Pike County Democrat, Volume 13, Number 51, Petersburg, Pike County, 4 May 1883 — Page 4

PIKE COUNTY Published K very I ’ iday- - INDIANA. PETERSBURG, MJXK SHILDRE V. Oh, dose sBlidren, dose shildren dey boddher mine life! Vhy don't! dey keep quiet, like Ci etohen, mine vlfe? Vot makes dem so shock fool mischief, I vunder, A-shumping der room roundt m t noises like dunderf » Hear dot! Vasdere anyding make sooch a noise As Herman uhd Otto, mine two ecdle boys? Venldakeoup mine pipe for i goot qviet shmoke, Dey crawl me all ofer, und dink id a shoke To go droo mine liockots to see \ otdey find, Und if rait der latch-key my vnteh dey can vind. Id takes somedlng more as dheir fader und moder To qviet dot Otto und his leedle roder. fecy Bhtub oudt dheir boots, und ear holes In der knoes OH dheir drousers, und shtockln; », und sooch dings us dese. I dink if dot Croesus vas liflng to ay, lose poys make more bills as dot Kaiser could pay: I And me. qrick oudt dot some riches dakc vings, ’'on each gouple a tays I must btydem new dings. s I pring dose two shafers some to; s ef ry tay, Because "Shonny Schwartz ha sooch nice dings.” dey say, “Und Shonny Schwarts* barents l as poorer as ve”— , Dot's vot der young rashkells assaying to me. Dot oldt Santa Klaus mita shleigh fool of toys •Don'd gif sadisfactions to dose g oedy poys. Dey kick der clothes oH ven ashloep in dheir ped, Und get so mooch croup dot der almosdt vas dead: Budt id don’d make no tiHerent: before it vas light ‘ Dey vas up in der morning mit bil lows to fight. 1 dink id vas beddher you don’d t it some ears Ven dey blay “Holdt der Fort,” md den gif dree cheers. . « Oh, dose shildren, dose shildren, dey boddher mine life! Bttdt shtop shust a leedle. If Grotohen, mine vife, Und dose leedle shildren dey don’d been around, Und all droo der house dere ras liefer a sound— Veil, poys, vy you look oupdot ray mit surbrise? I guess dey see tears in dheir oldt fader's eyes. —Charles F. Atlams, in Harper's Magazine.

CARRADDiE’S LOVE, - . £ Carradine sat alone at his oasel painting; and as he painted he thought. Eight years before, when he was a poor, struggling boy, just entering on that race which must be run by erery aspirant to art and its honors, there happened to him something wl ,ch neither time nor tail had ever been able to efface from his memory. As ho was passing along the streets a wreath of fragrant roses suddenly fell on his head, and, looking up in wonder, he beheld, reaching out from the embroidered draperies of an ovehanging window, a child, with fairy-like proportions, with great dark eyes and long, curling black locks, who stood smiling and throwing him kisses from her curved lias, colored like a pomegranate. , While sne still gazed, a nurse had come f< rward and drawn the ehildaway; the curtains were closed, and he saw the little csreature.no more. Such was the vision that the artist had carried so long in his memory; in his memory only, for lie had no second glimpse of the child. That very day an accident occurred which kept him a prisoner in his room ::or several weeks, and when next he went out vhe house was empty, and a placard with great flaring letters, announcing it for sale, stai-ed him in the faee. from the sanie window in which the little whiterobed elf had stood waving,her hand and smiling to him. In course of time other faces appeared them, but they were strange faces, and among them was never the one for which he looked. Now, as Carradine sat pai nting alone, he thought of all this; of i he straggle that had ended at length in success; of -liis WnJ, iiufrletiHcil Vx>yhon*l, aait of the beautiful child with her fragrant rose crown, which had seemed air.lost like a prophecy. Thaft rose wreath, dry and withered now, was all that was left to him of the fair vision; but when that morning, in turning over a;;, old portfolio, he had come upon it by chan -e, it spoke to him of that by-gone day just as eloquently as when its blossoms were flush and full. “Eight years ago,” he said, thoughtfully, retting the shriveled circles slip through his fingers slowly. “ She must be sixteen now—if she lives. If? No, I do not doubt her living presence— somewhere. I wonder w ere she is now, and what she is like at six tern?” With that he plaoed the wreath beside his easel and began)to pain:. The race, as it grew on his canvas, present od a young girl in the dewy morning Mush of first youth, with shadows-in the great dark eyes and a half-smile ahou the bright curled lips, like an embodied summer sun-shower. It was thus' that the artist pieturecfhis ideal of the childwoman, whose infantile look and smile for eight long years had been his own dream of love. Carradine had not had an easy life. An orphan from his earliest years, ioor and unfriended, he had studiedhari for the means to gratify that inhe -ent idolatry for arfwhich was always c amoring to find expression iu arm and coloring. He had fought and he had "on; but now, at twenty-six, he stood ir. the place which he had gainer for hii: self almost as much alone at the very I part as he had been eight years oefore, v hen the child’s gift came to him »a a prophecy. % It was not that he was friendless. There were men who liked and sought him, women who would gladly have taught him to forget his oneKness in their affection. But though his nature responded rapidly to an ' kind ness, there was one chord, dee; er than all, that remained untouched, and from the sweetest glances his th lights went bae^tw the unknown chi I that had smiled down on him so long ago. t The ideal head becai e his great source of enjoyment, and dream .' softness shaded his dark-grey ayes, as line by line and tint by tint took hire back into the past, which, all ifeless as it was, seemed to him, in those moments, more real than the busy present. Yet now, in reviewing that one brigb, vision of his memoir, it was not so m ich the lovely child that he saw in fane;, as the beautiful girl whose face wit’ll fuller depth and sweetness, look' d on . at him from his own canvas. Instinctively, he hard!}' kne ir ‘why, he disliked to work on 1i is pi . ture in any other presence, and he die' oted to it only his hours of solitude, So it happened that it was nearly nisb ud when by some chance a friend 4 reov iredhim bending over it, too abac bed to hear any approach. As the ioor opened Carradine rose hastily, turning his easel to the wall, so as to cone sal he face upon it. This little stre age n, however, was destined to b< of no avail. Having been marked by he ntruder, one of those cordial, well- nea ing people, good-natured to a deg pee, but with little delicacy of perceptk 1—toe action at once aroused his curiosity. “Aha, master painter,’ he S kid, with a laugh, “let us see what it is that yon work at by yourself till away your eyes And eat s. it steals )nly one on the forbidding around, loud in Pith that, he laid his ian< frame, and receiving nn word from Carradine, tur edi The next moment be vas praise. “Bat who is it, Carrad le? If it is a portrait, tell me where to Ind the original, and I will, if it is a set »n days’ journey!” Carradine smiled, "HI myself knew wht e to Undsuch (in original I should not h i hats to tell

you, nay good triend,” lse answered, evasively. “Oh, 'a fancy sketeh,” said the other, misled, as the artist had desired. “ I might have saved myself the trouble of asking. No real flesh and blood face ever looked like that—more shame to nature, I say. Of course you will exhibit it, Carradine?” “ No!” answered the printer, quietly. “No!” repoated the other, in surprise. “ But-, my dear fellow, you must, or I shall betray your secret, and you will have a swarm of visitors, ;worse than a plague in Egypt, let in upon you.” Carradine hesitated. A chance word iu his friend’s speech had suggested a possibility that made his heart leap in spite of sober reason. “You are right,” he said. “I shall send the picture for exhibition. It will be better so.” After his visitor had left him alone gain, Carradine bent low over his easel, gazing into the lovely, upturned face, until it began to fade into the gathering -twilight-“It—-it!” he murmured to himself, half unconsciously. “But it can not be. Yet I will send it*—and perhaps-” And so the picture was. sent, in due time; and it seemed almost as if Carradine’s soul had gone with it and drawn him to follow. Hour after hour, and day after day, he sat in the gallery scrutinizing eagerly every face amid the visitors whom taste or fashion had brought to look at the now celebrated artist’s latest success. Every night he went away unsatisfied, and every morning he returned with hope springing afresh in his heart. Still, the object of his search, whatever it may have been, does not appear; and one day, discouraged at last, lie resolved to go no more on so fruitless an errand. Shutting himself in his studio,, he began to paint, but, strive as he would, he could command neither hand nor fancy. Finally, tired of repeated failure, he abandoned work, and yielded to an impulse which drew his*Steps in the customary direction. When he entered the small side room in which his picture hung he found but two persons within, a young man and a girl.

uamuune eoiiiu not see tne laces ot these two, but, with an earnestness for which lie was at a loss to account, ho followed their retreating figures as they moved slowly toward his picture. But the next moment an exclamation of astonishment burst from the lips of the young man. “Why, here is your portrait, Leilia! What does it mean? Who can the painter be?” , With that he hurried out to purchase a catalogue. Carradinc advanced quickly to the girl. “ I am the painter,” he said. She turned and looked at him with one steady gaze from those glorious eyes that had haunted his visions for so many years. Then she spoke: “You painted that picture? and how?” “From remembrance,” he answered. “It was my only tribute to the little unknown fhincess who crowned me once with loses. Does she, too, remember it?” For a moment doubt was in her face; but as he looked fixedly at her it vanished in certainty. A smile just touched her bright lips. “It was you, then, on whom 1 forced my roses? A Princess who gave away honors unasked. How often I have wondered since—” She stopped, turned to the canvass, and added abruptly: “But I was a child then, and hero—” “Here you are a woman,” said Carradine, completing the unspoken sentence. “ Is it so hard to understand? The same power that kept the child in my heart showed me into what she would ripen.” . She did not look at him now, but at tin? picture ,sas she asked him In a low ■voice: “And whom anal to thank for such an honor? ” “My name is Hubert Carradine,” he answered, and saw at once that it was no unfamiliar word to her. “And yours? Through all these years your face has haunted me always, but your name 1 never knew.” She hesitated a moment, then turned to him: “You never knWmyname? Then think, of me still as you'have thought of me through all these' years,” she said, a half smile lingering about her mouth,* but never lighting the great dark that was shaded by some subtle sadness. The look, the 'tone, transported Carradine beyond all remembrance of place or circumstance into the unreal realm of imagination in which his wish was supreme ruler. “I have thought of you always as my life and my love,” lie said, half consciously, his dreamy, deep gray eyes glowing upon her face. She blushed suddenly, and then paled in an instant. Just then her former companion entered the room. “ I am Leilia Auvemay,” she said, hastily, “and this is Cecil Wyndham, niy—my betrothed husband.” Not another word was said. As the young man approached Carradine fell back a step and looked at the two. His was a fair, handsome face, so little marked as yet by time that it would be hard for an unpracticed eye to conjecture with what lines the shaping character would yet stamp it. Nevertheless, with one keen gaze Carradine estimated both present and future. She said a few low-spoken words to her companion, who presently moved toward Carradine, and addressed him: “I have the honor of speakingto Mr. Carradine, the painter of this picture?” Carradine bowed without speaking. “Will you pardon me for asking if it is a fancy sketch?” continued Mr. Wyndham. “ Partly so, but suggested by the face of a little girl,” answered the artist. “ But the likeness is so very striking,” muttered the young gentleman. “ I must have it at any rate. Of course, you will part with it—at .your own price?” “The picture is not for sale,” said ^Carradine, quietly, still regarding the young man with that cool, steady gaze which bad already caused him to betray a hesitation, almost confusion, very unlike his usual easy confidence. He seemed to have an instinctive knowledge that the artist was measuring him., and to shrink from that measurement with unconscious dread. Carradine saw Leilia Auvemay once more before she returned to her home in a distant town. Then he took his picture from the academy walls and hung it in his studio, where his eyes could find it whenever he looked away from his work. For he did not give up work; yet, among themselves, his friends pronounced him an altered man, and marveled what had caused so subtle a difference. Always silent, he now seemed to live in an ideal world of his own; and, whatever he might occupy himself with, there was that in his manner which appeared to imply that it was only a temporary diversion until the coming of some event for which.he was waiting. So passed half a year, at the end of which there came a letter to Carradine. It was very brief, but it was enough to assure him of that which he had been almost unconsciously expecting. The letter was from Leilia Auvemay, He went to her at once. She met him with a laughing light in her eyes such as he had not seen there when she stood in the gallery beside her betrothed husband—a light which recalled the merry child who had smiled down on him so long ago. “Mr. Carradine,” she said, “I told you that my fortune w»s gone, hut l

did not tell you how utterly it had been swept away, I am nothing better than a beggar. Will you take me as one of your students, for charity's sake?’ He looked searchlngly into her smiling face. •‘And Mr. Wyndham,” he asked, in a low voice. She replied without so much as a flush of emotion: “Mr. Wyndham has gone with the rest of uty worldly possessions. Did I not say that I had lost everything? You see, Mr. Carradine, that I|am not of as much worth as my picture.” The words as she said them did not seem bitter. He took her hands. “Leilia,” he said, “does your loss make you unhappy?” “Do.I look sop” she asked, gayly. “ As for the marriage, it was my father’s wish, and to gratify his dying request I consented—before I knew my own heart—” Here a quick, vivid color shot, into her cheek, but she went on: “ T here never was love on my side; and on his—well, money is more than love with some natures. I do not wish to blame him.” S Carmdine’s grasp tightened on her hands. ‘* Leiilia,” he said, “ once your answer put a bar between ns when I spoke words that were surprised out of my heart. Would it be so now if I should say them once more? My love, my life, will yon come to me?” “ Will I come?” she repeated, looking up in his eyes and drawing nearer, untU his arms silently folded about her.. And so Carradine found his love at* last.

Windy Weather. No one who is at all subject to any affection of the chest should expose himself to high wind. A high wind is always more or less cold; and, on the other hand, no matter how low the temperature is, exercise may, as a rule, be taken with benefit and comfort if there be no wind. The nervous, too, should avoid exposure to high winds, else headache will be the result, and general depression of the whole system will follow. Cold wet winds, especially those that blow from the north and east, Seem to possess a peculiarly disturbing effect upon the mucous membrane of the digestive canal, which may result in a fit of dyspepsia, or in diarrhoea, or even dysentery. It is these north and east winds that render the early spring months in this climate of ours so risky to the invalid, or those predisposed to consumption and various other complaints. But the east wind is more than an)- other to be dreaded by people liable to chest complaints; nor can any amount of care in clothing defend them against its evil influences. Blit there are times when calm days are just as much to be dreaded by the delicate and invalid as the stormiest winds that can blow—days when the sky is overcast, and the atmosphere hot; when the gloom is general, when in towns evil vapors float low on the ground, and in the open country the exhalations from the earth’s surface lie stagnant thereon, poisoning the air we breathe. Such days are hard upon even the healthy, and it is no wonder, therefore, if the weakly suffer. Night air is greatly dreaded by many, anil sometimes with good cause. * There is not only always the danger of catching cold or receiving a chill—which is often even worse—but of breathing malaria or miasmata; and this danger is greatly increased if there be mist, or fog, or even dew. It ought to be generally known that pasture-lands, woods, pleas-ure-grounds, and small lakes of water such as we have in "our most beautiful parks, all send forth malaria to some considerable extent, and that the delicate do wrong to walk in such places, even in the most delightful evemngs of summer. How best, then, are the roore tender among us to shield themselves from the evil effects of bad weather and baneful atmosphere? The answe^o this question is this: We are tp clothe ourselves in such a way as to be proof against cold and wet, and at the same time do all we can to keep our bodies as near to the disease-resisting standard of health as possible. Exercise must, on no account be neglected, but it ought not to be exercise of too trying or even too exciting a kind. Ave ought to study the kind and quality as well as the quantity of food we eat, not forgetting that people are all apt to err oh the side of eating too much. It is the food which is digested with comfort that supports life. Whatsoever lowers the nervous system Tenders us more susceptible to atmospheric changes, and vice versa. Healthful sleep should be procured at night, therefore, but only by rational means; and daily and complete ablution is imperatively necessary. People who are subject to colds should be particular to have their bedrooms well ventilated and comfortable, and the bedclothes warm, but not heavy. lam quite convinced that colds are caught as often in bed as out of it, and those with weak chests would do well to wear a chest-protector at night as well as by day. The part of the body most frequently unprotected at night is that between the shoulder-blades. Many a one takes every care to wrap up well in bed, but leaves this door open for illness to walk in; and many a fatal illness might.be traced to colds thus caught in bed.—Harper's Bazar.

“There He Is, Mamma.” The Boyd Opera-house was filling rapidly. A trio of young men had just ascended to the landing of the marble stairway and were approaching the flight which leads to the entrance, when a young lady, richly attired and accompanied by a matronly lady, exclaimed: “There he is, mamma!" The three young gentlemen turned. As they did so the elderly lady approached, and, addressing one of them, requested him to step with her to the reception room. Within the room, the matronly lady said: “Mr. Nolan, I am delighted to see you, and desire to cancel a debt* of gratitude for which I have long been in arrears. My daughter tells me it was you who saved her life some years since in the mountains of Colorado. She thought she recognized you at the hotel to-day, and now she is positive you are the man, indeed. If you will kindly accept this little souvenir of my appreciation of your exceeding heroism you will place me under even more heartfelt {gratitude." '> Seven years ago Mr. Nolan was prospecting m the mountains. He was climbing a circuitous road to a mining camp, when a runaway horse, to which clung a frightened and powerless lady rider, and which had run away from a party of equestriennes and their escorts, came galloping rapidly toward him. At a bend in the road both rider and animal would have been dashed to destruction a thousand feet below. At the risk of his life he reached the bridle of the horse its it was flying past him, and, in a short time, brought the animal to his knees. Both horse and rider were saved. The party and escorts soon came up and bore their member home. Mr. Nolan had not time or inclination to accompany them and pose as rescuer, and consequently continued his journey. He soon staked* beyond the divide, and nearer heard whom he rescued. After years of absence and separation, all the parties met here as transients,, as above related.—Omaha See. .-»>»■ ■ —The man who never saw a railroad train died again reoently in Wakefield, N. H., aged one hundred years. Ignorance of railway traveling appears to be oondneive to long life.—Lowell Cit**#n

Primitive Plant Culture. With regard to each of these primitive cultures as be long to the temperate regions of the Old World, it will be interesting to give !De Candolle’s conclusions. The turnip and rape-seed (not, however, sustainable as distinct species) originated in Northern Europe. The cabbage .win derived from the western coasts of Europe, where its wild stock may still be found; it was first gathered and then cultivated by pre-Aryan races. JPurslan is wild from the Western Himalayas to Greece. The onion was brought from Western Asia, As to textiles, the origin of flax is somewhat complicated!. The inhabitants of the Swiss lake dwellings of the stone age did not use our present annual flax, but a subpei-ennial sort indigenous to Southern Europe (Linum angushfoKum.) This was displaced by Linum usitatisximum, a native of countries south of the Caspian, which was "introduced into Europe and India by Aryan races. The knowledge of hempt seems to have been brought into Europe by the Scythians about 1500 B. C.; there is no trace of it in the Swiss lake dwellings. The vine is indigenous in Western Asia, whence its use was carried to various countries by both Aryan and ^Semitic races; but it did not reach China before 15!2 B. C. The almond, though so characteristic of Mediterranean countries, seems to be a native of Western Asia and perhaps Greece. As late as the time of Pliny the fruits were known to the Remans as Alices grcecee. The wild stocks of our pears and apples seem to have been indigenous to Southern Europe and Western Asia before the Aryan invasion; their remains abound in the Swiss lake dwellings. The quince is a native of North Persia, but seems to have been introduced into Eastern Europe in pre-Hellenic times. Remains of a form of the pomegranafb have been found in strata of the pleiocene age in Southern France by Saperta; but it died out and was reintroduced from countries adjoining Persia in prehistoric times into the Mediterranean region, of which it is now so characteristic a feature. The primitive home of the olive was apparently the eastern shores of tire Mediterranean, where the Greeks discovered its useful qualities, the Romans learning them later. Ttyc % has left its remains in quaternary rocks in France along with the teeth of Elephas priinigcniut, but' its prehistoric home must be sought in the Southern Mediterranean snores and lands, where it survived after probably perishing in France. The common bean (Faba vulgaris) seems to have become extinct in a wild state; it may have originated south of the Caspian, and was introduced into Europe by the Aryans. The remains of lentils have been found in lake'dwellings of the bronze age. and it was probably indigenous in Western Asia, Greece and Italy before its cultivation in these countries; subsequently it was introduced into Egypt. The chick-pea was carried from the south of the Caucasus by the Aryans to India and Europe. 'Hie carob* is indigenous to the Eastern Mediterranean, whence the Greeks introduced it into Italy and the Arabs into Western

Europe. De Candolle regards all the various kinds of wheat as derivatives of the small-grained kind found in the most ancient lake dwellings of Western Switzerland. He inclines to the belief that the wild stock of this originated in Mesopotamia, where it may still exist. The origin of spelt is very doubtful, and it may possibly be an ancient cultivated derivative from the wheat stock. As to barley, the inhabitants of the Swiss lake dwellings cultivated both the two-rowed and the six-rowed kinds. The former is found spontaneously in the area between the Red Sea and the Caspian; but nothing is known of the spontaneous occurrence of the latter or of the four-rowed kind, Either then both were derivatives in prehistoric times of the t wo-rowed variety, or they are the cultivated representatives of species which have since become extinct. As to rye, probability points to an origin iu Southeastern Europe. The lake dwellers even of the age of bronze did not know it, but Pliny mentions its cultivation near Turin. De Candolle supposes that the Aryan migrations westward met it in Europe and carried it onward. Oats seem also to have originated in Eastern Europe; they are found not earlier than the bronze age in Switzerland. From Pliny’s mention that the Germans used oatmeal, it is concluded that it was not cultivated by the Romans.—Nature.

Hollow Horn. People seem to have broken out on the “hollow-horn” question, audit bids fair toengage the attention of the public until some one opens the chess and wheat question by affirming that he knows wheat will produce chess. We have had all sorts of remedies recommended for the ailment, from rubbing the horn with an old boot to pouring sharp vinegar and black pepper into the ear of the cow. Now, friends, once for all, there is no such disease as unnatural hollow-horn, never was an<l.never will be while the horn was or is upon the head of a living animal. All this doctoring of the horns or for the horns is the treatment of a symptom, and we might just as well bore into a man's pulse because a raging fever makes it quick, with tho ^expectation of abating the fever. The horns of a sick animal feel unnaturally—sometimes hot and sometimes cold—because the animal is sick) because the system is out of condition, and not because there is any local disease in the horns. It is simply a cruel practice to bore into the horn at such times. The apparent demonstration of hollowness by such means is wholly fallacious. Sometimes when the gimlet passes'through one side of the horn ana bony structure it enters a sinus, and so meets with no obstruction until it reaches the opposite side. Now this has often been taken as evidence of “hollow-horn.” And then when ani-; mals are old, the bbny structure in the horn often shrinks in a perfectly natural manner, forming a cavity within the horn. Now if the horn is bored in a lateral direction, the gfmlet will enter that cavity, and the animal is pronounced to be suffering from hollow horn, and must submit to being doctored. The gimlet will sometimes too enter the frontal sinuses which mucus secretions have accumulated, and when it is drawn out a small quantity of thick mucus, and sometimes blood will escape. This is esteemed as proof positive of the existence of disease in the horns. Further, abscesses will occasionally form in the frontal sinuses —sometin.es the result of common catarrh—ami the gimlet may penetrate the sac containing the pus, which now escapes through the gimlet hole. Such a case is pronounced one of “hollow horn,” and when the animal reoovers, its recovery is attributed tp, the boring process. If let alone, the "pus would finally escape through the nostrils, ancl the animal be better off. Whenever there is a determination of blood to the head, the horns will feel unnatural and will expose themselves to the charge of being hollow by some people. The same will to true when there is a weak circulation of the blood, which under such circumstances does not reach the extremities. In one case the horns will be hot, and in the other cold. Restore the system by a proper course of diet, to its natural condition; perhaps by rubbing the animal; by giving it medicines that are anti-spasmodic in their action; stimulate the digestive organs; remove obstructions in the bowels by injections or aperients. In short., aim to promote a healthy action through the system. But don’t use • gimlet—Western Burqf.

USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVE. —Plenty of manure and patient laboi will bring onions every time. —A soil made mellow by the decay of a green crop turned under will remain moist through a drouth, and will not be packed by heavy rains. —If a little vinegar or some cider is mixed with-stove polish it will not take much rubbing to make the stove bright, and the blacki ng is not likely to fly off in fine dust.—Chicago News. —Kice Cookies: Two eggs, one cup of sugar, one cup of butter and lard mixed, half and half, three tablespoonfuls of sour milk, one scant teaspoonfu! of soda, and mix sufficient flour with the other ingredients to roll out easily. —7Se Household. —Pasturing ground in wet weather makes it solid and cloddy and in poor condition to furnish nutriment to plants and to sustain their life. It takeslyery little tramping of muddy grount to make Clods and labor to pulverize flpse same clods and get the ground into mutable order again. —Citron Pudding: A delicious pudding is made thus: Sift two tablespoonfnls of flour and mix with the beaten yolks of six eggs, add gradually one pint of sweet cream, a quarter of a pound of citron cut in very thin slices, and two tablespoonfuls of sugar, mix thoroughly, pour into a buttered tin and take- twenty-live minutes. Serve with wine or vanilla saUee.—Christian Union. —A correspondent of the Iowa Homestead says that it is a mistake to raise cabbage plants in a cold frame or hotbed. He plants, the seed where he wants the cabbage to grow, and when the plants show four leaves, thin out all but the strongest plant in each hill. He claims transplanting checks the growth of the plant, and that by the latter method larger and heavier heads are produced. —It is stated that the State chemist of Georgia has found by analysis that one bushel of sweet potatoes contains half as much nutrition as a bushel of corn, two bushels of potatoes equaling one bushel of com for fat-producing purposes. If this is correct it is important, since land which will produce in the South forty bushels of corn per acre will produce from one hundred to one hundred and fifty bushels of sweet potatoes. —Steamed com bread is particularly wholesome when made with buttermilk. If this cannot be proctired, use lobbered milk. To two cups of Indian meal allow one cup of white flour, two tablespoonfuls of white sugar, two aud a half cups of milk, one teaspoonful of soda, one of salt, one tablespoonful and a half of melted butter; steam for two hours in a well-battered tin, and dry off in the oven.—N. Y. Post.

—The back teeth of the horse often become so sharp as to cut the gums and. cheeks in every attempt at mastication. This also prevents the horse from grinding his food properly, in consequence of which he falls off rapidly in condition, and becomes unfit for work. Files are made for the special purpose of smoothing off these sharp teeth, which is easily done by holding the mouth open ami drawing the file back and forth over the teeth. A horse’s teeth should be examined at least once a year.—N. Y. Examiner. The Strawberry for Home Consumption. Every head of a family who has ten rods of land at his disposal should raise strawberries enough to supply his own table, for this is a fruit that must be ripened on the vines to secure it in full perfection, and when fully ripe will keep but a few hours. He who is obliged to purchase this fruit after it has been transported several miles, gets e quality of fruit that would not be eaten by one who inis become accustomed to eat only the thoroughly ripened fruit from his own garden. This fruit is so easily grown and requires so small a space to grow it in, it is very strange so few grow it. On ordinary soil a single day’s labor is sufficient, with the exception of pickling the fruit, to grow strawberries enough to supply a large family. As it is the first fruit of the season, it always meets a glad reception from both old and young of all classes, even though it be but half ripe; but when fully ripened on the vines, and eaten shortly after being picked, is surpassed by but few fruits of the earth. Three or four rods of land will furnish fruit enough to supply a large family with all they desire during the ripening season, providing thp vines are properly set and well cared for. Prepare the land as early in the spring as it will work well, and set the plants before the first of May. Late set plants do not do so well. In setting the plants do not cramp the roots, but, with a t rowel dig a good sized hole, at least five inches deep, dropping the roots in so they will assume a natural position; never crowd fhe soil hard around the plants but use only a gentle pressure; be careful also to leave the central bud above the soil; many plants are ruined by covering too deep. If the plants are full of large fresh leaves most of them should he cut off, that the evaporation shall not be so great. As to varieties,there are so many new ones that are claimed to be the best that it is very difficult to decide what may prove to be the most desirable.—Massachusetts Ploughman.

How to Suceeed. I wish to offer a hint to boys. But it will do for others. Diligence and earnestness will accomplish a great deal. I once had a grown-up boy to work for me who did not fully understand this. He boarded himself. He worked well, but thought success depended on making the best bargain he could with his employer. On .the last day of his engagement he borrowed a vessel at the house to carry drink into the field where he worked alone. He came in precisely at the hour for quitting work, but without the vessel. I asked him where it was. “Oh, he forgot it—left it in the field.” I asked him to bring it in, but he' said his time was up for his day’s work and declined. I intended to employ him again, but this turned the scale. He never succeeded well, although active and of fair abilities. Anoth er person in my employ always took an interest in the work, and did not mind an extra half-hour if matters required it. He works for me yet, and I can afford to allow him an extra hour on special occasions, and to do various things without charging him. Another instance will do to repeat, although not immediately within my personal knowledge. An orphan hoy sought employment he was repeatedly repulsed. He wasmearly discouraged; when the owner of a large establishment at last concluded to take him if he would do various menial “ chores” with small pay. He engaged for a year. He was first on hand every morning, and tried to make himself useful in every way. At the end of the year, when he talked of leaving, every one pleaded for him to stay. He had helped the clerks and helped the owner—they “eould not spare him.” He was offered higher wages, and in two or three years more commanded a good salary. • In process of time he was admitted as ... partner. He was not like some persons I have seen who seemed to think that the great point was to get the best possible wages and never to work a minute beyond the regular time, but rather, if possible, to fall within it.. They never made out much.—Cor. Oouniry Gentleman.

An Anecdote of Yandjrk. On one occasion Vandyck was at Haarlem, the home oI Franz Hals, a noted-Dutch portrait-painter. Vandyck went to his studio, but, as usual, Hals was at the tavern. Vandyck sent for him, saying that a stranger wished his portrait painted, and had but “two hours to stay for it. Hals seized a canvas and finished the picture within the given time. Vandyck praised it warmly, and said: “Painting seems such a simple thing that I should like to try what I can do at it.” Hals changed places with him, and the visitor painted the second- portrait as quicklv as the first had been made. When Hals saw the picture, he embraced the oainter and cried: “You are Vandyck! No other could do what you have now done!”—Mrs. Clement, tn St. Nicholas. —The federal capitol at Washington cost about $ 12,000,000, but is regarded as one of the great buildings of the world. The work was well done at reasonable figures. The unfinished State capitol at Albany, N. Y., has already cost $14,000,000,* and $5,000,000 more has been called for. The total cost will probably be nearly or quite $25,000,000. The estimated cost eightyears ago was $4,000,000, Architects and contractors are more enterprising and altogether more thrifty now than formerly.—N. ¥. Herald. A boy with a top tried to spin it, But his hand got a thorn right in it, The sport didn’t spoil, For S*. Jacobs Oil, Cured his hurt in less than a minit. A red-haired clerk in Savannah, Slipped on a piece of banana, Great pain he endured, But St. Jacobs Oil cured, ' He now goes dancing with Hannah. And now, as the violets appear, and roses become about twenty cents apiece cheaper, the young man tells his friends that he thinks of going to Europe some time in June. And all his contemporaries secretly envy him, and look upon him as a man born with a silver spoon in his mouth. Ho tells them how he is going to climb the Alps, and sail over Lake Como, and wander through the Colosseum and the Castle of Chillon. He makes a great impression on his friends, and invites them to see him off, which they do with a great deal of enthusiasm. Then he disembarks at Halifax, and goes off to Michigan, whore he spends the summer on his uncle’s farm, and gets the skin of his hands thick and hard enough to sole a pair of boots* or to be palmed off anywhere for a boarding-house steak. And when he comes back he speaks of Ravenna and Athens as though he had been living there in opulence all summer, and not hoeing corn and chasing mad bulls.—Puck. Mrs. James E. Wirman, of Harrison, O., writes: “Dr. Quysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla cured my daughter of dyspepsia and irregularities!”

In Yazoo County, Miss., a cow died with hydrophobia from eating the hay on which a mad dog had been lying. Wrecked Manhood. Victims of youthful indiscretions and pernicious praeti.-es, suffering from premature decay or old age, nervous debility, lack of self-confidence, impaired memory, loss of manly powers, and kindred symptoms, should send three stamps for large illustrated treatise, giving means of cert tin cure, with numerous testimonials. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.

Character is highor than intellect. A great sonl will be strong to live as well as to think.—Emerson in the American Scholar. __._ To Consumptives. or those with weak lungs, spitting of blood, bronchitis, or kindred affections of throat or lungs, send two stamps for Dr. R. V. Pierce’s treatise on these maladies. Address the doctor, Buffalo, N. Y. IT is not a lucky word, this same impossible ; no good comes to those who have it so often in their mouths. Sydney Smith being ill, his physician advised him to “take a walk upon an empty stomach.” “Upon whose!” asked Sydney. Still l>etter steps to take would 1* the purchase of Dr. R. V. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” and “ Pleasant Purgativa Pellets,” which are especially valuable to those who are obliged to lead sedentary lives, or are afflicted with any chronic disease of the stomach or bowels. By druggists. The Freneh Government intends to hold a grand international exhibition at Paris in 1885. _ ^_ Ladies, buy for your husbands, brothers and sons Chrolithion Collars and Cuffs and save trouble in washing. Kind words are like bald heads; they can never dye.—AT. 0. Picayune. Personal! The Voltaic BEi/r Co., Marshall, Mich., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltaic Belts and Electric Appliances ou trial for thirty days to men (young or old) whet are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above. N. B.—No risk is incurred, as thirty days" trial is allowed. The cricket and grasshopper sing in the dew wet. _ \ Ip your horses have sore shoulders, ■cratches, cuts or open sores of any kind, use Stewart’s Healing Powder.’ THE MARKETS. NEW YORK, April 28.1883. 50 4 00 6 00 CATTLE-Exports.t « 90 COTTON—Middling. FLQUR-Good to Choice. WHEAT—No. 2 Bed. No. 3Bed... 119 COBN-No. 2. 68 OATS—Western Mixed.... 50 PORK-New Mess. 19 75 ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling. BEEVES—Exports. 6 20 Fair to Good. 5 90 Texas Steers. 3 75 HOGS—Common to Select.... 6 75 8HEEP-Fair to Choice. 4 25 FLOUB—XXX to Choice.. 4 25 WHEAT-No. 2 Winter.. 1 10 No. 3 “ . 1 06 COBN-No. 2 Mixed. 49 OATS-No. 2. 42 RYE-No. 2... TOBACCO-Lugs. Medium Leaf_ HAY—Choice Timothy.14 00 BUTTE It—Choice Dairy. 23 BROOM-CORN—Prime. 4 EGGS—Choice ... 12 PORK—New Mess. 18 25 BACON-Clear Rib... 10 LARD—Prime Steam. 10 WOOL—Tub-washed, medium. 30 Unwashed.... 20 CHICAGO. CATTLE—Exports. 6 15 HOGS-Good to choice.. 6 80 SHEEP-Good to choice.....V 5 50 FLOUR-Wintor... 4 25 Spring......; froO . WHEAT—No. 2 Spring. 1 09’a« No. 2 Red. 1 11 ' CORN—No. 2. 53 OATS—No. 2. 38 RYE. 55 PORK-New Mess. 19 15 KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Native Steers. 5 70 Native Cows. 3 25 HOGS—Sales at..... T10 WHEAT-No. 2. 91 No. 3. 87 OORN-No. 2 Mixed.. 42 OATS-No. 2. 87 NEW ORLEANS, ades.. FLOUR-HIgh Grades.. 6 15 CORN—White. 62 OATS-Western... 55 HAY-Choice. 18 50 PORK-Mess. 19 00 BACON—Clear Rib. 10 jjjyjvw'W Muiitu,, 585 56 i 19 00 \ 20 0 > ■SWflfiSIl

GERNanreMEDY Rheumatism,Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache. Toothache. ■#r* ASM ALL OTHER WMMLY FAIKS ISO ACHES. Sold b* Drucctata and Dealern everywhere. Fifty Cwttt bottle Directions t» 11 Laugue*ee. TIE OiaiXH A, YOCELESOS. to »iw to A. TOQUES SCO) MHvoroaMd^IoEaA. /

“Dr. Benson's Celery and Chamomile Pills, are worth their weight in gold in nervous and sick headache.”—Dr. H. H. Bchlichter, of Baltimore. AN evil speaker differs from an evil doer only in the want of opportunity.—<>««»• fiffm. Another life Saved. J. Gray, Dadeville, Ala., writes ns: I hove been using your Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs, and 1 can say, of a truth, it is far superior to any other Lung preparation in the world. My mother was confined to her bed four weeks with a cough, and had every attention by as good physicians as there are in the country, and they all failed to effect a cure; but when I got one bottle of your Da. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for thk Lungs, she began to mend right away. I can say in truth, that it was thr MEANS OF SAVING HER LIFE. I knew Of five cases that Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam has cured, and my mother >9 better now than she has beenfor twenty years. ' Funny, isn’t it, that you always see the night-fall before any stars begin to shoot— The Judge. “ Five doctors; no end of medicine; no relief. J>c. Benson’s' Skin Cure has drtctn away all eruptions and rm nearln well.” Ida C. Young, Hamilton, lil. The diamond is the stone for an engagelent; but give us the old cobble-stone in a ■ee fight. "Brown’s Bronchial Troches" are excellent for the relic fpt Hoarseness or Sore Throat. Hale's Honey of Horehouud and Tar Take instanter. Don’t, neglect a cough. Pike’s toothache drops cure iu ohe minute. It is better to be reproached by a friend than complimented t>y a flatterer.—Ivan Banin. Rheumatism Positively Cured in the shortest time. Write for free 40-page pamphlet on rhenmatisir, to H. K. Helphenstine, Druggist, Washington, D. 0. . 35c. buys a.pair of Lyon's Patent Heel Stiffeners ami make a boot or shoe last twice as long.

AND CHILDREN’S SPRING SUITS, OCR OWN EXCLUSIVE DESIGNS THA T CAN NOT BE FOUND iELSE WHERE. Good* sent C. O. D. with iirivlltg* or examining: before paying. _ for Samples, 1 fashion Plates, am'/ l.ules for selfOleasurc- \ melt. THU S. W. Cor. 5th ft Pine, ST. LOUIS, MO.

I). C.YOUNG, Miigi-.\T

PORTABLE Soda Fountains! Send for Catalogue. CHAPMAN 8 CO., Nladlson. Ind.

TUE CIIM here is its I HE, dull PLATFORM: All the world's new*. Kvrrvlhinu»hat intervals men anil women; g>od writing in every column; honest auii learlcsa comment; absolute independence of partisan -ft.»,.„».ft„- »«.* --— ^.to true Demo* 1 *.tlv (4 paces), bj ‘ear; Sunday * hI t(9 pages), 91 SO per year; WaititLT (»page*). SI per year. I. W. ENGLAND, Puhhsber, New York City. DEHJESL’BL ^Famset*. Send 13 eh*. iupuat. s»nmi*s, staling kind of Musk* desired. Pi*no~4 haud»-—Vocal or Organ. >Sem» for Catalogue of '-cent . Music. Address. J. I*. Peters. :*>T N..VU **., k\SL Louts, Mo. KataMiahed I8SD. Lady Aaentsc“?5$*S$ and good sai.uv selling Quees City Skirt and Stocking ) ;pp«rt«ns etc. Sample outfit Free. Address Que^n City ucinnati.O ** MAUD $ »• HALTER cannot to any part of United States slipped by any horse. Sent _,___is tree, on receipt of 81. Special discounts to the trade. Send for price-list. JVC. LIGHTHOUSES HRO., IJochestcr.N. Y. ftDTlW PEARD RLIXIR . ■«. laaatiaat >•»-»•»** »k - I or ha.r h«»a. i«W»t Mara. B***S raaaaawi *4 w l yjMvik. * ii *?;***»•• fc*r»» J ...__ . ..„ i‘anka«a »iU» CW.i:. •MM«»if«**l*M»a.._ . stH..-*tamii.a or silver. I.. o.S'He l;:tt*.i*alaliue»IU% $65 a aaovxii and board for Students, Young Me TEACHERS i'n and Ladies, in a light pleasant Business, In your own county. Address p. w.r5- . ZIEGLER & CO., Philadelphia or Chicago. CORTBVALISTh?onl? 8- ___ _ _ _ and painless Opium A Morphine Cl'KE. ManTd by Erwin, Gay den St Yoague, Winona. Miss. nr*For saleJb^aH druggists. Send (or Circulars A Certificates of W lfiEVTC V STATE awl COUNTY• MIX Eli I Wlto handle a monopoly. When started a steady Income without requirtng any labor ^Address F. H. Nrtnolds&Oo., liWJ Chestnut St,, Phila., OPIUM i fflamh|n# HablH’nrwl 1st 19 jlttifOdays. Nopty till ('uretf. 1 Jia. J. STWrHK.vs Lebanon. Ohio. FREE! Buigrure. IfcW.lloody A Co., 91 W.9th, Cincinnati, 0. tt Oft A WEEK in vour own town. Terms ami J>UD *5 outfit aw. Addrs H .Hallct! A I'u.. Portland. Ms LEARN TELEBRAPHY^^^ Good situations. BEST chance ever offered. Ad*J* 1>. Brown, Mgr., Sedalia. Mo. A GENTS WANTED for the*best and Fastest* A. sidling Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 33 pi*r cent. Nath sal Purl*suing Co.,St.Louis,Mo. 80 Shwts flue writing paper la Burner Tablet, with calendar, »>.eta. h^inajl.^ Agntta wanted. ' —.‘v v"« twvmi wMiaca Economy Printing (k, Newbury port. Mass. HAIR , Wigs it Wares sent c.o.D. anywhere. Whole* sale & Hetail. Price list firm. Goods guaran iteed B.C.STRKHu 157 Wabash-av..Chlcago VI9 A WEEK. $12 a day at home easily made 4) A fiCostly outfit free. Address True A Co„ Augusta, Ma KICV/PD Out of Leglttnate Business. Ad HC.VC.ri dress Box BTT8* Bkiogkcobt, Conn

Oar Citizens Desire no Notoriety, but Art Always Bendy to Proclaim the Truth* Mbs. Obo. Davti,bt. of IS Knight street* Provide nor. R. L, relates to our reporter her experience with the wonderful curative properties of what is destined soon to be the standard and leading specific of the whole wide world, for kidney and liver diseases, etc. Mrs. j D. says: * ‘Early last spring I was severely afflicted with torpidity of the kidneys and enlargement of the liver, and the kidney disease came upon me so fast and suddenly that before I was scarcely aware of the cause of mp trouble 1 became badly bloated, and my body and limbs very much swollen, so that it was with great dttkitf ty and severe pain that X was able to walk any. I became dreadfully troubled by being short-breathed, so that even a slight exertion ora little exercise would ttto ms almost to exhaustion* and 1 was so distressed when f retired nights that I could not sleeps and was very restlew. One of my limbs especially had a very severs nervous pain, which always seemed to be more severe | at night than at any other time, and would frequently ache so sharply as to arouse me from sleep. I was very nervous and uncomfortable all the time, and was being doctored, and taking all kinds of medicine for this complaint and that and the other, but all to no good purpose, until at about the tlmerwhen I was tired out and somewhat disgusted and almost discouraged with medicines and doctor* a relative and highly-esteemed friend persuaded me/try Huut's Remedy. I began to take it a few da>*-u£p, and am happily disappointed by the result, for before I had used a bottle of It 1 begait to feel relieved, and soon commenced to sleep splendidly , the severe nervous pains in my limb which I had to handle so tenderly do not appear any more, my headache and backache have disappeared. I feel well every way, and rest well at night. The swelling has disappeared from iny body and limbs. 1 am now able to do my housework comfortably and easily. Hunt's Remo* dy has certainly done wonders for mg, Mks.tSeo. Dawliy." i - Safe and Reliable* A. W. Bbowk. M. D.. of Providence, K. I., says: "1 have used Hunt’s Remedy In my practice for the , _ past sixteen years, and cheerfully recommend it as be- £ lng a safe and reliable medicine.” Hunt's Remedy Is purely a vegetable compound, scientifically prepared by a first-class registered Pharmacist. and will surely cure all diseases of the kidneys, bladdt'tv liver and urinary organs.—Con.

A .Salvator for Invalids and tha Acad. An InoomparableAllment fortheCrowtlr and Protection of Infants and Children. A Superior Nutritive In Continued Fevers, and a Reliable Remedial Agent In all Olsaasos of the 6tomaeh and Intestines. _%HTS Justlveelobr,t«<l;d£t.tlo Preparationjo. (- _ in composition, princroally the rl-uten. ao* to ri-red from the Vv lUTE" WUiTliit FLINT V. WHBAT CERSAL, a soli* ntraot. tha inwent ion ©fan eminent Chemist. It _» ' . . ■ ■■■ m, art rlarl lilll i* f T* T I fl r Iff or INFANTS ana *y* »<'"***» lack in* Bufflcdent Nourishment fbr their offspring. Unlike those prepnratlona made from animal ©r vinous matter, ■ rhfch ar© liable to stimulate the brain and irritate the digestive organa, it embraces in its elementary composition— That which makes strong Bone and Muscle. That which makos ^ood Flesh and Blood. That which is easy of Digestion**never constipating. That which Is kind and friendly to the Brain, and .that which acts as a prevent va of those Intestinal Disorder® Incidental to JShllclhood. And, while i* would b© difficult t© eonceive ©f anything in Food or Dessert more Creamy and De»nd Ktruiirtheninr a© anything in i ooa or jjessert «wr« viwmj •*.*'**' licious, or more Nourishing and Strengthening u. s.scn:cisb.a^ii.sa Excellence in all Intestinal Diseases, especially m Dysentery, Chronic Dlnrrhcea nnd Cholera Infantum, HAS BEEN IirCONTEiTABET riiOVBH. -S'" SOLD BY DRUGGISTS Tgp5*" IN THE PRINCIRM. CITIES/j ,1 OFTHE UNITED STATES. (F /JOHN CARLE&SONS; g£-NEW YOK2..^s CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED I in HALL’S FOR THE Lungs. BALSAM Cure, Consumption, Colds, Pneumonia, Influenza, Bronchial Difficulties. Bronchitis. Hoarseness, Asthma, Croup, Whooping Cough, and all Diseases ol the Breathing Organs. Itsootlies and heals the Meat, brane ol the Lungs, inflamed and poisoned by the disease, and prevents the night sweats and tightness across the chest which accompany it CONSUMPTION is not an Incurable malady. HALL'S BALSAM will euro you. even though professional lid tails. There has never been an instance in which this sterling nvigorant and ami febrile medicine haa failed to ward off the complaint, when taken duly as a protection against malaria, Hundreds of physicians have a’mndoned all tha officinal spec! ties, antf now proscribe this harmless vegetable ionic for chills ami fever, as well as dyafefc STOMACH^ ^ bitters mmm To buy and sell the . ABLE and SELF-LB_____ till A M HOIiDEK; the most DURABLE ami ASflT t&INQ ev WORTH SENDING FORI Dr.JAi. JBKb Schenck h-;s just published a IhkIc on DIS E A S E S sum. U N CS t . AND HOW TO CtTKfi THE.TF, which is offered Fli EK, postpaid, to ail applicants. It contains m unhie in/nratqtum for all who suppose themselves afflicted with, or liable to any disease of the throat or lumrs. Mention this ]>ai er. Address Dr. J. 11. Sf’ll KNTK .V SON. 4*hila<Uh>hia.Pm. COICS WNCKt AU USE FAILS. * Best Cough-Syrup. Tastes gfx*l. Use in time. Sold by druggists. E_ WATERPROOF _ Thiswater-proor for roofs, outside walls of bail BUPLNfl MANILLA >r materi-Hl resembles tine leather, is used pepsia and neevorw affections ___ Hosteltor's Bitters is the epoctfic you need__ For 3»le by all Druggists and Dealc era generally SIMPLEST in the market. Sample to any address on receipt of 91.50. Over 1,000 Mid in Cleveland. Lady Agent© And H very saleable. For term* address ML.KM1ALL *V CO., IBB Ontakio Struct. CLEVELAIfD, O. of plaster. OataK^ue samples freed Kstab. Land intuit in place IV O PIJ CwAm, •C in tO fl per day at home. Samples worth 15 V3 «0 «ZU Address Stinson *Co.. Portland. Me.

MUSTANG Survival of the Fittest. A FAMILY MEDICINE THAT HAS HEALED MILLIONS DC KING JS YEARS! A BALM FOB KVEltY WOUND OF MAN AND BEAST I THE QLQESTtBEST LINIMENT EVER MAKE IN AMERICA SALES LARGER TEAS EVER. The Mexican Mustang Liniment T>as been known fur more than thirty-Bvo years as the best of all Liniments for Man ami boast. Its sal>* to-ilay are larger than ever, it cares when all others fall, and penetrates skin, tendon and muscle to the very bone. Sold everywhere.

DR. STRONG'S PILLS The Old, Well Tried, Wonderful Health Renewing Remedies. STRONG’S SANATIVE PILLS !«? ST& liver complaint, regulating the bowels, purifying the blood, cleansing from malarial taint. A perfect euro for biox headache, constipation and dyspepsia. STRONG’S PECTORAL PILLS feSSite tmn, regularity of the bowel*. A anro remedy for cold* and rheumatism. A nrecloiw boon to delicate IV male*, sooth in* and bracing the nervous system, and Eiv m* vigor and health to every fibre of the body. 8oM y Drngffists. F«»r Almanaos and full »?articuUrev.ad-t'.-B.Bl'U, «te CO.. Bu York. ®E£" Cut-Worms! SPuaaM the yield of the crop. This Seed Dressing haa »*een in use for the vast ten yeni-a, and is prepared from the instructions or an Eminent ARiicnltuat Chemist Sample package 'tor *<j bushel of seedtoe ; fnll site (tor ™1'sn i»7s: Xx« I Manufacturer and Proprietor, Qulm*r, lib >Ushelof Mi I 'THE BEST IB CHEAPEST.” INCITES, TUDCCUCRC SAW MILLS, „ I nntontno ci«TrrHallert 8 srse Powers (Suited to all erctiona.) Wrltefor»*'«KKinus.PampMet a»d Prices to The Aultman A Taylor Co., MiiutiI\eM,Ohio. A. N. K., B Dll WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISER^ please say you saw the advertlsemeat & this paper. Advertisers like to knowwhoa and where their advertisements Are pay. *■*>>*•*» a