Pike County Democrat, Volume 14, Number 50, Petersburg, Pike County, 24 April 1884 — Page 3
r! evening, calm, and biiigkt and ■'•'UJWS-tfSk-&653S&&FSEfiL. (A fear lest I u™ Of hla affection! inovr-* ” aay fears be eeiied to ” ^ssits rjsassgt* Sptart to answer, but how sweet to hear! «~o W7U-MUCB «u recrtvc in u,aae; One little word,”.be said, with fond caress, 3 veto; that word* (feat little word “ ^^Tbeatbei ■ . -—__. ed to be -ST”-™ thins on this fair earth tome, *&s8i&2£3 'Assembled friends with presents rieh and Ssfeteagggagg^—child with whom they fear to part. who, Hke^ttmid bird caressed, F—* to flutter from dearer, dearest to that uushini 3s ho whose place til! death is by he -Ah,ever -1-*- •—"-■» a—■ And WCe’ and hand in l a henceforth tint 25®“ many a fond caress mid tearful smiles; ■d-Ti,. ™,!bb mm Han oi si_ Beils pealjng. holy altar, flower-stre wn aisles; vfreath—* snowy robe—a bridal veil— V . ■ OUUWJ IUUC-• UA happy bride, who tells this “old. old taler* - - chmahoi'. > THE HEWS FROM PETER: (HAM. Mrs. Peak had been to P itersham (herself, to spend Thanksgiving with hex diiece, and brought the fist account oi 'old Mr. Johnson's illness. ? Mrs. Jesse Johnson, his daughter-in-daw, had come in for a few minutes [Thursday afternoon, and had said it frwas the first time since she could remember that toe old gentleman, had not (been in his seat in church on ThanksSgiving Day. And they all felt as if it were a great break. “He would insist upon setting at the (table,” said Mrs. Jesse, “bathe looked too feeble to be out of his bed, These bad colds take hold bf a man of his After the visitor had gone Mrs. Peal ■ land her niece Martha had talked a goo< deslabout the changes in the fatnih •which would be sure to come when Mr Johnson died. “1 know that Jesse's folks are de upon getting a lift,” sai< “Mis’ Jesaehas hinted a (much to me more tun once, for sh< isays Jesse’s got more * han he can cam lie his business, and everything wouli >be easy if he only Uhd a little men (capital. Truth is, I lave an idea toa Ihe s teased a good share away from hi {father now, and the old gentleman isn’ Iso ready as he used to be to further hi {projects. And there’s William, hi ’other son, I know it to he a fact that lw [fa intending to go out West when hi (father’s taken away. He has liad a no Ki of it for a good while; bfa wife’: er’s folks are all out there and do fing well.” 4 “They’ll be very much missed as i (family,” said Mrs. Peak; “how* Peters [ham has changedfrom what it was whei !I was a girl!” r When she went home toe next dar (she was quite downhearted, and toh lAsa Fales, who happened to be in at tin (depot when the train came in and of fered to carry her home, that old Mr Daniel Johnson was breaking up— seined to think (least, so his family seem__ L As* F#le8 wa* oeei^f concerned; t! [two villages were only a few mil (apart, turd he had been a Petersha hoy. It was old Mr. Johnson to who • he owed his rise in the world, and 1 remembered that he might never ha* ■owned this flourishing country store it bad not been for this kind friend ’assistance. 1 . Besides, he had been confident of M -Johnson’s support—if he could ma] fup bis mind to buy a luge tract woodland which would pay well It [being cleared tl»e very next winter. I was already indebted to him, howevc and it would be a very different thing jhe were the debtor of the eager heir? Sp with all this in hfa mind he qu« turned Mrs. Peak, anxiously, and to concluded that Mr. Johnson’s end —
“Of course he made a great effort to «et to the table on account of its being iTbanksgmng,’ said Asa, sorrowfully, , “but I’m afraid he’ll give right up now. (I'd ride over to see him to-morrow, but .'bringing It in now on wheels instead of Waiting for snow.” - t “ The snow does keep off late this year,” said Mrs. Peak. “Hers it’s the 'first o’ December, and there’s only been xme flurry that was hardly moire than a 'hosr-froet.” i the lilac-bushes, wbereMre. Peak and as she unlocked its side door and went in, it kerned strangely ‘I about for a lively kitsaid to hemelf; “itbey’re a t of company, and what trouble it ■ no harm. I declare ft i me feel onesome; all tlte folks I i always been used to knowing seem e rMngoff I always set a good i by Daniel Johnson/’ .
see him myself y hostess, “lmt.it ke day, same's it did: “They’Jl be Utf< from tho meeting asked Mrs. Roger body could answe. Next day being
aha Mod: “Yob may lan :h at i yon hare a m ud to, bat—J don’t to need another lesson like bis—] it’s a good deal better tc mind we’re got to do instead of j ,rin’ oi folks hare got to say; but it’s hi teach an old dog ne\r tricks • uddrt I shall always like tc he; what there is a-goin’.”—,S. t Jeict
said the thin Jc iteme, as he hi* nose wflh th: point of a Bartow knife; “there in something about them that is not to iiie found in any otherportion of the human race.” “Overdow of elcctricit;', p’rhaps,” sententious!^ suggested the thin man “Frhaps.” “ While the husband is; lire he acts as a sent of ground mire that thev can discharge their excels of the element through,” continued the hin man, in the style of one who has tong studied and philosophized njion it subject of deep personal importance. “A woman possesses mneh mow elec i-ichy than a man. I^s^a necessity for the serious qnently accumulates, like un excess of steam, and then she l as to blow off.” “Yon have found it no?” sympathetically asked the man with the cold “ It haAstruck metbatway,” replied the thinSnan with a sigh. “You are a ground wire perhaps?” “Iam no ground wire,” answered the thin man in a low, subdued tone of “I have occasionally noticed that yon looked as though you had been struck by lightning, but whit I referred to was a woman without her gyciEod wire—a widow. There is someth rig wonderfully fascinating about taem. They seem to belong to toe fraternity; to have taken all the degree), as I may say, andean give a man ihe sign anti gnp ahd cl8im full fellowship Iff may we allowed the expression, they know exactly how to tickle him under the chin right where his chin is most ticklish. And then titev hove the nerve to do it There is wh<3f%^fly hold such an advantage over the unmarried girls that come m competition with them. While your miss is blushinf • and patting a fellow to all sorts of desperate attempts to make himself agi table, your widow is quietly making him think he is the handsomest ancl smal lest man in toe world. Yon see she nuts him in good humor with himself a nd then he is sure to be in good humor with her. She knows to an ounce just how much flattery a man will .ijjke from a woman, and she also knoW that this earth does not contain the ball amount. She is toe terror of her sex The married women are afraid of her, for she knows too much, and the irirls detest her, for they feel she is a rival in the field with tactics of which they are in in sublime ignorance. Naturally the unhappy position excites sy mpathy, and toe men view her as a sac red trust bequeathed to them by some departed ground wire that they are bound to respect. Then they are so oozy, comfortable and confidential like. They tell yon all their little wo as and troubles, and hopes and annoyances, and the first thing yon know they make you feel like a father to them. “In fact they are so warm and comforting as widows that a nu n——” “That’s enough,” broke in the thin man. “Don’t go any far,her. Your u”'t■po“ are As widows they “As wives, what ate theyi’” “Well, I’m married to one and not at liberty to say.”— Pittsburgh Chronicle.
to ft correspondent some of ter experiences. Denying that the story that anyone asked U Senator .Anthony, of Rhode Island, was her son. she said that something just as fanny did occur to her. “A lady was introduced to her at a reception, and she said: (,rm so glad to meet, Mrs. Anthony. I saw yom husband in the Senate to-day. He was pointed ont to me as one of the notables, and I liked hint so n. licit’—that was an actual toot. But ti e meanest thing But was ever said about me,” continued Miss Amhony, “was in a Western paper soon after oar convention. It was a story about my having a poodle dog and carrying it in my arms, and it said tha; I took it to the convention and held it in my lap, and when I got upto speak it curled down at my feet There ii not a word of truth in it.” “Do yon owr a dog?” “No, and I never had cm I never even spoke to one.” “Bon, did the President squeeze your hand?” “I must tell yon how that was. When I bad finished my speech to I im at the White House that day he said in the politest manner possible ti nt he believed the women ought to have whatever they wanted. I (aid: ‘last’s shake hands on that, Mr. President.' and he took bold Of my hand and bold it while he was making his reply. It was only a minute or so.” “lint did j» squeeze HP” “He didn’t squeeze it t bit. That was all there was to it” , 'Miss Anthony,” adds the coiTespont sat, “will
Kot nil tanners get neb, though the number of those if ho become wealthy is by no means small But the great mass of them gain property, become independent, in a moderate way surround themselves and families with all the needed comforts of life, give their children a fair education, live free from the perplexities and worries which constantly beset the man of boaness and constitute, as a class, the very bed-rock of oar prosperity as a country. Fanning is, at the present day, about the otTv calling in which a man of small or moderate means can start and grow into an independent business of bis own. The false idea which has at some times prevailed, that farming as a calling is lower down in the scale than other occupations is largely done away, and now the man who owns land, raises crops cr live stock is regarded, as he always should have been, as the peer of any other man. Land ownership is becoming, in this country, as it always has been in Eurojie, a boon to be sought after, and the owner of a good farm need envy no other man living.—Farmers Review. “ Fighting Weeds.* We meet frequently with this heading to paragraphs In exchanges, . It conveys a wrong lesson, its commonly used. Simple and quiet extermination is better.^J! weeds are allowed to get a foot in height, a warfare is then began and carried on to an indefinite length'of time, and the weeds often comevictorious. The usu al cause of this failure is in attempting to cultivate too much land with a small force. The result is an enormous growth of weeds, a choking and diminution of the. crop, sad a supply of noxious seeds to fill the soil and la: It years.. The weeds get entire possesion in this way and the crops have an unequal chance until another plowing checks them temporarily. The remedy is a well arrangetr plan for goi ug lover the ground once a week, in all h oed crops, sweeping the surface, killing all weeds before they come up. All thiii work is more than paid for in the increased growth of the crops by this continued stirring, provided the right tools are employed. Take the corn eiop for instance. The plow and the haiTOW will prepareaelean, mellow bed of earth before planting. If the field is inverted sod, it may be reduced to a state of fine pulverization with the Acme harrow, or a disc harrow, the finish beiiig given with any smoothing harrow. By plantin' the seed an inch and a half or two inches deep, in the shallow furrow made by the marker, a fine shut-tooth harrow may be passed over both before and after the plants are np without injury to them. The operation may he continued once a wees until the com is a foot high. Some of the plants may he bent over, hat they will be erect again in a day. or two. After this a shallow cultivator' may bo run betvreen the rows till the corn is as high as the horse's back. This work, properly performed, will leave the field as clean as a floor—the small slant teeth killing the sprouting seed in the row and among the plants as well: as over the whole surface; and the sulKequent cultivating keeping the spaces clean between the rows. We have never seen cleaner fields than such ns w ere treated in this way, and the Co: it oil this la bor, first and last, was less than the old hand-hoeing. Bnt it must not he forgotten that the first attempt will be a failure if the necessary work & intermitted and the weeds get a start. It is indispensably necessary to beep them constantly under the surface. There must be no “fighting,1’ bnt suppression and extermination. The potato crop may he treated in the same way until the plants are five or six inches high, alter which the leaves would be somewhat lacerated with the (harrow. Carrots, beets and turnips are |too small in early growth and require, (clean soil in advance, with frequent passing of the cultivator between the pews, which,' as they become larger • by growth, require a. cultivator that may he contracted in breadth.—The Cultivator.
Ike FasMen cf gfcert Hair. Ike fashion of cropping the hair is fast grining favor, both in Europe and America, and it is quite wonderful to discover how many ladies are willing to sacrifi ce their wealth of shining tresses to a passing fancy. It is all very well while Ihe fashion lasts for the girls with ’ faces to transform themselves owitching little eupids, but alas! pronounced old rhatt off about 1 ile victim who is tbns that it will take five
^. mm i ess of skim-milk for rind £ rmers who have not -juld gi -e it » hearing this I f. Hens wil consume an im3 quantity of it if allowed • full y.~TrairieF trrmr. ’epid water with ft little borax disi hi it is good to wash table linen Nice table clothes and napkins d not be allowed to become really [ soiled, so that they will require ons rubbing with soao or in hot i \-n. Take care of your horses' tails. It “ half the trouble to tie up their before starting from the staole t is to clean them after they have »e covered with mud. Besides irfr coming in contact with the hair ® it harsh and brittle, and con* ntly is injurious. lint toast: Melt in a stew-pan a sma piece of butter till a little brown. Put nan much finely-minced him as will uvorthe amount; of toast you wish to* re. Add enough beef broth or ere? : to slightly moisten, and when quit hot, stir in quickly one or two beal r» eggs. Place the mixture on piec s of moistened and battered toast, cut i to any shape yon fancy.—Troy Tim a. — C> ornament the top of a loaf of choc iate cake, make a little white froa rg, and, after spreading the cho< »1 ate frosting over the cake, make scol >]« or rings with the white; if it is mad 9 t I ttle stiffer with sugar than the chocolate frosting, it wul keep it* shaj 9 perfectly, and will add very mue in the good appearance of the cake; t maybe put on with a spoon, very carefully, or you can make* liittla funnel of stiff, white paper, and drop it th rough that.—Boston Globe. Rhubarb Culture. Rhubarb, like currant bushes, wil^ groi aim ost any where and under any trea meat, and consequently receives !i iU-u>age than any other “green thin ;’ gro wing.” But for this reason it shoe Id non be sup posed that when growing under neglect and abase ft will do its best ana produce as abundant crops and of eq tally good quality a* when good treat neat is given. After it is one; planted rhubarb requires little -cultivation, but it must have at all tim 3 deep, rich soil, the richer the better In field culture the roots are planted about four feet apart each way, qpd cultivated like any hoed crop. In the family garden they should be planted two to three fee^tpart^p a single row, at 1 ‘.sat four Mt (latent from other plan s. It may be raised from seed, but as there is little re! iance in the seedingB being of the same variety as the parent plants, division of the roots is the method of propagation usually adopted. Any piece of loot with a bud or crown will grow if planted about two inches deep in mellow soil firmly pressed around it. Roots may he planted in autumn or early spring. Plantations are usually renewed every four or five years, yet when a liberal dressing of manure is given every fall the roots will produce acropfor an almost indefinite period. Heavy manuring; clean cultiva tion, and liberal space are the essential requisites for raising large, succulent rhubarb. The varieties best known are: Linnsns, grown extensively foi market as we 11 as home use. It is early, very productive, and of a brisk, spicy flavor. Its principal fault is that it seeds so lreely that unless all flower stalks arc cat off as soon as they appeal the crop deteriorates rapidly. Victoria is later, has larger leaves and stalks, and requires very rich, mther heavy ground for its best development Paragon is a new variety, originated in England, and now introduced here. The stalks are bright red, heavy, and produced in quick succession and great abundance. It is earlier, of more delionto flavor, and decidedly less add than any other variety we are acquainted with. But its most remarkable and most valuable qualification is that it does not produce flower-stalks, to which facn its great productiveness is mainly attributable, all the strength of the plant being used for the development of its leaves.—American Garden.
8mj Those who build houses, do so for the inoome they may yield. They are not especially interested in the welfare of those who may inhabit them. As a matter of observation we most insist that shaded honses are unhealthy, that every dwelling in which the yonng and growing live should have sunlight pouring into some of its rooms during every hour of the day. The importance of admitting the sunny rays in dwellings can not w too highly estimated. These rays promote health and strength. We are apt to fed that good health depends on pure air more than on the influence of the sun. They both have so great an influence on life and growth that they should tje allowed to fill every room occupied by animals or plants. Light may be so' direct and brilliant as to be injurious to the eyes, then let its penetrating rays be softened, hut let them enter in such a way as to do good and qo harm. Much been said in recent rimes about the value of a sun bath. No doubt it does produce and retain a healthy condition of the body. It costs nothing but the means of exposing the nude body to the sunny rays in such a way as to exclude prying eyes. A few aged persons, we have known, who built a small room upon the top of tbeir dwelling in such a way as to admit freely the sunny rays but exclude all eves but His who lives in the space far above. These men lived to see their ninetieth year and more. They did not hesitate to proclaim the great influence of sunlight upon health and life. Others will find, if they search, that sunlight is worth more than gold—and! pure water, fresh air. proper food well digested and sunny house, always c -y, will secure health and strength. ii3y one who has eyes and uses them mr. see that those who Ii%»4n the open *.¥ and under the sunny rays are healthier and stronger than those whose days are chiefly spent in the shade. The feeble should seek the sonny rays; many become feeble by excluding from their homes the lifegiving sun. They do all they can to exclude the source of all strength and health. Let all pale, weakly women thesunnyroys.andbecom ^ ^
fie Bed Sausets.
The iaiamn of 1883 will always ha re 1 a large place in s ienUBc history on a©- s onnt of the strange aspect of stst heavens, as well as on account of tbs preceding eruptions of volcanoes in the Straits of Snnda, which in their granienr and effects much exceeded any disturbance recorded in history. Although the volcanic outburst Bh&nged the: geography of large d's ocean waves and the throbs at the sir produced by the convulsion over the whole circumference of the earth, Ih nature was not nnnsnal; it differed from a thousand similar accidents of this tronb’ed world only in degree - only as the dis barge of a twenty-inch cannon dife.s from that of a small Seldpieee. Bat the strange heavens of the later Autumn, the fiery glow of sunrise and sunset, the brownish ha:* that girdles the, sun all day, are phenomena so out of the range of common experience that at first all the experts in meteorology were at sea in their explanaally to the conjecture that some iff the vagrant matter of space, such'as we etc-e hi the comets or dust-like meteors, had been drawn down upon our atmosphere and so enveloped ttte ear; h with a meteoric mist Others looked upon these movements as a metre intensification of the afterglow, or second sunset whicn is not an unfamiliar phenomenon in all extra-tropics,i regions at certain seasons of the year, parti. ularly in the autumn, and which is probably due to the condensation of vapor in the upper regions of the atmosphere. Gradually, as the facts have been gathered in from all parts of the world, these explanations have been overthrown, and the sunsets have been proven to be in some way connected with the Javanese convulsion. At several points in Europe the new-fallen snow contains particles of volcanic du tessentially like tho. e that fell upon the decks of ships near the point of eruption, and whir'll pre umably are the heavier bits that have descended from the dust-clond in the upper air. Still farther, it has l)|ui shown that these curious appearances of thtr sky occur ed more quick-y in the district near the volcano than in regi ns remote from it. It is not easy to determine the prerise times when the sunset and sunrise became so brilliant; for at first the phenomenon might seem accidental In its nstuae, and so not become recorded. Yet it is clear that at Rodrigue”, Mauritius, and Seychelles, points from three thousand to three thousand five hundred miles west of Krakatoa, the red snnsets were seen on the 518th of August, within thirty sis hours after the eruption occurred. In Era il, which is over ten thausandmDes away, they appeared on the 3Cth of September. In Florida, thirteen thousand miles distant, on September Hu. It was noticed in England on the ! th of September; but in Sweden not until the 80th of November; each of these countries being about seven thousand five hundred miles from the point of eruption. The volcanic mist sprea# more rapidly in the tropical belt between the parallels of latitude in which Java lies than in Hhe regions to the north and —The Americans, according to Oscar Wilde, are the noisiest people in the world. Linux raox HENRY WABD BUCHER, Bbooiu.tr. March 25th, im-, I have used Allcock’s Plasters for some years for myself and family, and, as far as able, for the many sufferers who come to us for assistance, and have found them a genuine relief for most of the schen and pains which flesh is heir to. I have used Alloock’s Flastxxs for all kinds of Lameness and Acute Fain, and, by frequent experiments, find that they can contool many cases not noticed in your eiivwIdas. H. W. SacmL Whir does a horse become a book-keep-er? When he becomes a “charger.”—ATewman Independent. From Major Downs, Military Instructor, Mt. Pleasant Academy, Sing Sing, M. Y.: During the very cold weather I was suffering with Catarrh. My head and threat ached so severely that I was obliged to keep quiet. Ely’s Cream Balm was suggested. Within an hour from the first application I felt relieved, the pain began to subside. In a few days I was entirely cored. W. A. Downs. Etcbmal hanging is the prime of vjgfc fonts.—Erratic Enriqne. Absbkztht, the great English surgeon, asked a lady who told him she only had a cough: “ What would yoa have? The plague.” Beware of “only coughs.” Tho worst cases can, however, be cured by Dr, Wit. Hall’s Balsam for the Lumps. In Whooping Cough and Croup it is sure to prevent a fatal termination. Th* more successful the hotel-keeper* he greater inn-ability he shows. Bibo’s Cub* for Consumption does not dry up a cough; it removes tho cause. M Buchn-paiba.” Quick, complete cure»*B annoying Kidney and Urinary Diseases, P.
ST. LO UIS. SHEEP—Fair to Ch< FLOUK-XXX to Ct WHEAT—No. £ Win „ N o. a - CORN—No. a Mired CHICAGO. SHEEP—Good to chouoe, FLOUK-Winter. WHEAT—lia'aSpririg!!' POBK-Now Mew........
WSeeSy Adopted. 5, l&U tiiption by most Of imnnuuiu Sajif/saoc and farmers of tbs Uniled States, pf 'vto iaonrnit Butter Color made by WelS^SfcbsnUoo & Co.. Burlington, Vt., is % proof of their wisdom in a business jraiat of vj*w. Nearly all winter butter is solwrod in order to make it marketable, and this color » ihe boat, la recant to purity, *‘.y«agat,'psnaaoonce snd perfection of tint. SiinBjr Men. "WeOs-Health . stoma health aisd vigor, cares Dyspepsia,#. r* “WstAr's the difference,” asked a teacher «£ sritiioietie, ‘‘between one yard and two yMds!” “A fence,” said Tommy Beales.— Boston Post. Ho wonw can live without_ •st physical suffering; but many accept as isevtSabSe a crest amount of pain which earn he s^uided. Lydia E. Finkbamfs Vegeteb!« Compound was Invested by one who uoteratcod its need, and feed the rare skill tc provida a simple, yet admirably effective remedy. A tgcko woman is about to open a cigar atm* in Hew York. We have so doubt she will bat o capital to back her. Tze testimony of many who long tub farad from tli health, caused by an impure state of the blood, goes to prove that the bast remedy for making the blood rich,\pd §B» pure, for beautifying the eompiexioBr frrarisk «ogK< pimples and other skin diseases.’ for Mnotiing aches, pains, stiff power of endurance, for giving health and strength to every 'weak portion of the body, is Dr. Ouysoit's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. Its effect pleases the user in every instance. No other remedy equals it. Worn* ornament their dresses behind tec-.use they Kko to have nice things said about them wheel their backs are turned. Eon- John Cessna ,ex-Member from Penn., writes; “In the snare of twelve hours my rheumatism wps gone, having taken three doses Darsng’s Rheumatic Remedy. My brother was cured by a similar amount. 1 cordially recommend it.” By all druggists, or B, K. Helpbenstine, Washington, D. C. line more you contract a grea er it become:!.—Drake’s Magazine. cold the Traveler*’ If you want a fine looking Face, And a Skin rosy and clear, Tfse “Bkcsoh’s” Sulphur Soap; all Trace Of disease will disappear. S3f8oId by druggists, etc., everywhere. Hotrcrsixs that should never be lost, yet seldom kept—a bad temper.—IP. JT. Jvarml. " Mother Swan's Worm Syrup,” for feverishness,worm:9,cc]i3tipaUou.taatelete. 35c Wi suspect the reason why so many young men are so very fresh is merely because they are not aide t-tftfipna their salt. i,:s amims Physicians, Eminent Divines—every oae who tries it, endorses Samaritan Nervine. “ Rough on Corns.” lio. Ask for it. Com* pl5te.cure.haid or soft cor ns, warts, bunions. As Iowa editor wants any young lady jumps at conclusions” to consider who “j him a “conclusion.” Conans. For Cougba, Colds, Sore Throat, [etc., use Bbows's Bronchial Tbocbxs. m*M ftsly in boxes. Price *6 cts. S.Ilovk fighting Is called manly sport, probably because women do their fighting without gloves.—Phila. Chronicle. <>tt.X. K. G. MePurmxox. of Bloomington, Ind- antes. "oamaritaii Heroine euros fits.'* ►tale’s Honey of Borehanad udC Bu Will stop a wheezing cough. Pike's Both. ac!w drops cure in one minute. * Bough oe Coughs,” 1S&, at Druggists. Comphtecur* Coughs, Bvcnsnoss, Sore Throat.
'COMPANY Xiaatoa, 5. J. AMERICAN Sj»K
I! *
ABSOLUTELfI THE BEST.l LI6HTNINGI Tw® thonaand itltebev a WILSON’S NING SEWER! warid. Sent «o trial. Warraat-d 6 jean. Bead far Illustrated Oatalaneaad Circular FxfiiuaiBi"eo!, «£?ws«wT. XX.-CAUTION.-XX. It BLUE FLANKL Gammis OTIifcrlir Quality rfQw. are told a<i the ••g-nulne MWilleaex,” which are do c madd'by that mill. Ttw Middlesex Company, la oidt» Aioutt AKUAKU in Ulutl Ui.lra r LAAABLS ami ■ ;0 811 parties ordering tbe goods. WENDELL, FAY * CO., LLINO AGENTS. MIDDLESEX COMPANY, nd 8* Worth St, Hear Yoflt; ST Franklin St, Boston; *14 dWnut St. Pbiladelpfala.
|$ the time, Epileptic ISpotnu, Fi mm is invaluable. CTTbousands proclaim it the most wonderful Inrfgor$1.50 per
