Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 14, Number 48, Plymouth, Marshall County, 5 August 1869 — Page 4

Sketch of the Democratic Candidate for Dorernor of Pennsylvania The Hon Aa Park r was liorn in lNtMi, in Groton, N v Uabon county, Conn pvand in 1822, With his outfit strapped ina knap sack on lii back, reaaoved to Springville, SuMpi. hanna county, Pa., and apprenticed himself to i carpenter of that Tillage On arriving .it the age f 81, with his scanty savings be porenwed a small lot of land upon the upper waters of the Susquehanna, and settled down as fanner. In 1833 he remored to the Lehigh valley, and, as master f his own host, engaged in the transportation of coal from Manch ( hunk to Phil idelphia. The managers of tinLehigb Coal and Navigation Company, attracted by the energy and industry of Im Packer, aeenred his services tor the corpora ion at a liberal compensation, and in 1856 Am and his brother, R. W. Packer, aided by an uncle, established themselves at Manch Chunk, in the gen- . :;il merclianilise business. The ca-h capital of the firm was only $.",0M, but in I -hurt time their business became widely extended, ami embraced not only the ordinarv transactions of a country store

but tin "erection of locks and dams for the anal. Ih 'J working of con1 veins leased fron 1 1: Lehigb company, and at last he v ini; of the ilazelton mines, owned the Packers. The firm shipped coal t- New York and Philadelphia, not onlv hv tin Lehigh, but also bv tluj Sehn vlk ill river. In 1850, Am Par k, r en tered on the u'rk of building the Lehigh VaOel r lilroad, having become the owner of a controlling portion oi the stock at a company chartered in 1M, out not a loot of the hue oi u hich had been built ; in fact only 1? days of the limit for com mencinjr the road ret remained. Packe in October. 1851, submitted a proposition t. build 16 miles of the road from Manch Chunk to Pinion, and receive his pay in stock and bonds. This proposition was accepted, and the work, ander pressing financial embarrassments, was rigorously pressed to completion, and the entire lint was aeiivcreii in ."pi turner, icvw. i in success attending upon Packer's exertionto build the Lehigh Valley railroad hid the foundation of his fortunes as a coo :uid railroad operator, and he is now worth, it i estimated, between $15,000, i too and sjMÄH,(HKi. in 191, Packer founded, at South liethlchcin, a scientific school, called the Lehijrfa University, and endowed it with i trad of land. 50 acres in extent, and with $300,000 in money and it is believed he intends giving an ad ditional 1500,000, nuking t,000,000. Asa Packer, throinrh his entire career aaa been widely known as an earnest thorough-it fog, ronflHant Dfinocr.it, o the I'M school He baa been a member o the Pennvlvania Legislature, ni term in that bodv ending in 1843. and a Member t the House of Representatives in Con pr - for the Thirteenth District from 185! to 1 ". At the Democratic National Con rention. held in 1888, in New York, h received the entire rote of Pennsylvania as candidate for the Presidency, for four teen ballots, and arm only withdrawn in far of o n. w. s. Hancock. The nomination of Judge Packer as candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania is a becoming compliment to a life spent in honest industry, and to a character of blameless purity and unspotted integrity. Plalahl phia Public JLedjer. A Word with the President. ( U mmentins on some of the appoint ments of the President, the New York Be ning "' (Republican) says, in speaking of the diplomatic and consular service : Here he aeeaai to bare chosen men with very little regard in some notorious instances with utter disregard of fitness or character. It was not creditahle to him to send m Minister to Prance a man until 1 v lack of education, by all his training, and by his ignorance of almost everything required of a foreign Minister. It was bi tter to M-:id him to France than to keep him in the State Department, but it is neither right nor decent to pay personal debts by such appointment, or to gratify the ill judged ambition ot a favorite by assigning him to a post the duties of w hich he cannot fulfill. , But Mr. Washbnrne's appointment be coaaea creditable, nhnuat, in the liiht of that of Gen. .-sickles to be Minister to Spain. That the President should have persisted in this choice after the public exposure of Sickle s history, after the protest of moat respectable journals of lb parties, show s, it seems to us, more disregard of public opinion and of right and decency than is proper in the ruler of a free country. Some of his other foreign appointments also show but little judgment in the President ; they were made, either to gratify personal favorites, which is groasly wrong, or at the bidding oi politicians, whom he was bound to resist upon his owl theory of the duties of the Chief Executive. If we look at the consular appointments, gain we And that many nu n of ability and ep rience have been removed to jrivi place to persona who, whatever their merits mar he. at least lack experience. For instance, Mr. Kiiliu Bn tritt lias held for some time minor consulship in an English city. Re was, a we happen to know, oi considerable service to our country during the war; he is a capable and faithful i tlicer, and he ought to have been retained, if he could not be promoted to I better place. He has been sent adrift. There were no complaints against him; there w a no pretence that he had misconducted himself, or in anything tailed to fulfil bu duties. But the least faithful or capable public ohVrr eonkJ not have been dismissed with leas courtesy than Mr. Burritt. Again Mr Ettgi ne Schuyler, who has for several years keJd the place of Conan ;it Moscow, has been suddenly dismissed also for no cause, except that some less capable man iniiht be gratified w ith the plao We my less capable for Mr. Schuyler is one of the very few flmorirans w ho -peak and w rite Russian ; he is familiar with the people, knows the country, is a gentleman of capacity and probity, as w ell as a scholar; and is in every way a most creditable reprcsentativ" of this tonnt rv abroad. He has bean dismissed ly the administration There are no charges against him; he ha.; done no sP-iil'. nor omitO'l any duty; but his Government does not hesitate to degrade him by a summary dismissal. We eonld mention other instances of as mare injustice. It h not pleasant to see the public service thus lualadministered, m d r the rule of a Chief Magistrate who, we were taught to believe, would set aside the old and uii-cliicvoiis system of " rotation in otliee," and make no removals hut for cause The election of Omni mummed i reform in this reaped which all Ihnnghl M citi' us had long felt to he needed. It is impossible for the ioverninent to obtain t ithful and clficient service, if its oflicers are to Im- rmntd sulrift at the whim or ca pries of their chief, and regardless of the net that they have perforated their duties well. Jen. Orant must he conscious that he could not have successfully managed the armies on the principle on which lie is now trying to manage, some parts of the ereil service. It he had set at the heads of estpa Iii favorites, imjardWM of their fitness or character; if 1 1 had not onlv re fused promotion, but degraded to the ranks faithful and capable subordinate officers; if he had show n himself oblivions of merit, he would nevr have won the battles which have made him justly famous. Nor can we help remarking that those appointments whirl are commonly and justly regarded as the worst "re those w hieh have been made by binisel In the revt nue servit h.. Jj;., ino ifcied hu' little,

ut where he has done so, more than one

seandal has vexed the public Where he hm left the selection ot officers to his sobordinates thev have been in the main judiciously made. We will not speak now ot the untortu nate selection of some of his Cabinet Mr. Boric has retired to private life, whence he Might never to have been drawn; hut the neonle vet look for an order restoring to our ships thfl names under w hich they became hunOUi : nor do they cease to wonder that the President, whose public history is connected with the late war, should have permitted a whimsical Secretary to humble the navv by substituting senseless names, taken from I foreign naval register, for those which had acquired fame ami a place in history by great achievements The truth mems to be, that, asthe President began by refusing to take any advice, he too quickly ended by taking bad ;idvice ; and it is our duty, who hare, ever since the first battle he won, been his steadfast supporters, to tell him that in the particulars in w hich we hare found fault with him he has gravely weakened himself in the esteem and confidence of the public. A Word for Employes. It h) surprising how apt certain employers are to make a (lull boy ot the Jack who serves them bv irivinir him all work and no play. They sometimes may rest their horses for economy's sake, but their clerks and apprentices must toil on to the tiresome end without a holiday unless nature take the ease in hand. and. laving Jack tlal on his back, bid him make sport f fever as best he in:, v. since naught else can win him a ticket f-lean from factory or shop. Every employe, in whatever business hi may be engaged, should be granted seam resnite l n on work during t lie hot season not as Scrooge would granl it, with KTunt and a scow I, and suspension of pay ; but cheerfullv, heartily, with a glowing " (to. and i niov yourself, that sends him off half rested at the outset. .Not onlv in the larire cities, hut in country towns, in villages, even at lh store on the cross roads, when- ran sounds come sweetly in at the open door the clerk needs change and rest during . m a 11 . the summer, and he should nave it. it is no excuse for an employer that he s;i - "7" work all the rear t hrou" ;h, and ask ihoe who Benre me only to do the same. Hecause he has chosen an incessant wav of earning his Oread, it is do reason wh he should entail the dry bones of his mis take upon others; no reason why In should my to Jack : ' never stop warn ing fruit, to do you never stop ihakins the tree for me." No. A hearty, thoughtful employer secures hearty, thoughtful service. Only i conscientious master ma expect to have a conscientious man. Ever time a discreet task-girer w ins a grateful "Thank you. sir'" from his clerk or work man, he plaees a lerer under thai roan's powers readr to raise them to hieher and better service. Contrast the two employers, George W. Childs, of Philadelphia, and the London manufacturer, Adams; rhe one, at an expense of thousands ot dollars, giving his army of "hands" a grand sinless frolic on the Fourth, bringing them under tie happy influence oi pure air. fine scenery, music, generous entertainment, and social intercourse. The other, if accounts art1 to be relied on. selfishly and cruelly turn intr out a workman to starvation tttd de spair, after years of faithful scrice, at the first intimation that the poor fellow's consumptive condition would soon unlit him for labor! Which of the two men sleep the more restfully he whohreathes an atmosphere of blessings from those whom he has cheered and benefited, or he In whose ears must ever ring the curse of the poor crazed murderer and suicide, Duggatt: "May the horror of this nighl !' visited upon the man who forced it." These are extreme instances. Few em plovers, however enlightened and w arm hearted, tind thenuelres able to carry out nwfnllVrcnl schemes of kindness after the manner of Mr. Childs: and not all selfish, hardened men thank God! can act the cruel part of Mr. Adams. Yet there an gradations of Christian courtesy and of grinding tyranny ladders by which even employer may go up or down, climbing heavenward or descending toward tindepths. The latter sort arc crowded with those who dedicate their mast -ship solely to Mammon. It is on the ascending rounds we find the men who are most eager to plan vacations, or at least, occasional holidays, for all in their employ. Hearth nd Horn . The Prince ami the Actress A Romantic Tale or Courtship. Tns announcement of the approaching recognition, by the Imperial famity ot Austria, of the marriage of Duke Lot is, ol Bavaria, with the beautilul Mile. Mendel. the actress, of AugsboUTg, has given a new aim to the theatrical ambition of the ladies of the Paris board. The visit aboul to be made by the Empress Elizabeth t the beautitul castle of Lake Stahliberar. where the newly married couple reskh has become the talk ofererybjn r (fariirte in Jfiurope. I hey say in the couUmat hen that her Austrian Majesty was the pro moter ot the marriage, the story connected with her brothers love and courtship be ing romantic enough to excite the strong est interest in her kind and womanrj heart, and nutkaiL' it forgetful of all difl tinetion of rank where an equal share of love and delicacy had heen displayed bv both the lovers. Mile. Mendel, who had preserved her reputation unsullied amid all the perils and temptations of a theatrical lue, la considered as the most lovely wo man in Germany, her beauty being f tin ä . a i1 .1. I ' - ( i ue i hi in au n oe. oi i ne oeci at in in s beheld in no other country golden hair in soft silk v masses, without the smallest tinge of auburn pure gold unburn iah l a complexion delicate as the inner petals ot the licngal ns pale pink, scarcely ever M en in nature and almost impossible to produce by artificial means; Ups of the deepest carnation; teeth small and exquisitely white and eye brows of the darkest brown, with eyes of the deepest blue. All Ulis made such an mipresema on the heart of Duke Louis, that from the moment he first beheld her at the Munich Thealre he vowed himself Iq the worship of this one kloL Ilm Mile Hendel was valiant in defense of her repu tation, and awan of the responsibility incurred by the eommnkni of gn it talent, she resisted every overture, even that of marriage, on the part of the Duke, well know ing that it wa - out of his power to contract any alliance of the kind, as much was expected of him h his family At that time Mile. Menden was in the habit of wearing a velvet collar with a clasp omj muted by a single pearl of great value, which had been presented to her by the King of Saxony, and in order to qnefl nil hope of success in the bosom of her royal admirer, she declared to him one day thai she had made a vow to bestow her heart and hand on him alone w ho could match thai single pearl with as many others as would make a necklace. The' declaration was made laughingly, for the fair creature knew well enough the Duke, li ring fully up to his income, which w;i hut mediocre for his rank, could nevi r accomplish this Herculean task, and she laughed more merrily still when she beheld the disconsolate ejrnrmnion of his countenance ;d the an nouncetnent she had made. Bui soonafh i Ward she heard that the Duke had sohl ld horses and broken up his establishment gtsae to live in the strictest retirement In h small cottage la-longing to his brother's park. That very nij;ht, when about to place the vclvuv baud upon her Bf k la fuum

to her great aurpriae, thai a second pearl had been added to the clasp. She knew

well enough whence it came, and smiled i ..11.- l 1 . - ........ 1... saui ai i in io oi Kloo, MH- u-ii ..in i- min Duke Louis was incurring for love's sake. By degrees the velvet band became coren d With pearls, all of them as tine as the one bestowed by the King of Saxony, until one erening great was the rumor in Augs. boursr. The fair Mendel had been robbed: while on the Rtage, dirested of all ornament, in the prison scene as Bettina wn mixt, ill , her dressing-room had been en tered, and the velvet collar with its row of nriceless pearls had disappeared from the toilet-table. The event arasao terrible, her nerves were so shaken, that in spite of the assurance of the Chief Police Magistrate, who happened to be in the theater at the moment, that he was sure to find the thief in a very short time, for he had the clue already, poor Mile. Mendel was so overcome by grief that her memory failed her entirely, so that on returning to the stage not a word could she remember of her part ! The audience waited for some time in astonishment at the silence maintained by the actress; the actress ra.ed at the audience in piteous embarrassment, until, by sudden inspiration, and almost mechanically, indeed, sh, remembered that she had the rehearsal copy of the play in the pocket of her apron. She drew it forth without hesitation, and began to read from it with the greatest self possession imaginable. At ti ist the audience knew not whether to laugh or be angry, but presently memory, pathos, forgetitilness of all but her art had returned to Mile Mendel, and in the utterance of one of the most Impassioned sentiments of her speech she flung the rehearsal copy into the orchestra and went on with lu r part without pause or hesitation. The nnnhUMf! of the audience was mi - - tremendous that one ot the witnesses to the scene has told us that the great monster chandelier in the center of the roof BWUng to and fro with vibration. But on her return to the dressing-room the excitement proved too much, and she fainted away! On eoming back to consciousness it was to find Duke Louis at her feet, and the head Commissionaire standing by her side, bidding her take courage, for the pearls bad been found. " Where are they ?" ex CJthned she. "Are yon sure that none are Bussing! Have none been stolen y" Duke Louis then clasped around her neck Um string of peirto, complete it last, no longer sown on the velvel band, iui strong with mraunetry and fastened with a diamond clasp. What more could be done by the devoted lover' lb had spared neither pains nor sacrifice to attain his end, ami Bilk. Mendel consenti . , li D ' eil lo Ii come Ills nr. i ne r.i 1 1 1 i e sa 1 1 A list ria appears to ha e tu en much morct I by the story, and suggested the nomination of the bride elect to the title of Baroness de WaUersee, which thus equalized the rank of the jtaacst, and enabled them to marry without difficulty. They live tie moHl retired life possible in their little chateau on Lake BUhnberg, where the Empress of Austria is about to visit them They say that the Duchess Louis of Bavaria never puts off nighl or day the neck lace ol pearls, the clasp of which she has had riveted to her neck, and litat in eon sequence of this peculiarity she is known all through the country round by the name ot the Fairy Perfina, front the okl German talc ot the Magic Feaii Pfui f Isr. ( 'tntrt Jon rntl '. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Tk.mihs I'i i.n It's fly-time. Tfflf floating population Sailors. A hand to hand affair Marriage. Tn oldest cup on record the hic-cup. How To pre pare apple- Peel before stew ing. An nngranunatical doctor suggests that " Patients is a virtue." Any thing to please the child, asthe nurse said w hen she let the baby craw I out ot the third story window. A ( i.kuoyman who performed a mar riage ceremony in church is said to have read the hymn lor the choir, beginning with the words: "Mistaken BOUI8, who dream of Heaven." MoLKCULAS motion can travel with erpial and even greater velocity than light, ami it is show n by the rapidity w ith w hich electricity trarcnes a metal wire w here each particle of metal Is undoubtedly affected. LlTTLE Thomas Jefferson, baring eluded the vigilance of nurse and escaped from the nursery with bib and cheek glossy with tn acle, ensconced himself snugly in a dark nook ot the parlor toawait the in eritabie ring at the door which should announce the arrival of Augustus George. When Arabella had fluttered down. and. the first tender greetings being over, tin twain had arranged themaelres for a co v ((' i-ht. , little Thomas crept from his den, and, confronting the pair, with handthrust resolutely into (he recesses of his pockets, slid sulkily : " Now, Arabella, I suppose you want meto go to bed, but I won't stir a step until you ix'ivc me a big slice of the fruit cake you made thimorning." St. A i. hans is the butter mart ol Ver mont, and really regulates the price ol butter throughout the country. One. a week the tanners from all the surrounding towns conic in with their two horse teams and market wagons with the last week's diuminga, m ashen tubs. The wide streets are then alive. her four hundred wagons are gathered round the square, and the fanners, with their wives and daughters, are busy enough bargaining off the producta of their dairies, or making purchases at the stores The farmers are shrewd. Tiny understand their business, are wealthy and intelligent. Nearly a million dollars per annum is received by the farmers in the eighl or nine towns which send their produce lO St. Albans for butter and cheese alone. Kxi-Jniuije. A crnaam of Bennington, Yt., recently found in an old newspaper an atlidavit made bj Captain Jonas Galuslia, of thai place, i"n l so; and 1808. Referring to the battle of Bennington, in 1777, he testified : "1 was ordered with I he cut ire com paay under my command, by Colonel Moses Robinson, to march to said battle ground, and marched in obedience to sain order at the head of my eomptuy. I recollect at the time of the Bennington battle, a soldier came up to Colonel N a than Stone, and said: 'I have BO gUB. what shall I do?' Stone replied, "Stand by me a few minutes and you shall have one." The man obeyed, and in a short lime Stone drew up and tired at a lies si in : asthe Hessian fell, Stone said to his comrade, ' Run and gal your trim,' and the man obey d." The chief inspector ol Rliwdail railways has jnsi published an account of the Rtate of the traffic on the railways of the Kinpire for t he last t wo years. He stales that the traffic ol lsus w as carried over fMM miles of the QorernmeBtal lines, ami 8,611 milesof private lines the last lm lag been traversed by 7,743,.W8 passenger in 1867, and 8,78399 in 1868. The amount rsT the goods forwarded by the private lines in 1867 was 116,050,000 cwt., agaiaal 156, 100,000 cwt. m 1868. The gross receipts of all the private lines an about 5,423, 009 i 37,900, 165 roubles) lor Is'm. and aboul 666522 146,665,743 roubles) for 1868; showing an mcreaae of 61887,718. This increase would probably be far greater if all the main lilies leading to MobpoV) and St Peterabura were provided with double rails The lines of Moscow RJazan and Moaoon Kotnah are furnished on!) with single mils, m thai the aornmulallttn of gOOqs at dilleieni itnttonj in eiioiiuous.

FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. I

USEFUL RECIPES, ETC. A wniTKU in the Rural Messenger says as good a crop of corn as he ever saw was saved by the persistent use of the hoe between showers, in a season as wet as this has been. All the boys that could be hired in the neighborhood were employed in hoeing the corn and keeping the hills clear of weeds. The neighbors w ho let their corn alone until their ground got dry, had scarcely any corn. Tins is the way to cut off the neck of a bottle: With a strong twine a yard or less In length, make one turn around the neck, rapidly move the bottle from one end of the string to the other, that the friction mar heat the part; while hot, dip in cold water and the glass is cracked off as clean and smooth as it cut by a diamond. A few strokes or movements with the st rim: are all required. A bottle may be cut in two by the same process, if strips ot paper are pasted around it, to keep the string from slipping from the place de sired. Svonky Smith said : ' Never give way to melancholy : resist it steadily, lor the habit will encroach. I once gare :t lady two and twenty recipes against melan choly. One was a bright tire; another was to remember all the pleasant things said toher: another to keep a box ot sugar plums on the chimney-piece and a kettle sinunri nur on me Bon. l tiiomjni mis mere trilling at the moment, but uncovered in after Die how true it is that these little pleasures often banish melancholy better than higher and more exalted ob jects; and no means ought to be thought too inning w hich can oppose it in our selves or in others." ATK1UNG I'i. ants. A writer in an exchange savs : Plants set against Walls ami piazzas frequently sutler from want ot water at this season, w hen even jrround near them is ouite wet Draw away the soil from each plant so as to form a basin ; till in with a 1 u ketful of water, allowing it time to swak gradually away, and when the surface has dried a little, draw in loosely the soil over it, and it will do with out water tor some weeks. This applici to all plants wanting water through the season. If water is merely poured on the surface, it is made more compact by the wei-rlit of water, ami the harder the -oil becomes the easier it dries; ;tnl the result is. the more water you trive the more i: wii'iiiil. Btcka d;. How Smt Cans Corn. Mrs. A. Z. Lindsay, of Montrose, Pa., sends to an tSastern paper the following recipe, w hich will be serviceable when the melancholy dava have come : " Boil it fifteen minutes on the ear. then dry the grain in pans an hour in the warm sunshine, next salt it just so much as will season it for the table; till tin cans, leaving halt an inch ot space. Pul a gill or so of water in each can, and leave an aperture about the size of a pin in the cover tor the escape ot the ga Then place the tins in a kettle, having in it cnouirh water to reach within an inch of the iop of the cans; then boil nioder atelv three quarters of an hour; then sol der up the vent. 1 he corn will keep per lectly sweet and good as long as it is re (jiiircd to keep, To Rk.h vi natk Old Obafi Vim s. I lie editor ot the rr(cttrii trarmcr Bays M Having on our pEemises, planted by fi run r owners, probably twenty year-. halt a dozen old grape vines with large weatherbeaten trunks or stems, which made annually but little new wood and yielded hut very tew poor grapes, two season- BgO we cut off the branches, nnd laid the main steins down in the trenches, covering with about a foot of earth. Vig orous and heauliv s loots sprang up m irreal abundance the weak ones of winch were broken oil, and leading ones at proper distances trained to the arbor. Tin new growths are now clean, healthy, and strong sufficient entirely to cover tin large arbor the present season; we look for bushels of fruil from the new bearing wood. We see old grape vines even where, doing no good, and which could be made young and thrifty by this process.'' I'sk ok Rawhides. A skin of an animal, whether COW, calf, colt, or horse, that dies on the farm, is worth more at home than at the tanner's. ( nt t hem into narrow strips, and shave off the hair with a sharp knife before the kitchen fire, or in your workshop, stormy days and evenings. Von may make them soft by rubbing. A rawhide halter si rap, an inch wide, will hold a horse stronger, ami last longer, than an inch rope. It is stronger than hoop iron, and more durable, and mav be used to hoop drv casks and hoxes, and for hinges. Tiv it upon a broken thill, or any wood thai is splintered. Pul it on wet and nail fast. Thin skins make the best bag strings in the world. A rawhide rope is good substitute for a chain. It is valuable to mend a broken link in a trace chain. ror some purpose it is nest to use it in its natural state. For Other purposes it may be dressed soft. ISxckangt. How ro Milk. Cows should be not onlv milked with perfect regularity as re Karas the hours of milking, but thev should be milked to the last drops; and it hired srirla or men are employed to milk the cowa, the dairynin, the farmer's wife, or whoever has charge of the dairy, should P round with a small tin pail, and milk each cow drv hetore the work is to DC considered complete, and they are allowed to return to the held or enclosure. I he udders should he washed with tepid water before milking, so long asthe cows remain in or about the bvreaand varda, but after they are put on pasturage it will seldom be found necessary to do more than wash the teats occasionally. The habit acquired bv many servant girls ot dipping their hands in the milk w hile milking the cows, i- a disgusting practice that should not he tolerated. Cows are just as easily milked with dry hands, and it they are not, the I eats should be softened in tepid water, and gn at care taken to allow not hing to i run from them or the hands into tin milk pail, while the operation of milkin i going on. Agriemturm ruper. las Currant Worin At the hort null unH cxihitmion in Rochester, recently, several gentleman slated that the currant worm would not disturb bushes under which coal ashes were liberally sprinkled. In confirmation of this a correspondent of the Stprtu of that city says: "Thai to prevent the currant slug on currant bushes persons have only to mulch thoroughly all the ground under the bushes with anthracite coal ashes. This should he done late in the autumn or early in the spring of the year, 1m lore the bushes leave out, as the worm thai feeds on the leaves, after its grow th, drohs off and goes into the earth Immediately Bilder i he hushes. The grub, w hen il comes up to change ino a fly. cannot make its way through fhis coarse, sharp, gritty ash heap, und pi rishes there. Thus tin ins hushes are unmolested by Oy or Kings this year, while last year they were almost entirely snipped of their leaves In sluus. An easy and cheap remedy surely." I'sefulness of Willows. K RMSR8 should havcapatch of Ofcier nrillows growing near the homestead, as He y are exceedingly useful for many pur poses. Baskets or various sjes me needed in the house, barn yard and field, and w hen there is plenty of material they can be I made within doors in winter, when farm work is not pressing. 1 he Sti-li.r rimiitoit, I or basket willow, is best suited for this j purpose Of i lie Purple willow , Sflttf put I OH rill, it lias been -aid that "if there were hm ope osier in cMstcmr, Ihh WOUM RUh

ply more of the wants of willow-workers than any other one." Willow withes are very useful in the garden, nursery, or

pleasure ground, as thev supply an abund ance of ties for fastening vines or trellise, tall-growing flowers to stakes, and also serve for bands lor the nurservmen. The clear stems of two or three year old wil lows furnish poles for beans, etc.. and w hen split make hoops for vessels of various kinds. The Golden ffricT, (ftsfir ritdKna) is verv ornamental, even when entirely de nuded of foliage. It is also useful, for its young shoots make good ties, and its me dium sized branches and twigs furnish peabrush, a thing that is not alw ays at hand in some gardens. W lllows will grow in a great variety of soils, especially if Bioist, but not profitably in any unsuitcd to their habits. Drained swamps afford fine sites for willow plantations. A deep, rich bottom of sandy loam that is occasionally overflowed, is very suitable for their growth. Any amount of overflowing, not in the growing season, does no damage, but increases Un fertile v. Richness of soil is important, great depth indispensable, and easv culture desirable and profitable. WtWttTH Rural. Building Hay-Mows. Ox small farms, where the horse fork is not used, much hard labor may be Raved by building up one-half of the hay-mow at a time. For instance, with the tirst hay draw n, till either the right or left hand end of the bay, up as far as the big beam. then rake down the side, and while this part is settling, till the other half. The two parts being filled at different times. will not settle alike, and ot course w ill not unite, so there will be no use for a hayknife in winter. The principal benefit of this plan is derived by lessening the hard labor w hile unloading. One-half of the mow being lower than the other, the top of the load mav fa throw n on the highest part, and the balance below, which saves pitching from the rack over the big beam. Atter trymg this mode ot mowing away hay, it w ill not be abandoned. There is still another advantage: the greatest heat caused hv lernientation is always in the centre of the mow, and the seam lu re gives escape to the generated eases. There is very generally a neglect among farmers to properly prepare the bottom of their bays for hav to keep well. In most casts the hay is allowed to lie upon the irrouinl, or at nest, to rest upon a tew poles or rails laid on the earth. The brst construction we ever used was to put in loirs fifteen inches through, across the bay, once in eight or ten feet, and upon these spread rails or poles, leaving a space be tween them ot about two inches. I his (rivi'V n f i'i i i i Vt i i 1 1 i . t n lii'l.tw tin in..,,- '.nil not a pound is injured if it remains there for vcars. Ohio Farmer. After Potato Digging. The usual crop after potatoes is weeds, which have ample time t mature theii a a aa aa sect is neiore trost conies, and to make trouble for many year afterwards. Few farmers estimate the amount of damage 1 a la a a a B 1 none to incir lands i- tins untimeiv seetliuir. We have seen land so stocked with charlock, Canada thistles, ami other weeds, that the cost of all hoed crops upon it wa fullv doubled. Their presence depreciate the value of the oats and barley, and even of irrass. No jrrain or graaa seed tit to be sold can be raised upon it, and even the manure made from the feeding of such rops is lesi valuable by reason ot Be loul seeds. ct inanv farmers press rnrht on. docking their lands with weeds, as it thev were a moat valuable crop. 1 he potatoes are dux and marketed in Jul v. or earlv Augusi, and the ground lies waste for tin l'esi ol tlie sea.son. It crops are not wanted, the opportunitv should be mi proved to destroy weeds. Plow the land as soon as me potatoes are oll. Auer ten davs go over it with a harrow. This will destroy a second crop of weeds. In ten davs more im over it with a brush harrow, which will destroy a third crop In two weeks, follow with a harrow, and so on until the frost conns in November. A second crop may be taken from the potato around. If not in irood heart, sow good superphosphate, or Peruvian guano. at the rate ot :00 lbs. to the acre, on tin old rows, lot over tin- rows once with a cultivator. Sow turnip leed spariimh upon the fresh soil, and put them in with a liirht one-horse harrow or bush. W hen the turnips are up, cultivate between tin a a . a rows, and Keep lliese spaces tree irom weeds. I he turnips w ill soon shade the ground, and prevent the growth ot weeds in 1 he rows. I here are frequently three months of more between the early potato harvest and the closinir of the Round, and in this tune a tine crop of while tinnips may be grown at a cost ol less than six cents a bushel. They are excellent for young cattle, and will assist materially in making beef and mutton Sometimes the potatoes come off early enough for buckwheat or the winter grains. If ma mile is judiciously Used, two crops in a season may be taken from the soil. Am ricoH AgriculturwL How to Make Spruce Beer. As tiik season is at hand when pleasant summer drinks, free from alcoholic influence, are frequently brewed by the housewife, or the well brought up daaghtera, who ought to be tauarhi a little of everything in the way of household duties we append the following receipts, Which are claimed to be excellent : 1. Take three gallons of water of blood warmth, three half pints of molasses, a table-spoonful ol essence of spruce, and the like quantity of ginger J mix well together with a gill of yeast ; let stand over night, and bottle in the morninp. It will be in a good condition lo drink in twentylour hours. Il is a palatable, w holesome beverage. 2. Those who prefer mead have only to substitute honey for the molasses named above, and for one third the iringcr use allspice. Halt the quantity of yeasl w ill be sufficient, and the bottling should occur the second day instead of the next morning. It w ill be tit to drink in lour days after being tattled, and will keep for many weeks. A small quantity of alcohol is formed during t he fermentation, and this prevents l he acetous fermentation so common t spruce beer. The essence of spruce is of course left out in the making of mead. The alcohol formed from the fermentation ol honey resembles that found in metheglin, while i he alcohol formed from the fermentation of molasses is ruin. Those who imagine thai they can make either spruce beer or mead without entirely forming any alcohol are mistaken; but it is present in so light a proportion as not lobe sensible to I lie most delicate Mill perance nerves. Extemtinatiag House Flies.

A Vkkmontku gives to the Partners1 Institute his method of destroying these pests by means of a kind of net secured in a doorway. II my 8; "I am enabled by means of a net made of proper male rial ami suitable sie, attached slightly to a door passage in a horizontal position, to entrap all lae flies lathe house in a lew minutes, and scald or destroy them. I lind that Mies an be driven out of a room through a doorway witb facility, and a net attached to the passageway receives all the flies. I ,are not how numerous, that are driven from the room. The ml being light, with open meshes, they will light on the same and stay there till you drive all the Hies in the room into ihe net ; then quickly remove the mi from the doorway, im losing the mouth in VOOf hand ; shake it, lifj MM Hies will quickly be jpulierul

at the rear end of the net, just like a swarm of bees, and then destroy them by dipping the bunch of flies in hot water or BOM) suds. A few applications of the net make the flits very tew in number in and about your house. By using our contriv

ance once or twice a week, in anv dwell ing, during fly time, will give peace and quietude that such as detest Hies and vermin aa I do will fully appreciate." Exereise for Girls. Exercise is, no more than food, a thing to he taken and profited by riet armi. The child compelled every day to swallow a breakfast and a dinner composed ot objects disgusting to it, would never be expected by any person to thrive thereon. Hut it is often assumed that the same rirl will obtain all the benefit of exercise il obliged solemnly to walk up and down a terrace for so many hours, or to use the dumb bells and perform calisthenic exercises in her dull school room. Real exercise, especially in youth, must be joyous exercise, spontaneously taken, not as a medicine, but with the eagerness of natural appetite. Romping frames in childhood Puss in the Corner, Blind Man's Huff, and all the delightful vari.itious on Prisoner's Base. French and English, Petit Picqnt. and liattiedore and all with screannmrs permitted ad libitum, are for indoors. Out of doors: Come Hunt the Hare, and Hide and Seek, and hoop, and ball, and cricket and Irite-ilying, and above all, that bteased thing, 14 Playing in the Hay.'" Arc these all M dreadfully unlady like." and calculated for the production of tom-hovs. Never believe a word of it ! The most hi-di-hred of women have been the most free and joy ous ol children. I hen come a little later. r almost as soon, the two great exerciw a of ladies, whereby more health and viiror can be trained by ladies than in anv other way. namely, gardening and riding. ( )h ! fathers' of daughters who will hv and l ask you to spend thousands in" paying their milliners' bills, taking them to fash tollable resorts, and giving them rich set tleinents : will you not spare a few tens or hundreds, to give them the scrap ot garden, or the rough pony which will se cure ior mem neaiinanu niooin and vcars of strength and lite which all your thou sands ran not buy a lew vcars henre. 01 all the penny-wise pound foolish policic in the world is that which irrudircs th girl of fourteen her pony or her hall rood of ground, and lavishes on her. four years all erward, silks and jewels, and nil the costly appurtenances of fashionable lite. How is it that Harriet Hoamer has become the woman of whom America K SO proud, England so fond ? Because her father taught her to ride and shoot before Gibson taught her to model "Stecpiag Fawns;" because she possesses physical streiigth,enerry,and joyous animal spirits, such as win every prize, and charm every heart. Put), um Sfayaziuc for AugutL Mr. Richardson tells ol .1 California woman to whom he showed a twenty live cent note of our postal currency, specimens of which are rare in t hat hard-money region. She turned it over and over with keen curiosity. "It seems very strange to me that t his should be money." she said; " it don't look like money." "What does it look like ? " M Well," heal at i ugly, nd with tin- utmost sincerity, "it looks like a hibtl for an oyster run ! " The name of Clark Seminary at Aurora, 111., has been changed to .Tknninos Skmi nry in honor of Mrs. Elia Jennings. who has given largely to pay its Indebtedness and enlarge its library and apparatus. The World HffWWa Wiser. The human utomaeh has been a "hafifslfj panecutcd orjran. There wa a time when for every dere li tion of duty it wa punished with hu'e iaSM of the most diustin and nauseoua drug. In vain it rcji'iH-d them, and Oi'eralljO returned them upon the hands of those who administered Uwax Th-y were toned upon it imain aud BflBB, until lU ofoml imer was thoroughly drenelud out of it. The world i wiser now than it wa- in that drastic era. when furious purgation aud mercurial salivation were rast Artemus Ward would have railed the main holt" of the faculty, iu cases of dyspepsia and liver complaint. The great modem remedv for indigestion and biliousness is 1 1 ( 1ST ETTEK'S STO MA CH ITTERS, a preparation which has the merit of combining a palatable flavor with such tonic, aperient and anti MlkMH properties, a were never heretofore united in any medicine. It has been discovered, at last, that cick people are not like the fabled Titans, who found prostra tion so refreshing that, when knocked down, thev rose from the ea th twice as rffjarowg M before. When an invalid is pnwtrated by powerful depleting drugs, he is apt to utay prostrated ; and the debili tated. being aware ot the fact, prefer the flMififlnu nil. to the kiiix-king linirn svtem ot treatment. HOBTBTTKHt BITTKKS meet the require etil of the rational medical philosophy winch ai present prevails. It is a perfectly pure "vegetable remedy, embracing the three important properties ot a preveaUve, a tonic, and an alterative. It fortities um body MaJaat dtwatS, invigorate- ainl re-vitalizes the torpid stomach aud liver, anil effects a niM salutary change iu the entire system, when in a morbid condition. In summer, when the enfeebling temperature renders the human organization particularly u ceptible to unwholesome atmospheric influencetin1 hitters should be taken as a protection against epidemic disease. I mm accomplished by the election of Ciraut. and a revolution of immense social importance has been effected by the general substitution of that pur--and harmless preparation, Crisfadoro s Excelsior Hair Dye, for the deadly compound of lead and brimstone, ol which, according to the Journal of ( ' hunixt -? and the JmBooI iaztU. more than thihty BBRIB have been foisted upon the public! Crlstadoro's Dve is the onlv one that HAS lt-f-: ANALYZKIl; and Profer-sor t'hilton. over his own signature, declares 1 hat it is perfectly wholesome. CRISTA UOROS HAIR PRES KB V ATI VE. aa Dressing, acts like a charm on the Hair after Dyeing. Trv it. SOLD BY ALL DBUGGESTC. Thk Reason Why so Many Die with ('ONtrapTioH, is because they neglect to use the proper remedy in season. When the system Is tirst attacked with a cough, oppression of the cbest or seated pains in the breast, A;len Lung Halsam will cause the phlegm to raiae, heal the irritated parts, and restore the system to health. For sale by all druggists. a 1 Th Bibt aud Original Tomo of Iron. Phcphorua and Caltaaya, known a Krro-PuopSatl hllxtrof CidtftayH Bark. Tbo Iron ntitore color to the blood, the phosphorus renew waste of the nerrc tisaue. and the calisaya gives natural, heal thin I tone to the digestive organs, thereby curing dyspepsia ti. Its varlou lorma, wakefulness, genexal debility. 1 preaslon of sairl's; alao, the heat PMTeoMve again) fever and ague. One pint contalna the Tlr'nea of one ounce of . Hiisaya, and one teaspoonfui, a grain o Iron and phosiihorna. Manuiactured only by Caswrll . Hazard A Co., sure 8ra to Caswell, Mack CoNew York. 80M by DrugcUta. f2.KM. Kt -KI.I.'M HCHOftl New nv n. T on 11 FALL SK.SS0 begins September i:th. Catalogues sent on application. AlJKNTH WASTKII TO HHl.t. Sights an(t Nee rets OK THK NATION.1. CaPITAI.. A work Patau 1 iv or Washington City; Its lilifh snd 11 low lite; magnificent public e.lltlce . hidden mysteries, vlllanles and c rrupMone ; lhiiiHide workings i the Government; and showing h w money is squanderer ; how public servants per lorm their trusts ; how rlnits re managed ; how officials are black mailed: njw counterfeiting Is carrle I on; and ill a'tout female I l'v RWUMMra, lady clerks, tit-., Ac. n beautifully I'I" trated, and is the spiciest, most thrilling, e l enalnl ig. instructive, and u.tiiiig book ol the day. ffTJjaa fte tUJtmlars, with te-ma. Ac. Adores .TOVK-J, .IHSKIN A o.. 1H7 Sint i Urk 8tret ObleaWA, I" JENNINGS SEMINARY, (Formerly rlrk Seminary,) AI KOKA.ILL.. B.n gl KKKAC, D.D. Principal, olbrs u'ood accoiniii ' l iti 'tis, mtfc 1 1 1 plcaa-int ROaaC, and laptilnf a.hnnUgea In English, Olaaalaai, mi Ornaincntal brauche. The twelfth year opens August :W ONLY ONE DOLLAR 1 . OH .lON'H IIKKAI.O to Jan I t 1H7U A I4 first class Illustrated Religion Journal o nate '0 Contrlb"t rs ; 5 K'Lors. The chiv-i ni.ei Ip i"c l'"l f .' XIa j ear in ad vanof . Sihm ini'-n Ft. ilea tree. K. . WINfLOW. Pm.lhei, 11 lidualilt matou.

POLITICAL il Ti

1 GOOD F l Ml MEDICINE. ALLEN s EI.EmiATEI) LI NG BALSAM Cure CoMa, Coujrh und Consumption. ALI EN s, CELEB BATED LUNG HALSAMCurp Brnnrhlrt. Anthma und Croup. ALLEN s , ELEBBATED LUNG HALs.Wl Imtiart -treiiiitli to tti Mrni. ALLEVs . ELEIO: TL1 UM. BALSA M b peasant to take. ALI EN S CELEBRATED LUNG BALAAM always Riven nfa-t!on or tb" money III he refnnrted. Itt PMMMMBBeS '" prominent lt iclmi : and utill it in pleasant to take "nnd hanule in Its nature, it 1 a powerful remedy for ourim; all dieRe of the Lungs. Sold by all Dkcuuibts.

SUMMER TONIC! Ir. s. o. Richardson's SHERRY Will BtTTfRS ! The Celebrated New Ktiidatnl Kemel) HABITUAL CONSTIPATION, Jniinriire. Fever nnd Agu, IJenrrnl SIebilily. und all Diea' ariNiiiK Tram a Uinorderefl -juiiiacti. Liver or Bowel, lieh ait Aeidity of the Stoiii trh. Iiidiititlon, Heartburn, Lo of Appetite, Coti mi. can't und Re-lint I'il". IM ntl t Food. s..ur Eraettatta, Sin klar or Fluttering ol the lit of the Stomach, Dinmeai of Viion. Vellounw of the Skin Htul Kve. Cain il. tlio Ni.l... lek. i'Iks! or Umba, hikI in i" .t "? w Ii' 'Ft it I o N l J i- nt'djsjttary . J.N, Harris & Co., Sole Proprietors, nxiAri, onto. (W For Snlr h nil Medicine Denlera. DR. RANSOM'S mil siivjn mil Dr. Ha-som's Hive Syrup nr. 1! Tolu, In aaflStaa to ingrd'enfji fir ordinary Hire BfTtta, otitHlng Balaam nfTolu, Deeoetfoa of Skank Ca'b2e Itoak, Lobella and Hops; a comhi M o- that tnust comm.-ml It to every on- aa asni.-r'or rm- 'y 'or Cronn. Wu' ntnCough, AsTh;na, BrwncliltfcL CoaglM aaS Ootaa, Indeol. for all atl-ctlons ot the lhroaf and Lutig where a cough medicine is rK'e'ary rbis Syrur1 i carM'utl) prepared under the Mri-..n ;1 !'e-rio!i oi .1 re-r nl;r physlclar 01 vt twenty ye.fs' prac'irr. wlio'; sliature is attached to the directions on the bottle. Its vry ,-ileasant taste mak- It an agr-eahle no-lie ne for children : everv i ron shou'd ke.-p h-tt!e ot K'.i aoaaa UIVK aVEUf A Ml TULI' m xw house not only as a univi-rs i: Cough Medicine, -.t a n aur an'l rsdv remedy i.-r suddt-n att4ck- 01 Croup Amoot the chlldn'n. Kememrv-r that tnsnmption 1s caused. In M aaaa, by uiliallni a -:ight cfuh. Greatest Discovery cf the ige ! UK. ll.TRA9K'i agnetlc Oisiimrnt ! This PMMrfnMa ar.fl mot lirer"-;ng remedy Is ComponHil oi lh- r0iirrtrt'n .luifes of the most powerfoi and the n;oit aoif li;.. Plants and ICo-)ts in iiHtilie. e' en icaily eoai bMd aid in- Vated in well 'Hlefl il k. tHittl.-s, H'.d Ct Hr re4 'y A p-,w,"nl Bsl tery : Thun prnwi-iiiL' in mlilui n t It -niifi l medical vlrtnes. Mtrons M NKTl' ami Ki.e-tbio proper ties, prolotit dly KiK.tl atlac aa t eminently gub'tipr mil soothing It relieve-! Pain and !iirttnmati.n m once, (heu (reqw ntir appHeil,) relTine t- e stratm! muscle aad nerves. l'Iviii n.w M? at:d vit!.ty by Us life giving ijualitle.. t0 fmtwifm'4 Mra4 Chronic ir long s'and1'-. "o:np'aitit ai"l Wea: eses aMaynt tttl WW ram. niewralgtw.) Irr t it -... hi i K"uvtna ObHtr'ict'.on ;1ke h chrin. Iride.t u" who kH Msl I', pk ol it a truly a w-ndertul 'nedlclne. jid teem ii ty Tar super;-..- ;o any a'id ill of er extrTini remwlio in ue. I! applii ;! in waauS It I- a-' u iiaillc remedy tor the Omi . iMjitheria. Bore lhr', Ir.fls ;i mation of Ii.-- Luit. 1'w.' . l iver. Kidneys and other Organs, i .' r-.iiiaiiiii, S ( InitaHtOM, Anne 'n the Hnnst. and st all ttaaea evrea Nervwai Healache, Nenn igia, s. e Kj ea, K&r Ache, ! c. afjas ti the Face, Pbantna nnd Krup'ions o: all kind. Ptls. Bruised :ir.! Spr-tined t,'ni!-. r-iiTiia, Frozen par's, :hllblai'.s. into en and lorn; tw.t'ng S.-r.-. Wou.id, Ac. Ac. it wi.i - -1 r' -or-tin aair to the Bald Head, and prevent the Hair ItOu: laiiir t Prof. H. Anderson's DEBMADOB ! In at Liquid l.lu 1 meiii for A 1 1 1 a t . 1 : ii 1 1 FOR MAM Om BBAJV, A Valuable Cotnbinatiou XMscovcrod bv a Celebrated Chemist. Itsfiw application to 'nt'.amed sonia, and surfac, on both Man and B-'. Ina.eryshori time reli' . he pain and s..rcn.-, -i'.-l -he not, anry aud red 1.nce ta .u-ii-, c..:. nioit ! 111 ura!. and by e.aitln ned apnlicatior. and aM:.tton, 'be pari ts aoon rsi f-d to health. IMPORTANT TO K0&SBMB1 Prof. An df M I - D'-n.-l !o. 5s tiie - LM aw t In use tor ho;sm. TMaSSet S shown by ii'i:n er sal letters "Vor-, ali pAns d OOWIlCrj. A Mtaw reals follows : W have been ' Xjv r'.uich'in? wi'h raw i rni .doc on hoiiifilesh, .11 1 Und it i very m .'tor r-medy; inn h 'ip-rior t 1 'he IShmmm "Oaru'.ing il." or any other nalaaefcl we enr aawS In our L v-iy BtaMt Phase e:nt us two .loz.-n la-ee ia-lflca bv i-ip C. o. D. Vour- rvapectfnUf, WA.TSKIK A LXK1PAB. Waveriy, ltd-" DR. J. R. MIIXER"S Oiiiversal Magnetic Balm Cures, as 'f by M; letle I il"' c wrt gli and all ! " MliUetIC aln. md Is th reiore verv nroiRTiV ter Bam" fta parelv i v.V. t .tile (rrtrtlon. I' has no "Ulla. . i-m.dy I, CIIOlAkA, CHOLKKA Ki;.itrs. UIAKK1KKV UVSnN 1 KUY, COLIC, an 1 -ill BOWKL COMPLAINTS- Its MiueiV "'' -l!l cure Coins, Croup. Dl.due.la, Quinsy, and ail Throat affections. When properly used, Kever ar.d Agn", n.1 o'hr compialnt incident to our western MM ajattim climates, are easily bro. t-n up. PBVEB AMI ILCSUB. fiae th iVitem; th-n, aa the lime forachli li son, cover warmly la bad and taAe a cwpfu of hot w iter, with a rto teaapoowtWla ol te Hacnetle B-iltti sw el-ned With brown sunar. aNo Bam the back and s'otpacli with the Balm and nuiain juiet. BaaaaCtl ;u c-ary. IV All ihr sbovp uSBftt e Id br OrugglMlsi Kv'i r here. Is iALwtra -V- ( 0., Props, PUaTiyA I X, TM. V. I? Hl'liOV MUST ' t t'J- for particulars, ad Vj dr -s a v ! S'. 'Ki .v cv I . !".r '' " VI VINEGAR! Asa . ur fitta-f.. tor rai se .-. (.'.iiisViMtiAi. A moi spb ndld article. arr:.!t-l pu-e .! to pna-rvc ptciiee. .i,icii,r.l'iii Khlr Laret-si orfcs 01 uiwl PUVU I'M At the L'.s. ra-r. i . m; ran. the klrd 1. a. fatal b.ee-1 ;i tMA341 Mtai avo SWEET -WRKT UCMIN. tJ. 'OIT-ilM. annal noae ior doae tothe eat en su'.pnate tMtier) quinine, with rhe Important itdvaiitage o( ti-ti2 awwel in-ttewd 01 btttr. svai-m s. iseii'M 11'BiriKO of Its sicltenlng and plaonoin properneis it 1 lae luoat eerlect ANOOYNit and tHil 11 Uly C'PlATK ' dlscoveiW. W s.,:-; 'v OrnuTisu, preQUININE Svapnia cr1td br the !. Ihvs1cins. Mad steat 11. Karr A Co MaDDfai Inrli e Ctn lata, N 1 V.rk. The Iiistliirt of tin' Slomacli. 1'iki Momcdici.ie that the stoma, hl.eith.- ri.eit.still.-t r that dominant organ may be trusted It accepts TaaBANT" Ki t KK l- INT Skiti k rnm.T and hvv Bttain In Iwe Aelletowa t.-bntuire U recognizes a toning. nurilMiig. regulating i" p'r'," Una. Tlie nfre-hin:- rem.d ImiUtes witlttljd avstem. and Invigorate, the siomaeh. while it gently relieves the bowels, induce h. althlul flow of bile, and restor.'f the apiwlile. SOLI V ALL nWUi.lSTV a:ioiMsA i.a k v. aasMwP.1 ntAwaoa,.!1. Iäimi PHava'f. Sovel, I arlowsaaS liaat A.lrt.vis lloloMH A Uaaiettsvlflr, Ohio. C. O. D. C. O. D. r a mil IB II' I Till ri ll III 1 II 11 J I I II I II. I. II Ii I 1 - i.ATr.sr nttaovaaaa la. Fl I Lt.lt A I II,, ilate M t ( 'lapman A to. n.-npo.ii I,, , , 'g.y .i.iim St.. 1 We w til send, on ud.-r. single W All H M AI . HKS, In solid I o ld ; 1 1 1 Ml- er t -. 01 l. lo epr. f. uir part of tin- I '11 1 ted Sub . to ! paid !u on d.-liverv, after examination, at v i, -l -ale pricea. The buyer to pav ail express efcanwa Th.- 1 oiuiiai.v gnarantee sen! ilh each watch. IS'" Send loi llu'ii:i!i-,l irci.l.it ni' ii't full Infor in .lion l. MI 1 11.00 its to sell Kit 1 a -i k kSTli 1 Agents to sell the Ii. na Shttti t Sitw i ' ifii r make ihe Ixk'I aTiTVH AI. IKK ON Bn ti sii-m. nas the unler le d. an 'iseijua! in eveiy respect 10 any tcw tag Machine ev. r Invei.iod p.icefafc. Wari Mews, hend for circular Add res .louwa.' 1 Last 4(X).,B0lWw. . m.m . ... TV- Aa I ft,

t

II II 'I'll 1 II II 111 lit X

Villi SH I" 11:1 I till