to be a coat of arms, badge of tribe, or ensign of official distinction, which was buried on the person of the wearer. It anydl.affsir, »ftUmucl> largoc-thaa-tb sijver dollar, vet a gentleman in Cincinnati once offered its Des Moines possessor $200 for it. Another relic taken from one of the holes was a peculiarly shaped hatchet, very unlike anything then in use by the American Indians or border whites. It was not of stone, and while certainly of metal seemed neither iron nor steel, and was so hard that a file made no impression whatever upon its edge. —Swiss engineers have employed tht principle found so useful in coal mines, of drawing nr> empty cars by thesuperi‘or weight of loaded cars descending the incline, on a passenger railway at Brienst. From the landing at that place to the plateau at the top of the Falls of ! Giessbach the road is furnished with two coaches, attached to an endless steel rope, In place of an engine to drive this cable, a tank- is attached to each coach, to be filled with water at the top and emptied at the bottom, thus ascending empty and descending loaded. Thus the force of inertia that carries one coach down causes the other to go up. Instead of a double track, a single track with an automatic turnout in the i middle is employed. —The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy ‘ Railroad Company are burning clay for ballasting their road. A small fire of bituminous Iowa coal is started on the surface of the ground, and when burning freely the fire is covered with a layer of lumpy clay, then alternately coal and clay, the coal decreasing in quan tity until at the top it is as one to lifteen. The mass is formed like a cone. Three united cones, each 18 feet high and containing* 1,000 yards of materia’, have been started near Red Oak. They will bum for months. Six hundred miles of road are to be ballasted with this crude pottery broken up. It Resembles coal cinder, but is harder. —Thank Providence for spring. The earth, and man himself, by sympathy with his birthplace, would be far other than we find them, if life toiled wearily onward without this periodical infusion of the primal spirit.—Hawthorne.
THE 9UUKETS. NEW YORK,.March 25, CATTLE—Native titcers..S3 00 ® OOTroN-Middiing......., .... " FLOUR—Good to Choice. 5 70 WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 12t No. 2 Soring. 1 20 COHN—No. 2. tiO OATS—Western Mixed.. 43 FOHK-Stujdatd Mess.15 50 S r. LOUIS. COTTON-Middling. HELVES—Choice.... 5 23 Fair to Good. 4 50 Native Cows. 2.75 Texas Steers. 5 23 IKK is—Common to Select. 4 75 SHEEP—'■air to Choice. 4 75 FLOUlt—XXX to Choice. 4 50 WHEAT—No. 2 Winter. 101 No. 3 “ its COEN—Ntfi 2 Mixed. 41 OATS—No.2. 30 IIYE—No. 2. 10! TOliACCO—Dark Lugs. 4 00 Medium hark Leaf 6 00 HAY—Choice Timothy.16 50 XIUTTE it—Choice Hairy. 24 EGGS—Choice. 13 POKE—Standard Mess........ 15 75 1851. 11 75 10S£ 6 75 1 24* 1 20* 60,* 45 16 00 OS * 4 10 4 40 4 21 4 BACON—Clear Rib i.A il)—Prime Steam. WCOL—Tul) washed,Medium Unwashed “ CHICAGO. CATTLE—Nativcsteers. 4 10 1IOGS—Good to Choice.. 5 70 SHEEP—Good to Choilee. 4 00 FLOUR—Winter.. 5 00 Spring..... 4 50 WHEAT—No. 2 Red. 1 02 No. 2 Spring.. 03 10* ■5 75 4 85 3 85 4 50. 6 S3 5 73 5 15 1 01* OS* M* 36* 1 01* 4 25 7 00 17 00 26 13* 16 00 OS* 10* 41 CORN—JToPi. .1.. A...... 37* * OATS—No.2.. . 20 ltYE. 03 PORK—New Mess. 11 75 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Native Steers....... 4 00 NativeCows........ HOGS—Sales at....... WiiHRAt—No.2.... No, 1..... CORN-No.2 Mixod. OATS—No.2. NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR—High Grades. 5 40 ® CORN—White. 63 m OATS—CliotC*. 53 « HAY—Choice.. 21 <00 ® PORK—Mess.15 25 « BACON—(dear Itib. . 08*41 COTTON—Middling. .... m 6 15 6 00 5 75 6 00 5 25 1 02* 1 00 iiS 23* 1 00 15 00 75 ® 00 « 00 ® 86 4t 32*® 32 » 4 10 3 50 5 15 00* 87 31 33 0 37* 67 54 33 :o 16 25 13 11
A Ghost In a Picture Gallery. AVaynesville is in a fervent excitement over a haunted photograph gallery. For more than a week the artist, Mr. AV* Slater, has been unable to take a picture, owing to the appearance of the figure of an old gentleman behind the sitters. Until to-day he failed to hold the shadow on the negative, but he is now able to print the gnost, who looks like a fine old man of fifty, dressed in an old style. The artist’s bottles and negatives have been%haken, his lamp blown out, etc., and he is so scared that nothing would induce him to spend the night there. Old residents revive the story of a peddlar being murdered fifty years ago in the building in which the gallery is; intact, they say his body was thrown into a well which is immediately under the gallery. But those who have seen the ghost’s picture say that he was never a peddlar when in the flesh.—Cincinnati Commercial. —A young man in this city described a taxidermist to a bevy of young girls as one who sort o’ upholsters animals! He took the cake.—Rochester Democrat. Clinton (Iowa) Herald. James Butler, Esq., Clerk of the Roxbury Carpet Co., Boston, Mass., employing eight hundred hands, In a late communication concerning the admirable working of an article Ahtrodueed into the lactory, says: “The famous old German Remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, has effected several cures among our men, who have been badly hurt in working in the factory, and they pronounce it a success every time. _^
Tub decline in eggs is attributed to the fact that hens are shelling out more freely. (Jackson Daily Patriot.) Happy Friends* Kev. F. M. 'Winburne, Pastor M. E. Church, Mexia, Texas, writes as follows: Several months since I received a supply of St. Jacobs Oil. Retaining two bottles, I distributed the rest among friends. It is a most excellent remedy for pains and aches of various kinds, especially neuralgia and rheumatic affections. __ Because a man says he lives on faith you must not infer /that he will refuse a good dinner. Prejudice Kills. 11 Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery under the care of several of the best (and 6ome of the worst) physicians, who gave her disease various names but no relief, and now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bitters, that we had poohed at for two years, before using it. We earnestly* hope and pray that no one else will let their sick suffer as we did, oh account of prejudice against so good a medicine as Hop Bitters.”—Tub Parents.— Telegram._ __ Every business man likes to be patronized, provided his patron does not patronize him in a patronizing manner.—Jlutne Heittinel. Keddixq’s Russia Salve is the universal remedy for burns, scalds, cuts, bruises, etc. If afflicted with Sore Eyes, use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 35c.
THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGt), BACKACHE, GOUT, SORENESS CHEST, SORE THRQ& QUINSY, SWELLINGS SPRAINS, " FROSTED FEET EARS, stmws SCAIiQS, General Bodily Pains, TOOTH, EAR HEADACHE, ALL OTHER PAINS ACHES.
No Preparation on earth equal* St. Jacobs Oil as a urc, Burk, simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entail* but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Certs, and every one Buffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of tta uldimji. mK1rtIoss IS xLEYmt LA.\€IACE3. SOU BY AU UUBQ1STS ABB DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOQELER & CO. Baltimore, Met., U. S. A, WOMAN’S TRIUMPB! HRS. LYDIA £ P1NKHAM, OF LYNN, HASS,
DISCOVERER of LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Th^oeitir^m® flwftH tk«M P«WU Complaint* tad WrakneMM •o common to our beat female population. It will cure entirely the worst form of Female Complaints, all ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and is particularly adapted to the Change of Life, It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus in an early stage of development. The tendency to can* cerous humors there la checked very speedilyl>y its use. It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous I’rostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. ^ That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by its use. It will at all times and under all circumstances xet in harmony with the laws that govern the female system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex this Compound is unsurpassed. LYDIA K. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND is prepared at 213 and 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price fL Six bottles for $5. Sent by mail in the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, on rooeipt of price, $; per box for either. Mrs. Pinkham freely answers all letters of inquiry. Send for pamphlet. Address as abovo. Mention this Paper. No family should bo without LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S LIVEIt PILLS. They euro constipation, bliiousnesst and torpidity of the liver. 23 cents per box. Sold by RICHARDSON & CO., St- Louis, Mo FOB BALE BY DRUGGISTS. DrBULLS COUGH SYRUP For the Cure of Ooutfni, OOlits. Hoswenma. Asiams, Brass i nn v Bali* , Nm<.* tor aN Bias's Instilments.too Sent by mail on receipt of price. JV» th*m. u L. Wiurn.*, a Winter st, Boston,*.
TUTT’S PILLS r TORPID LIVER. Lost of Appetite, Bowels costive. Pain in the Head, with a dull sensation in the baok part. Pain under the ahouldar blade, fullnesa after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind, irritability of temper. Low spirits. with a feeling of naying neglected some duty. Weariness, Diiainess. Fluttering at the Heart, Lots before the eyes. Yellow Skin, Headache *2h®r*Uyoyer the right eye, Restlessness with fitful dreams, highly colored Urine ft COwaTiPfri iQNj TUTT’S PILLS are espeelalty adapted to Kuril ra«ro, a single dose effect* such s change of foaling ns to astonish the sufferer. SOLD EVEP.yiVIIERE, PRICE *5 CENTS. OFFICR. as M array Street. Now York,
Invalids who have lost bwt are recovering vital stamina, declare In grateful t*rms their appreciation of the merits as a tonic of Hostotter's Stomach Bitters. Not only does It Impart strength to the weak. It corrects an Irregular actd state of the stomach, makes the bowela act at proper Intervals, gives ease to those who suffer from rheumatic and kidney troubles, and conquer* as well as prevents fever and ague. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers <- generally. RIIRRIF <5 mtwwmsi sarriabe co. cirn.fc UUUUlug Territory given. Catalogue free. $10 AI>AY. Bowie make it. SomrtfcingKcwfbt All KSTS. Cue, VON'GE*Co.,St. Louis,Mo. I Any Canvassers wanted for a new article. LRUI iCORONET CORSET CO., Jackson, Mich. HAIR and Wia* sunt 0.0. D. anywhere, Wholesale a::d Retail. Price-list fret. Goods gu&r&n* teed. B.C.Strkhl. 157 Wabash-av .Ublcaga I lUlt Warrants and Soldiers’ Additional Homestead ■■Hull Floats bought and sold. Highest price paid. N. W. Fitzgerald, Laud Att'y. Box 583. Washington, D. & | GE^TS WASTED for the Best and Fastest* Selling Pictorial Bonks and Bibles, Prices reduced 3 per cent. National Publishing Co.. St, Louis. Mo, AfiEUTC Coin money with Up. Chaw’s New AyClt I 9 Receipt Rook. ~ * ______Newly revised and en* larsed. By mail. 12. Address Chase Pub g Co., Toledo, O. A CJKrVFS 1ft anted—In every city or town. No capital required. Address, with refer* tnefti, Gakpen Citt Gkaix Exckasgb, Chicago, 111. $350 A MONTH! AOENTSimTBD! 75 Best Selling Articles in the world; a sample /m. jay nnoxso.^. Detroit, Mieh DRUNKS-s0PiUM^rB,T U 11 V IIII By LESL1E E. KKELEY, M. D. geon C. & A. It. R., Dwight 111. CTKEO __^ _, . Bdr*HT Rooks free. WELL BORINGhd «ki DRILLING MACHINES. .Tools for all kinds of Well making. LOOMIS & NYMAN, TIFFIN, OHIO, Johnson’s COMMEECItL College. Fnr t'lmilaN Wvifatn T W -n_4 n. » For circulars write to J. W. JoHNSGN. Pres’t, St Louis. TEACHERS fflMMS“’'5<> - Summer. For full particulars, addivss _J. C. aictLHDY <V CO., I ■ Hp^LUtPY * COh St. Loate. Mo.
Agents wanted. $5 & Day made our PLATFORM FAMJ Weighs up to 25 lbs. tail price, tl. 5tf. Terms snrprtseAs* PbMftmc Soai.k Co.. Cincinnati^ SHi
i* *&»■»««* •* twfe. or v> tt»W « fc«*Ma S n*ifcw»M |H* Voir •»• «W», *»': W „«l —4 **1> 8tX «f.u fc* «h« > i 2firt^ra.,a!&Hr i IUXlM8.aMM.il ou. /(MW/«k q
Gold Violin,Guitar & Banjo Strings, iye. each; silver. 12c.; plain Steel, tic. Sheet Music half , - price. Agents Wanted. 40-pasr© Catalogue sent gree with first cash order. HURLMUSIC! BERT BROS., Wholesale Music Dealers, St Louis. RSlisffii Is put up in sixes to suit ah classes* and sold by drug- ‘ — 1 on each can, and has CO. Is put up in saxes to suit all class* Ssts everywhere: full direct tons . ie signature of WOOL RICH & C FRAZER AXLE GREASE. Beat Ju the World. Det the gettuiae. _ ery package baa our Trade-mark, and In Kwmwrked IVmcr’i, iULlI JEVRRY WHRR&. kfor SOLDIERS, PENSIQNSsss .__% ____Apv Thousands yet entitled. . Pensions for any wound or disease. Bounty yet due to thousands. Pensioners entitled to Increase of Pension. New laws and decisions. Time limited. Apply at once. Address, with two stamps for laws, blanks and instructions, F. H, GELSTOS A CO., U. 6. Claim Attorneys, Box T35, Washington, D. p. “CORN: From 4 to 10 Kars per Stalls 1AO Bushels to the Acre. YIELD Tills is* no PraudL W. h vr. aeen Mr. Crowley ’s field of corn, and 1 now th. above to De true: M. J. Lawrence. Editor Ok. .. a. X Marvin, Attorney: J. A. Brown, Clerk Criminal Court: Marine lnauruee Annt-.ll of Cl.veland. ft —*• P. rhinneT.P. M., Itoekpoii.O. Price by mail. poet. »pe prepaid. Bl.Ottpcr <fi______ _ •Iorders. Send yourordersearly as tbe amount is Uinited. fl[. A. CJK6SSLE * -- Price by mail, postlateral discount for bosh* • C'leTelaad, ftk!?._
Pearce’s Improved Cahoon Broadcast
SEED SOWER ••We «ik klnla Srala awk Uras _ _ 1 Thts machine has been sol«l ■ « every state in this country ::*»d in ahnrst every Oraiu* section on the «****« enure satish faction everywhere to every ^H», Does the work of S men. berul stamp for Circular. W. IIUrSEY MF0.€0«
to TMMiin|.!i«*-iKa«T him hr-u h»Pvr t» «*v* thotr test i irmy (nfavor of thetisr of '' ffiftdr'a PKrtCoa-JJr&r Oil and IM*." Kjcpertr nee hM proved It tote avaluaM* remedy for Consumption. Asthma, Jitphtherl*. and all dlseasM of *ho Throat and {.ana* Manufactured only t.y A. B. Wjlbok.Chemist, Boston. Bold by ail droughts.
ASTHMA. JONAS WHITCOMB’S REMEDY Hu been used in thousands of the wont omm, with Mtonishing and uniform sucoess, and U offered to the public with full confidence In lie nw*rtu It contains no poisonous or injurious properties whatever, end a* Infant may take it with perfect safety. “My mother had suffered eight years from the har* ▼eat asthma. The recurrence of this three month* igoxtv every year must soon wear her out ‘Jonas Whitcomb’s Asthma Remedy * arrested the terrible <llseas\ aud has kept It off for the whole season, to the great Joy of the family.” Row* JOS. E. ROY* Chtcag# Agent of the American Home Missionary Society. In the K. T. Independent. \Publt*hfd in * “TO THr BRONCHT___ such persona, without any conference with those who advertise It 1 earnestly urge all who suffer by these dla» tress'ng maladies to uss persietentlv ‘Jonas Whitcomb's Remedy for Asthma. Rose Cold, etc.’ ** T. R. kOBEJKTiONi Broad Bus. Fauuulw Oo . Va.
Books by Mail. 1,-MS 11TTLB COOKS. By Miss Kiuuio. Price *1.00. , ' „ 1' While it Is really an Imen atltiK narrative In ttsel*. It delightfully teaches girls Just howtu follow uracilcully ita many recipes. — Si. SicAoiat,X**c I ore. *.1K»KA’S HOl'fEKEmXG. By Miss Kimlank. Price *1,00 “Hoecupte* a hitherto uutllled field In literature, and girls and their mother* will he equally delighted with It.”—J'Ae Advance, Chimuo. a_HABBERTOX. The Jericho Boatli m Story of WVeatcro Llfr. a By joau Habbiktos, author of "II len’s Babies,* etc. 12mo., 28pages. Cloth, price*!.DO. “Habbeltou'abest book! — Aorth American Review, “That wonderful clever story of the West. —PAC Advance .Chicago). 4.B1MV HUE CAME I.\TU HER KIXQAKntuance. ByC. M. C. 12 mo., 381 pages. Pried ^'“Certainly a remarkable romance."—Button Adper* Is a novel of remarkable Intensity and originality."—,!’. V. American R'lOkseller. ‘It is far above displaying great Graphic, e the average of works of Its el*sa strength aud tragic power. -Jr. r. T. 01»I> OB EVK.X. By Mrs. A. I>. T. WutTNKT. lino. Houghton. Osgood & Co. Price, #1.50. “Odd or EveUa’ la not the novel of a clay or a seaton or a sensation; it is a capital novel forever. —CVw* caffo Wines. Ss-LomsiAKi:. By Frahcis H. IH’ritktt. 12mo. Charles Scribners Sons. Price. SI. 25. “A purely American novel. f „• • One taiyitt down grateful for its literal y purity, proud of its lofty spirit aud very sorry that there are not several mow volumes of it.— Chicago Times. -CAPTAIN FKACASSE. From the French of Theoiuiilk Garnft 16mo. G. P. Putnam’s Sous. Ptoer, Ale,; clotli. •1-35-“In this delightful work Gautier surpassed himself tndmroduecd the model o.i picturesque romances. — Henry Stines. Jr. V | lO v-llRlt RRIGHT FUTURE. A brilliant story of American life, drawn from fact and! jlctlon. . .... interest well sustained and situations admirably portrayed.*’— Chicago Times. 6.—TRUTHS FOR TO-11AT. Second SoBir Prof. David Swing. 12mo., 2M pages, tinted paper. Price, $1.50. TUferv olnme contains the latest discourses of Prof. Swine, some oft he in preached ad the Fourth Church* but!most of them spoken at the theater to the new CVutrafClHiveh congregation. It is universally conceded that these ai e the finest efforts he has ever made. Any of the above hooks sent by mail, prepaid, on recyptef the Brice named. & ^ KELLOGG, IT J.ek.on Blrtfl. Chl^mo. MORE THAN 100 STYLES OF THE MAS0N.& HAMLIN
OlRGJ-^lSrS are now regularly made, from i 109 [Shown in iht cut), the 1 and smallest size, popularly know® aa tha BABY ORGAN, at only m to a law CONCERT ORGAN at #900. TwufTT STTiiXa at from $2S #500 and up; cash prices., Sold also r Kiir i “ l is esnecli
will be round equally useiui ior PRICE, $22. adults, having fine quality of tone sad power, and sufficient compass (three and a Quarter octaves) for the fall parts of hymn-tunes, ant heme, songs sad popular sacred and secular music generally. MASON A HAMLIN ORGANS are certslnlTjth© BEST IN THE 'WORLD, haring wen HIGHEST AWARDS for i>xvonbt*atkp scrawoarrr at E\ ERY ONE of the GREAT WORLD’S EXHIBITIONS ro» THiaTBXKTKAas: being the only Americaiygrgans which have been found worthy of such at any/ ' ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES jfnd Mica list* free. MASON is HAMLIN ORGAN CO- lMTrernonl fet.. BOSTON ; 46 East 14th St. (Union Square), NEW YORK: 149 Wabash Avc- CHICAGO^ , NICHOLS.SHEPARD & CO Battle Creek* Michigan, hlAyUTACTTTEE.H3 07 TUB ONLY GENUINB VIBRATOR THRESHERS, Traction and Plain Engines and Horse-Powers. broad warranty given on all our goede.
STEAM-POWER SEPARATORS utf Complete Steam Out fit s of «uudkl<mf«oha <?«. Finest Traction Engines and Plain Engine! ever Seen in the American market . . .» A multitude of special feature* and tmprovemente for 1881,together with superior qualities \n construe* tion ana materials not dreamed of by other makers. Four sizes of Separators, from. 6 to 18 hr capacity, for steam or horse power. Two styteeof “Mounted " Horse-Powers. 9 KAA ||AA Feet of Selected Lm § |WVW|VvV (from three to six years a ireonstantly on hand, from which is built the i comparable wood-work of our machinery. TRACTION ENGINES Strongest, u^ost durable, and efficient ever 10,1« lione Power.
Circulars sent free. Address NICHOLS, SHEPARD * CO. Battle Creek, Michigan.
IsutdorDry Form act* at the same time on the diseases of the Liver, Bevels aM Kifliejs, ThU combined action gives it wonderful . power to cur* all diseases. WHY ABB WE SICK? Because tee allow these great organs to be vme ctoggedor torpid, and poisonous k umors tre therefore forced into the blood that should ! be expelled naturally. I BlLIOtT8> ESS, PILES, CONSTIPATION, KIjB.NET COMPLAINTS, VEIN ART DISEASES, FEMALE WEAKNESS, AND NERTOES DISORDERS, by causing free action qf these organs and { restoring their power to throw qf disease. Why Hatter Billons pains, and xKnl Why tormented with rilen, Coaatlpatioat I Why frightened oxer disordered Kidneys! I Why endure nervous or tick headaches! Why hare slocpleas n|ghUI [ CseKIDNEY-WORT and rt/oice bt health I
8M K. S. I*. 58 IldV. 4WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please say you law the advertisement ia this (taper. Advertisers Uke to kpo« when sinn whnri their advertlae meats cuni paying bent. 5
' ami torn taiuod by pig':VSSSLI discovery and a largo rtcord of a ADMINISTERED BY INHALATION
