Rensselaer Republican, Volume 12, Number 31, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 April 1880 — Page 4
sw«ipaw|le)!iil)licßn. MAJOR BITTERS A SON, RENSSELAER. ~T : INDIANA,
THE CHUBCH REVERIES OF A SCHOOL GIRL. IliTltiMT bonnet: TU go np to elnwt *o the sew preach nr, young Jonathan Hs’s stogie' and hnndnoMn, but they nay he’s And sermosia are long and dreadfully But, bachelor. 11l try far Msaaka To look interested, and keep wide awake. ' What a good congregation! Vm gksd that I That face is familiar, bat what Is her name? Ah, pee! at the social she sang through her Srifisrif Murray will ever propose? choir has finished its opening hymn, preacher’s too pale and awfully prim. His prayers I think tedious, and penny and loaf; They say that he thinks even dancing is What'beautiful the Barton girls I woedertj they realty do bleach their hair? They areas awful stylUh and hare a front pew; They say that their father s as rich aa a Jew. Ah! there goes the sermon—l most listen with Oh. haanM: Frank Fields got beaotifal heir? I must catch, ff I can, the drift of the text. I wonder what beau Belle Laws will hare next? Ah, me! bow I wish the choir would sing. I’d gtre something nice for a new diamond ring! Oh, why don’t the preachers all preach to the point? I hare sat here till every bone’s out of Joint; I hava a croak in my neck and a pain tn my back. I declare. Mary Riley has got a new sack. And all lined through with the finest of far, I never could see wnat folks fancied tn her I Well, the sermon’s progressing, 1 must listen and learn. V How I wish be d warm up sad not look so stern. Mary Gray is in mourning, I wonder who’s deHd, * She’d k>,k well in black if her hair wasn’t red. in the pew right behind me is old Deaoon Moore: ■! 1 don’t mind his sleeping, but why does he snore? f. Just boar that cross baby: 1 know Mr. Birch Must bate so to have it disturbing the church: And bow oau be preaoh sn<l pray through it all? They say Maggie Koe-t was "belle of the bail;” Thai her drees was just lovely, her dancing divine. t But I won’t believe it was better than mine. The sermon 1s Onisbe<LZUie Bible is closed. The ‘'collection” has wakened the deacons that dozed; -» r I must feel in my pocket and get out my dime. Those boys in toe gallery have bad a good time. Why, tbeie's Mary Martin! what a beautiful hat; How pretty she’d be if she wasn’t so fall And now we will have a tune from the choir; Ftbink that their *ing«nglackafeelingand fire; I wonder if Murrey wiA beat the door, ' Or if he will join that pert Minnie Moore? She s so proud of her eyes, with their sleepy old lids, ' Ido wish 1 had some six-button kids. “Old Hundred ” is finished and m get my muff, S think for to-day I’ve had preaching enough. The aisle Is so crowded we ll have to go slow. Ah! there’s Minnie Moore gone off with my beau! • See how she struts in her new polonaise; 1 always did bate her impudent ways. I’U pretend not to see her, and turn up my nose. And show how indifferent I am to the beaux. There's Jennie Jones opposite, waiting to see If 1 bad a gentleman come Dome with me. Ah, me, I just know pa and mi will be vexed Fur I have forgotten every word of the text! —Cincinnati Gazette.
THE BASKET OF SHAVINGS.
CHAPfEU I. “ Becky Faibweather, where have you been ail this while?'’ It was a shrill woman's tongue that put the question; and it -was a timid child's voice that replied, “I’ve just been playing in the court here, along with the girls. Please uon't whip me, Aunt Nora! Please don't!” Little Becky stood trembling at the door, with a face lull of terror and entreaty, while the woman advanced upon her lyith a lowering look, whose dreadful meaning the child knew too well. “ There!” sail Aunt Nora, giving the little shoulders a rude shake. < “Now stop your crying. I’ll teach yon to be oat playing with the girls, ’ when I Wnnt you!” "I didn't know you wanted me, Aunt Nora!” the child. “You might have known. Hush your noise. Now take the basket and go over to the Dimmock house forshavings, and don't let me hear another word out of your head, if you know what’s good for youseif.” “ Oaunt! it’s getting so dark. Tm kfraid to go. 4 ’ “What are you afraid of? There’s nothing to hurt good girls, and if you’re a bad child, it's your own fault. Yon might have gone before sundown. Come, I shall want the shavings to kindle the fire in the morning; and the longer you wait the darker it will be.” “O aunt! I can t go into that old house. The last time I was there 1 heard something, and it wasn’t half so dark as it is to-night. I’ll get up early and go in the mdruing, if you’ll let me. O aunt do!” The aunt made no reply, but turned to take down from Its place on the entry hooks a switch, whose marks poor little Becky's hands and arms had carried many a day. ’At sight of it, she caught up the basket, and ran out of house, “Well, you betters!’ said'the woman grimly, “You’re old enough not to be afraid of the dark. You "tan see well enough; and there’s nothing under the sun to be afiaiibof. Now don't you come back into this house without the shavings or you'll get suc’i a whipping as you never had in all your life? 4 which was saying a good deal, if Aunt Nora only knew it. Not that she meant to be a harsh or unmotherly guardian to her little motherless niece. But cares and toil had worn out about all the health and patience she ever had; afcd it was no wonder that she, who so often had angry words for her own children, should have kept something worse for the orphan, whose coming into her house she had always regarded as a bitter trial.
It seemed as if she had never forgiven Becky for it, or for being a child with all a child's thoughtlessness and love of play. She . expected more of her than she .did of her own girls, who were older; and could never understand why Becky should not contentedly settle down into the quiet, womanly drudge she wished her to be. Yet Becky was only eleven years old. The child went off with the basket, sobbing with fear and despair at the thought of what she had to do. It was really not very dark, only deep twilight, on a pleasant summer evening. No doubt her aunt was right in saying there was really nothing for her to be afraid of; yet the sensitive, imaginative child could not help being afraid. The old Dimmock house stood in a lonely lot. backJrom the street; it was undergoing repairs, and Becky hsd more than once been there for shavings, which the carpenters allowed her to carry away-. ' She was not afraid whan the men were there. Oh, why, she thought, had she not left her play, and gone an hour before, when she could have got some other girt to go with her. and have made the task & pleasure? Poor Beoky was always doing some such thoughtless thing, which was sure to provoke her aunt, and give herself all the more trouble and pain; yet the never could learn wisdom. She blamed herself a little; but she blamed others much more. Her aunt might hag&Mraited lor the shavings till morn she might have sent Tom for Ihetft— cousin Tom. who was fourteen yean old and not afraid gs anything. »■> But Tom' was a proud, willful hoy; he be seen going through the o/ hi, i
almost young*** belonged to Tom. She met Tom on the afreet with two other boy*. He had the stomp of a cigar in his month, and ha was talking loud and swaggering. “ToimP* fine called to him, implorUl *“‘Whafc do too want of Tom?” ha retorted, not deigning to torn his head, bat just mating oat his chin sidewise toward her, and puffing away at his cigar-stamp in loaferiah fiiUofi. ’ ‘ Please go with me for the shavings, won’t you? Do, Tom!” “ HPhi-hi f” Tom snickered. “Go with joa for shavings! that’s a good ; “I'm afraidl” she pleaded. " “Afraid, you goose! What are you afraid off The old house is fall of ghosts, but they never hurt anybody, only silly little girls that are afraid of ’em; they scare them almost to death sometimes! Hi-hi-hi! ootne slang!” cried Tom to his companions, putting back into his teeth the stamp, which he had flourished in his fingers whilst making this foolish speech. Ghosts in the old house! Poor Becky knew well enough that Tom never let a lie stand in the way of any mischief or sport of his, and she wouldn’t have minded at all what he said if she hadn’t been so frightened. But now all her vague fears of thfc darkness and solitude of the deserted house took shape to her fancy, and became horrible spoolers. She slopped at the door, crying desolately, She would not have had strength to go a step farther if the certainty that it was growing darker all the while, and that she would be whipped if she should go home withont the shavings, had not given her momentary resolution. Tom had said that the ghosts scared only little girls who were afraid of them. Then she wouldn’t be afraid. She would be brave for once. So she nerved herself.
Breathless, trembling, cold shivers of fear creeping over her from head to foot, she mounted the steps, paused a moment to listen in the dim entry, then glided softly into the room where the shavings were. There she paused again. She could see nothing but the faint outline of the work-bench, the bare walls, and the windows through which the evening light came. Suddenly she heard a rustle in the shavings. It may have been caused by a prowling cat, or perhaps by some beggar who had cikwled in there for a night's lodging. But to poor little Becky it was the rising of the ghostsT and she really fancied she saw a huge head, with horns and fiery eyes, starting out of the darkness. All her courage, which had oast her so much, was gone in an instant. She dropped her basket and ran. Oukof the house and down the steps she went, and along the street, until she began to meet people. Then she came to herself a little, and remembered the basket, and the whipping she was sure to get if she went home without it. She stopped, and finally turned back toward the old house. But she could not summon courage to enter it a second time; neither durst she go home to her aunt; and thus, between two fears, she wandered to and fro, the most wretched little girl in all the world that night. At last, tired out, and not knowing what to do she sat down on a doorstep and cried. A woman approaching the house saw her there, and started back. “What! Becky Fair weather, is it yonP” . “Yes’m, if you please,” said Beoky, meekly. “I didn't know it was your doorstep, Mrs. Carr. Til go away.” “No. you won’t,” cried the woman, “not until you?ve told me what’s the matter, anyway. Has your aunt turned you out?’ “She hasn't turned me out, not quite, but she made me go to the old house for shavings in the dark, and I got scared, and left the basket, and she said I wasn't to go home withont it full of shavings; if I did, she’d whip me worse than ever.” So Becky, amid sobs, told her story. Mrs. Cary put her arm kindly about her. and spoke so pityingly that the child cried all the more.
“You needn't go home without it, nor with it, if you don’t want to. She isn’t tit to bring up a child like you; I've known it, and the neighbors have known it, a long while. So if yon'll come with me. I’ll take you and give you a good home till I can find a better one for you. So don't think of the basket, but come along with me.” Mrs- Cary’s house was not far off; and there the orphan found comfort and kindness, snch as she had not known since her mother died. Only one great fear now troubled her. It seemed as though she might as well die at once as let the time come for her aunt to light the fire in the morning, without the basket of shavings. But children soon forget their trouble, when blessed bedtime comes; and Becky slept well that night, in spite of her anxious thoughts. The next day Mrs. Cary kept her in the house; and on the day following, two strangers called to see her—a gentleman ana a lady—who talked to her kindly, and regarded her with an interest .which Becky coaid not understand. At last the lady said: “Becky, we like you pretty well; Mrs. Cary has told us a good deal about you; and, as we haye no children of our own, we would like to hare you go and live with us, and be our little girl. What do you say?” “ O Mrs. Cary!” cried Becky, turning to her friend, in terrified surprise. » “ Yes, dear,” said Mrs. Cary, cheerfully. “ I know these good friends very well; and it is for this that I hate sent for them. They will give you a good home and all the advantages a girl can ask. They live in another city, and yon will begin a new and happier life with them.” “ But,” Becky faltered, joy and hope getting the better of her astonishment, “ my aunt!” ** She has no real claim upon you;and it will be best that you should not see -her again, I think.” , “Oh! and then I shan't get whipped for not carrying home the basket.” “ No, no, child!” said the lady, tak> ing the girl in her arms. “I asm so glad!” exclaimed Becky. ‘K)nly—dear Mrs. Cary—l shall want to see you sometimes; you have been so good to me.”
chapter a. Aunt Nora was very angry that first evening at Becky's long delay in bringing the basket of shavings. Then, as it Sw late, and the child did nofc come, was alarmed about her, and perhaps a little conscience-smitten at the thought of her own harsh treatment of the orphan girl Tom found the empty basket the next morning. In the old house, but, nothing was heard of Becky for two days. Then came a letter from some unknown person, in which were these words: - “Dp not be anxious about the child. She has s home among friends a ho will be kind to her. They are as glad to receive her as you will, no doubt, be, to know that yon are relieved of a burden of which yon have so often complained.” “Good riddance!” was Aunt Nora’s first petulant exclamation, on reading this letter. But she was not long in finding oat that Becky had been, after all, less a burden than a help. Wh tn the dishes were to oe washed, or errands to be done, the good womap scolded well because she missed* the services of her little drudge. Finally, however, seeing every day how proud and ungrateful her own daughters were.
aunt thaayon are to yoorommother.” “ Why didn’t you treat her deoently then, and keep her, if she was so lovely!” the young ladies would retort. “It was to make ladies of you that I made a slave of her, and this is all the thanks I get for it!” was the usual reply, winding up with a sob. - lean passed, and never a word did the aunt hear from the lost one. Meanwhile, the world did not prosper with the poor woman. Tom turned out a spendthrift; when in want he would always oome back to his mother, el as he was always sure to desert again when she was most in need of him. Josephine, too, forsook her, but afterward came home to die in her forgiving arms. Laura married an actor, and finally aooompanied him to California, leaving two young children to be oared for by her mother. Fortunately, Aunt Nora owned the house she lived in, and, by letting every part of it except two small rooms, she managed to live, though in a miserable way. Bat at last, to help Toni out of one of his scrapes, aqd save him from prison, she had to raise money by mortgaging her house. This money the scapegrace promised to work faithfully for and repay; but, of oourse, he never did. It is not easy for a young man to change bad habits formed in boyhood. Tom could not. Perhaps he had not character enough left even to try. For that is the most terrible punishment of wrong-doing; one loses the even the wish, to do r;ght. The end was what the neighbors foresaw. The interest on the mortgage could not be paid, and the bouse was advertised to be sold. t The day of the auction arrived. AuntNora had no shavings, nor anything else, to kindle a fire with that morning; and she, and the little ones Laura had left with her, would have fared badly, had not the neighbors kindly sent in something for them to eat. The poor woman was sick and in despair. She was no longer able even to take care of herself; and m a few hours she would be without a home.
She sat moaning in her chair, rocking sadly to and fro. The children were at play in the court. The doors were open, for it was pleasant summer weather. Suddenly Aunt Nora heard a voice, and looked up. A young lady, tall and well dressed, stood on the doorstep, bearing "in her hand an object which presented the strangest contrast to her cultivated manners and fashionable attire. “Aunt Nora, may Icornein?” shesaid pleasantly. “I’ve brought the basket of shavings l” “Becky!” the poor woman shrieked, starting to her feet. “No, it can’t be. It can’t be my little Becky.” “It t* Becky, but not your little Becky, any longor,” said the lady, setting down her basket, and supporting the form that tottered toward her. “I am married, and I have a happy home, and I-=_ I thought I would come and see yon. But, as I wasn’t ever to enter your house again without”— “O child, child!” cried Aunt Nora, weeping passionately, “you do right to remind me; I was cruel'to you. But I didn’t know it at the time—only since my own children—dear! dear!” she went on brokenly. “ I hope you have forgiven me!” *~ - “ Dear aunt, I have forgiven you, long ago!” said Beoky, making the poor woman sit down again, but still holding her hand affectionately. *• And do you know? I think it was a truly providential thing for both of us that 1 left you as I did. lam able to do for you now what 1 fear I never could have aone, if I had always staid with you. “ I heard of your condition only a few days ago. My husband is out here in the carriage; would you like to see him? He went into a carpenter's shop as we were passing, and got the shavings; but see. Aunt Nora, there is something else in the basket—something for you and the child? en. And my husband will buy the house for you this afternoon.” Aunt Nora coaid hardly speak a word, so great was her gratitude and joy. The child her unkind ness had driven from her had returned like an angel o. mercy. Her home was still preserved, and she could still keep Laura's children. “ Dear; dear! is it all a dream?” she asked. “Oh noP’ laughed Becky. “I am really 1; and this is really my husband; and, don’t yon see, there are the shavings P’— J. J. Trowbridge, in Youth's Companion.
Fashion Fancies.
Stockings are now made in all the colors and oorabinutions of color that enter into other -fabrics. The open work or cable cord thread hose are the newest. These come in solid colon of ecru, old gold, garnet, sapphire blue, cardinal ami black. French thread hose are open-worked in fanciful designs on the instep, as are the fine silk hose intended to be worn with the low-cut shoes and fancy slippen now considered so essential a part of every lady’s toilet. Spun silk hose are quite a luxury, durable, comfortable and moderate in Erice, and they rival the double thread ose, once so much in favor. Walking boots, cut high ahd made of French kid foxings, with fine satinlaine nppen, constitute the choice walking boot of the season. As the warm weather advances low ent shoes promise to replace the high boot to a great extent, yet it can never be considered so thoroughly ladylike for the promenade. * House slippers are cut very low in front, and have a right and left bow; that is the loops and cat-steel ornaments are different for each side of the slipper, while the bow in the middle may be of a third arrangement still. The loops may be of black velvet or of any shade of ribbon matching either the hose or some portion of the toilet. Silk kerchiefs bordered with lace inserting, a band of silk jardiniere embroider]), another band of lace inserting and a border of laoe are the latest fancy for the neck. Beaded fichus of nearly the same shape as those* oldtime crocheted shoulder afghans worn by ladies in the house and under their wraps, are among the imported Parisian novelties for street costumes. *- Fine line stripes, pinhead check, small broken plaids and solid looking cloths, having a blending of all the cob ors of the rainbow introduced so deftly as to defy detection at a distance, are used for gentlemen's clothing. Coats are cat quite high on the breast, and cut away very much below the waist Trouzers are straight and a shade narrower than formerly. Neckties Are of plain colored sarin, with a stripe of Oriental satin at the side or a hand embroidery of self color on the ends and oolors in the loop of the tie representing jocky caps, whips, horseshoes, etc. Sleeve-buttons have a spring to save the buttonholes of the ouffs, and a pair in colored ivory represents the one a male and the other a female monkey head, or a Chinese man or woman. Bank of England or mille franc notes enameled in lac-simile of the» original.— N. Y. Herald.
At a donation given to a parson of Cayuga County, & Y., a fewevenings since, the gross receipts were four dollars and the expenses eighteen dollars. Two Testaments, one hymn-book, • dilapidated copy of the Pilgrim’s Progw*s, of which latter he already had several gross, were among the teoti mpnials of esteem.'*
BEAUTY BUT SKIN DEEP.
- • ->, - % ; —’ MLi g-SSSKSifig Sfcrtto Sgajhers. No l*dr afflicted with Herethestruggleto improve kertppetranoe ip renewed. No remedy is too repulsive or dangerous to be used. Arsenis to devoured In large quantities, mercury i« taken internally and applied externally, until the teeth rattle tn Thtiir loosened sockets, the system groans beneath the load of poisons it is 0r.«.« alight tkm blemishes, what must be the condition of those suffering from salt rheum, tetter, ringworm, pemphigus, psoriasis, leprosy, ttebsn, prurigo and scald head? Ho pan oaa fuliy describe the tortures they endure. Death in many eases might be considered a blessing. The burning beat, inflammation and Writing nearly Impel the sufferer to do violence to blmsen in order to end his suffer »I have seen patients tear their flesh their nails until the blood flowed in stveems. Others have told ms that they could out the flesh from their limbs, so great was Mom* tion on the construction and preservation of the skin, scalp, and hair, and the proper treatment of them when diseased, I have hare condensed to a popular form such Information as is most desired. THk poapTMPCTUM dr ran ski*. The skin is composed of two layers, whloh may be separated from sack other by the action of a blister. Tbs thin portion whloh Is raised up by the blister is called the scarf skin, the cuticle, or the epidermis; that which remains in connection with the body is the sensttfre akin, tha cutis, the derma, or the true skin. Bach has separate duties to perform. The scarf skin la horny and insensible, and serves as a sheath to protect tbs more sensitive skin under it. Were tha scarf skin taken off, we oouid not bear to have anything touch us. Tha derma or true akin, and its glands, oli tubes, etc., are the seat of all cutaneous diseases. TUB OIL AMD SWEAT OLARDS. That the skin stay be pliable and healthy it is necessary to have it oiled every day; and for this the Creator has Wisely provided by placing in the true skin small glands and tubes, whose efflee it is to prepare and pour out upon the snrfaoe the proper amount of OIL On some parts body they do not exist, but are Abundant on the faoe, nose, ears, head, eyelids, etc. They produce the wax of the ears, and on the head they open into the sheath of the hair, and furnish it with nature's own hair oil or pomade, when the skin is healthy, these little vessels are always at work, and constantly responding to the demands made upon them. Consequently no person should be afraid to wash thoroughly every day with soap and water, lest, as the “Boston Medical Journal” onoe taught, the skin be injured by baring the oil removed from it. FREQUENT WASHINGS WITH PURE BOAP (free from caustic alkalies) and lukewarm water, followed by brisk rubbing with a coarse towel, will do more to preserve the healthy action of the oil glands and tubes, upon which depends a clear and wholesome complexion, than all the cosmetics in the world. So important is the free and perfect action of the sweat and fat or oil glands in the preservation of tbeaeneral health, as well as the special oondition of the skin, that particular attention to them will be rewarded hy Increased physical health. Ihey discharge upon the surface of the body about two and one-half pounds of matter per ‘day, and their Importance in the euriflcatlon of the blood and fluids of the body i so great that, were they closed by an impervious ooating. like rubber or oiled silk, death would soon ensue. THS GREAT SKIIt AND SCALP DISEASES. But bad as are minor forms of skin diseases, they sink into insignificance when compared with the great skin and scalp diseases with which thousands are afflicted during their whole lives. That the reader may know more about them, the principal affections are here named, omitting such as are symptoms of constitutional diseases, like measles, rash, etc. The moat important are salt rheum or eczema, tetter, ringworm, psoriasis, impetigo, leprosy, lichen, prurigo, barber's itch, Jackson’s itch, baker’s itch, ground itch, scald head and dandruff. Towering above all others in extent, in duration, in suffering. Is eczema, * commonly called salt rheum. Wilson divides it into twelve species and others into many mote; but it is sufficiently clear to tbs average reader, and will be recognized by Its small ■ watery blister, about the size of a pinhead, whenever seen. Prurigo, impetigo, and i aortas is are but little behind salt rheum in the suffering they cause. Scald bead Is another obstinate affection, defying all remedies, destroying the hair, and producing great misery and suffering. The scalp, like tne skin, is subject to salt rheum, tetter, dandruff, and other eruptive and scaly diseases, which generally destroy the hair follicles, and produce permanent baldness. THE TREATMENT of diseases of the akin or scalp has been for centuries based upon the mistaken theory that they are entirely due to some Impurity of the blood. No special attention has ever been directed to the Important part the sweat and fat glands play in the propagation and maintenance of disease. It is no unjust reflection upon the medical profession to say that its effoifs in the cure of skin diseases hava been a failure. What with mistaken theories, poisonous remedies, and blind adherence to methods and practices originating in ignorance snd superstition, salt rheum, scald head, and psoriasis flourish and increase upon systems shattered by the oopious use, both internal and external, of mercury, arsenic, sine, snd lead. Foroenturiesithas been the popular notion that diseases of the skin snd soaip must be cured, if oured at all, by purifying the blood. Admitting that this is partly true, what has been the method or what tne remedies by whloh it was sought to be accomplished? MERCURY AND ARSENIC. Putting aside the senseless “ sarsaparilla," “dock,!’ and “dandelion ” “blood purifiers,” and considering only those remedies that have received the sanction of physicians, hospitals and colleges, we find that mercury and arsenlo are the only medicinal agents of to-day, as they were hundreds of years ago, which are regarded by the “regular” as having specific medical properties for the purification of the blood, and hence the only remedies adapted to the treatment of skin and scalp diseases. THS TRUE THEORY. But a little light is being thrown upon the darkness that has surrounded the Intellect of the past. To a tew German and Frenoh physicians and specialists we owe what true progress we are making at the present time in the cure of obstinate affections of the skin snd scalp. They teach and prove, (1) that diseases of the skin and scalp are caused by a derangement of the secretory and excretory tubes and vessels of the true skin; and (2) that such diseases or affections are aggravated and maintained by poisonous fluids containing the virus of scrofula, malaria, or oontagious disease, which are discharged from the blood and circulating fluids upon the skin through the sweat and fat glands. From these facta they successfully maintain that skin diseases cannot be cured solely by internal remedies, nor solely by external remedies, but by a judicious use of both. These affections are not wholly caused by impurities of the blood and circulating fluids, nor gre they due entirely to a diseased condition of the sweat and fat glands, tubes, vessels, and cells of the true skin, but to a peculiar and inseparable eondlt lon of both. For If you treat the one to the neglect of the other, no progress Is made; but with attention to both at the same time, and the use of such remedies as I can here recommend, a cure is possible in nearly every case. ~ “ WHAT W 1 WAHT," said a distinguished authority on the skin, “ what we moat earnestly desire In order to cure obstinate skin and scalp affections, are three great remedies, with as many specific properties, namely: “ 1. An Internal remedy possessing cathartic, tonic, and alterative properties, which will enable it to expel through the natural purifiers of the body, viz., the lungs, liver, kidneys, bowels, and skin, the constitutional poison which floats in the blood and circulating fluids of the body. “ *. An external unchangeable application of Jelly consistence that, may arrest Inflammation or irritation and destroy fungus or parasitlc KTOwtha: and, “K An emollient and healing soap, free from caustic alkalies and Irritating properties, for cleansing diseased surfaces, and partaking, in a milder farm, the medicinal properties of the external application. > “ With three such remedies as I oonoeive it possible to prepare, but which Ido not now know to exist, 1 will venture to assert that ninety per centum of the skin diseases in existence may be permanently cured.” THE USUAL REMEDIES FAILURES. If I have appeared severe upon the medical profession, I have not been unjustly so toward physicians who adhere to practices at-varianee with reason and common sense, and, withal, lamentable failures I here assert that no ointment, salve, cerate,, lotion, or compound, for external applloation, nor alterative, or “blood purifier, * for internal use, to be found in the materia medica of the schools and colleges of medicine—and there are thousands of them—will certainly cure a ease of chronic salt rheum, psoriasis, or leprosy. 1 have tried them with all the care and experience suggested by a liberal education, but with unsatisfactory results as to specific curative properties. HOPE FOR'THE AFFLICTED. Hence, when Messrs, weeks A Potter, Bg£S 2? fSZigSi been experimenting with medicinal agents,' ■ and had obtained—mostly from substances remedies, which they believed to be sn infallible cure for every kind of skin, soaip and blood disease, from salt rheum to dandruff, whether caused by a scrofulous or dlseaam, tainted Mood, or hy a morbid oondition of the glands, tubes, vessels and oaUaof the true •kin, or both! 1 wf* gratified beyond measure. As my Ufa has been and is devoted to the treatment of skin and scalp diseases, to which. I have given much study and attention, t eagerly embraced the opportunity afforded me by. Messrs, weeks h Potter, to make a thorough test of these- remedies in my prentice, determined, if successful, to give them such pnblloity as tbeir merits entitled them to. This 1 now do after, two years of extraordinary success with them, with the object of thereby lessening, as far as in my power, the great suffering caused by tha diseases under oomi ilar ■ tkm, nSEStR&SS&'&B&gXSiSI s
tioiu tluu have been the torture of a ufetima, s.iiri.’23r«, o sjffisr , £r2M; E£#3£E: taa? ar.j’ia^fefaraaa; in afiy riimatA “ftwHUre'm^reLZ 1 tSZSZ. •Dotklor «*<< tMitny fifty j ear* heaoe m ft hi to-day. Contrast tala with the horrible solves and oiittmeote of the present tlmel the Cuticura MedtaUßaTToUet Boot*, rwdm fte durtcteriafo same from the remedy to whloh ft owes tts valuable healing and useful propeztlea It is free from caustic- alkalies, and is of a delicate, natural green eolor. Its emollient, soothing and healing action la the Sea Cutioura, in a modified form.: Aside its medicinal properties, ft la more vola a toilet, bath and nursery sanatire than S other soap. It cleanses, soothes, whitens, beautifies the skin, had la a natural preventive of Injury to the oomplexloa and hands from the bests of summer and the chills of winter. An ounoe of prevention is nowhere rewarded with more pounds of curd than In the care of the skin, and no remedy or method is more appropriate than the Cuticura Soap. It dissolves sway undue exudation of greasy matter from the oil glands, which eauses the skin to shine, prevents clogging of the pores and tubes, ana stimulates the olrouiotfon of the blood through the small blood vessels, giving color, freshness, and beauty to the eompmaton, amply repaying every moment of care. This soap Is also specially prepared for shaving, and Is called Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap, and will be found es great value by gentlemen entering from tender. Inflamed or diseased skin. ■. THS THTKO great remedy submitted to me is called the Cuticura Resolvent, because of its intimate' relation to Cuticura In the cure of skin and scalp diseases. Of all the remedies for the purification of the btoed and circulating Holds that I have ever tested, none approach in specific medical action the wonderful properties of the Resolvent. In forty m.nutea after taking the first dose it may be detected by ohemioal analysis In the saliva, sweat, fat and blood. Showing that It has entered the blood and circulating fluids, and made the entire circuit of the human labyrinth many times. Chemical : tests show It to be present in the water with which the patient has bathed on rising in the morning, which proves conclusively that It has entered and become a part of the circulating fluids, enabling it to traverse every diseased cell, tube and vessel of the skin, and leave Us wholesome constituents upon the surface of the body. But It does more than this. It Is a powerful purifying agent and fiver stimulant. It neutralises and te-olves away blood poisons, caused by the virus of scrofula, eanoer, canker, malarial or contagious diseases. It destroys microsoopio Insects or pai asltes which Infest the water and air of malarial regions, and breed many forms of skin diseases. It regulates the stomach and bowels, and perfects digestion so as to admit of a rapid iucrease of wholesome .tissue and strength. Henoe its power to eliminate from the system all the destructive elements that foster and maintain diseases of the blood, skin aod scalp. t Having been charmed with the results of my analysis of these great remedies, my next step was to demonstrate their value in the treatment of the great skin, scalp and blood affections usually considered incurable. 1 know that every word I now wr*te WILL AWAKEN HOPE in the breast of many a fife long sufferer. Can I, In a broad and Christian -pirit, without prejudice, without reservation, say to those afflicted: “Here in these great natural remedies, which may be had or my obemist or druggist for a trlning sum, is a speedy and permanent ourer* with a just of the responsibilities I assume, i say I can. There does not exist a oase of ohronio 'salt rheum or eczema, tetter, ringworm, pemphigus, psoriasis, leprosy, lichen, prurigo, scald head, dandruff, or itching or scaly eruptions or humors of the skin, scalp aud blood, that Cuticura, externally. assisted by the Cutioura Soap, and the Resolvent internally, may not speedily, permanently and economically cure, when all other remedies and methods of pure have utterly failed.- 1 have proved, in hundreds of the most aggravated cases, their wonderful curative power, In evidence of which I submit the following remarkable testimonials. LEPRA Ain> SCROFULOUS HUMOR. Hiram E. Carpenter, Henderson, Jefferson Co., N. Y., cured of psoriasis or lepra of twenty years’ standing. His case is so wonderful that 1 give his exact words. “Fhave been afflicted fortwenty years with an obstinate skin disease, oalled by some M. D.’s psoriasis, and others, leprosy, commencing on my scalp, and la spite of all I ooulddo, with the help of the most skillful dootors, it slowly but surely extended, until s year ago this winter It covered my entire person in form of dry scales. For the last three years I have been unable to do any labor, and suffering Intensely all the time. Every morning there oould be nearly a dustpanful of scales taken from the sheet on my bed, some of them half as Large as the envelope containing this letter. In the latter part of winter my skin commenced cracking open. I tried everything, almost, that could be thought of. without any relief. The 12th of June I started West, in hopes I oould reach the Hot Springs. I reached Detroit and was so low 1 thought I should have to go to the hospital, but finally fit u far as Lansing, Mich., where I had a sister living. One Dr. treated me about two weeks, but did me no good. All thought I had but a short time to live. I earnestly prayed to die. Cracked through the skin ail over my back, across my ribs, arms, hands, limbs, feet badly swollen, toenails came off, fingernail* dead and hard as bone, hair dead, dry and lifeless as. old straw. Oh, my Godl how 1 did suffer. “ My sister, Mrs. E. H. Davis, had a small part of a box of Cutioura in the house. She wouldn't give up: said, ‘ We will try Cutioura.’ Some was applied on one hand aud arm. Eureka 1 there was relief; stopped the terrible burning sensation from the word go. They immediately got the Keeolvent, Cuticura ana Soap. I commenced by taking one tabletpoonful of Resolvent three times a day, after meals; had a bath once a day, water about blood heat; used Cuticua Soap freely; applied Cuticura morning and evening. Result, returned to my home in just six weeks from time I left, and my skin as smooth as this sheet of paper. “ Hiram E. Carpenter. “Henderson, Jefferson County, N. Y. “Sworn to before me this nineteenth day of January, 1880. A. M. Leffingweuu, „ _ “ Justice of the Peace." Hon. William Taylor, Boston, Masa, permanently cured of a humor of the face and scalp (eosemai that had been treated unsuooesslully for twelve yeais by many of Boston’s best physicians and most noted specialists, as well as European authorities. He says: “I have been sc elated with my successful use of the Cutioura remedies that 1 have stopped men in the streets to tell them of my oase.'’ ECZEMA rodent; BALT KHBtJM, BTC. Eczema Rodent. —F. H, Drake, Esq., agent for Harper and Brothers, Detroit, Miok., gives an astonishing account of his case (eczema rodent), which had been treated by a consultation of physiolans without benefit, and which speedily yielded to the Cuttcara remedies. Salt Rheum.— Will McDonald, 1315 Butterfield Street, Chicago, gratefully acknowledges a cure of salt rheum on head, neck, face, arms, and legs for seventeen years; not able to walk except on hands and kne-'s for one year; not able to help himself for eight years; tried hundreds of remedies; dootors pronounced his case hopeless; permanently cured by the Cuticura remedies. Psoriasis —Thomas Delaney, Memphis, Tenn., afflicted with psoriasis for nineteen years; completely cured by Cuticura remedies. Rtnyworm.— Geo. W. Brown, 48 Marshal) Street. Providence, R. 1., cured of a ringworm humor gi t at the barber's, which spread air over the tars, neck, and face, and for six years resisted all kinds of treatment; cured by Cutioura remedies. SKIN HUMORS, MILK CRUST, BTC. . Shin Humor.- Mr*. 8. E. Whipple, Decatur, Mich., writes that her face, head and some parts of her body were almost raw. Head covered with scans and sores. Suffered fearfully, and tried everything. Permanently cured by Cuticura remedies. MUk < ru»t. —Mra, Bowers, 148 Clinton Street, Cincinnati, speaks of her sister's child, who was cured of mils crust whloh resisted all remedies tor two years. Now a fine, healthy boy, with a beautiful head of hair. Tetter of the Hoads.—Elisabeth Buckley, Littleton, N. H., thankfully praises the Cuticura remedies lor curing of tetter of the hands which had rendered them almost useless to her SCALD HEAD, ALOPSCI A, ETC. / Scold Head.—H. A. Raymond, auditor F. W., J. AS. R. R., Jackson, Mich., was cared of scald head of nine years’ duration by the Cuticura remedies. Falling of the Hatr.— Frank A. Bean, Steam Fire Engine 6, Boston, was cured of alopocia or falling of the hair by the Cuticura remedies, which completely restored his hair when all said he would lose it. Dandruff.—Thomas Lee. 878 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, afflicted with dandruff which for twenty years had oovered his scalp with scales one quarter of an Inch in thickness, cured by the Cuticura remedies. His scalp is now free from dandruff, and as healthy as it is possible for it to be. ". CHILDREN AND INFANTS. Fred Kohrer, Esq., Cashier Stock Growers' National Bank, Pueblo, Colorado, writes: “I am so well pleased with its effects on my baby, that I cannot afford to be without it <n my house. It Is a wonderful cure, and is bound to bcoome very popular as soon as Its virtues are known to the masses.” J. S. Weeks, Esq., Town Treasurer, St. Albans, Yt., says In a letter dated May 28: “It works to a charm on my babrs face and bead. Cured the head entirely, and has nearly cleaned the sane of sores. Jfiave recommended it to several, and Dr. Plant has ordered It for them.” M. M. Chick, Eeq„ 41 Franklin Street, Boston. says: “My little daughter, eighteen months old. has what the doctors call eczema. We have tried almost everything, and at last have used about a box of Cutioura, and she ft almost a new child, and we feel very (Sea. Eayre Hinkle, Jersey City Heights, N. J., writes: “My son, a lad of twelve years, was completely cured of a terrible oaae off eczema by the Cuticura remedies. From the top of his head to the soles of bis feet was one mass of scabs. Every other remedy and physician had been tried In vain.” EVERT SPECIES OF SKIM DISEASE. It would require every column of this paper to do just toe to a description of the cures performed by the Cutioura remedies. Eczema of the palms of the bands and of the ends of the fingers, very difficult to treat and usually considered incurable; smalt patches of tetter and salt rheum oh toe ears, nose, and sides of the face: soald-feads with loss of heir without number; bjads oovered with dandruff and
f»Vi rflHfnrf am! BArmftnMitJv aiipa diMiffinfi of tfce akin and scalp which have been the torevidence* of disease with the glow otCSS and thus render beautiful the fees es man or woman, is to dneervs the gratitude of nuJ1&22$ n &e e &£S£ carnal use of the Cutieura Resolvent, will cure and worettoemsot think Iha vo fully domonst ■ a tod, Qrasd cura Mveblßsslngsare tjus substituted tehsfih taed!^i/a*tboUßan<inS!fooe , mher’revcSttng, poisonous end senseless things must now sink Into obscurity before the wooderful healing powers of the Cuticura remedies.
M. E. JOSSELYN, M. D.
New York, Aprfl, lSßtt.
Testing New Varieties.
Every season several new varieties of fruit, vegetables, or grain are brought oat, with statements of their wonderful yields, and sold at extortionate prices. Not nnfrequently ten dollars is charged for a sickly grape-vine that has been rooted but one season, while from one to five dollars Is asked for a pound of potatoes. New varieties of oom and wheat generally sell for one dollar per pint. A. few years ago the Wild Goose filum was advertised as a very productve variety, that was proof against the attacks of the corcnlio. Many thousands of these trees were sold in this vicinity at a dollar each, and some persons purchased enough to set a considerable orchard, ft is safe to say that not one plum has been raised for every ten trees planted. The career of the ever-bearing strawberry was very similar. As a rule, the nearer an artiole comes to being entirely Worthless, the higher is it extolled and the greater is the price demanded for it. These new candidates for favor, whether planted in the field, garden, or orchard, are always the object of special Interest. They are cared for and treated like sickly infants. No attention is denied them. When the son is hot they are shaded, when the wind blows they are sheltered, when the soil is dry they are watered, and, if thought beneficial, a mulch is applied; the best location and soil are selected for them, the best manure Is obtained, incorporated with the soil, and used as a' topdressing. Their cultivation is never negleoted. A plow will answer to work among the ordinary crops of the farm, but the hand-hoe is employed for cultivating the] high-priced novelties. A potato of a new variety will be out with a penknife into as many pieces as there are eyes, and each, planted in a hill by itself. The sprouts from this potato will receive as "much attention as all those that spring from a bushel of some old variety. It would be strange indeed if potatoes, or for that matter any vegetables, grains, trees, bushes, or vines, planted and tended in the manner just described, were not productive. It would also be strange if the quality of the products was not excellent. Extra culture will show itself in the increased yield and improved quality of the vegetable products,' and it will make out little difference in this respect whether the varieties be old or new. Farmers who pay a dollar for a pound of potatoes or for a pound of seed-corn are naturally desirous of multiplying them as fast as possible. They are generally anxious to nave some seed to dispose of the next season, and to have a considerable amount to plant for themselves. For this.reason they adopt the forcing system and witness the usual results. They are rewarded for their pains by an enormous yield, while the quality of*the products is excellent. It must be admitted, however, that this method of procedure affords no test of the value of the plants cultivated. An old and almost worthless variety of the same plant might, and Srobably would, prove very productive 1 subjected to the same culture. Varieties of plants, to be profitable and worthy of general attention, must be tolerably productive on common soil and under ordinary cultivation. To aso irtain how a new variety of a plant compares with an old one, it is necessary to place both in the same kind of land, at the same time, and to give equal care and attention. In no other manner can the comparative value of plants be tested. If it is desirable, as it generally is, to brmg the yield of the new variety up to the highest point possible, then some old varieties must have equal benefits by way of favorable location, excellent sou, high manuring, and careful cultivation. Most new varieties of plants are not tested in the true sense of the word till after they have been introduced several years. After they have become quite plenty and are sold at about the tome price as old varieties are, they are Slanted mid cultivated in the same way. 'hen, and not till then, are their comparative values known. It is often the ease that some variety chat acquired a marvelbus reputation when it was first brought out is declared to be unworthy of cultivation as soon as it is cultivated in the same way as old varieties are. It is'to be regretted that more sound common sense 'is not employed in the matter of testing new varieties of plants. The amount spent by farmers in obtaining and propagating new varieties of plants is enormous, and in a large proportion of cases no equivalent is received for the money.— Chicago Timet
What Better Kvidenee Coaid the people uk to substantiate the merit* of Dr. Pierce’s Family Medicines than the fact that they hare not only yearly grown in popular favor In this country, but the foreign demand for them has become so great as to necessitate the est ablishing a branch of the celebrated World’s Dispensary in London, England, that these blessings to the afflicted may be dispatched from the greatest commercial center of the world to every country and people? Golden Medical Discovery is S concentrated, potent alterative, or blood-cleansing remedy, that wins golden opinions of all who use it for all humors, from the common pimple, blotch, or eruption, to the formidable scrofulous swelling. Internal fever, soreness and ulceration, yield to its benign influence. Consumption, which is bnt a form of scrofulous affection of the. longs, may in Its early stages be cured by s free use of this God-given remedy. Bee article on Consumption and its treatment in " Invalids’ Guide Book ” —lO cents post-paid. Address, World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, W. Y. „ Woacnsron, Mass., Feb. 3d, 18TB. Dr. R. V. PntKCX: Dear Bir— With trembling hand, from my extreme age, being eighty-five, I write to inform yon of the great benefit your Golden Medical Discovery and Pellets have been to me, Three years ago I was prostrated with pneumonia, and no one tb ught I would recover. By the use of those medicines I was raised to. health, and by the blessing of God and your medicines I have enjoyed pretty good health since, though for years before this I suffered from weak lunea and a bad cn-h. Gratefnily yours. Hast B. Fxbk. Is Powder Form. VsesTprs put np in this form Is within the reach of alt. By making the medicine yourself, you can, from a 50-cent package containing the barks, roots and herbs, make two botl ties of the liquid Vegetine. Thousands will gladly avail themselves of this opportunity, who nave the conveniences to make the medicine. Full directions in every package. Vegetine in powder form is sold by all drug* gists and general stores. If you cannot buy it of them inclose 90 cents in postage stamps for out package, or $1 for two packages, and I will send it by return mail H. R. Stevens, Boston, Mass.' —What is home without children.— Yonkert Gazette. It's an awful lonefor a molasses jug. —Oswego TW Bear Bear Tarawa* Sw Tsai* CCitm CYC., vfj ivclv vWlnnew lO lIMO ACfTCt OT UftTlDf by means of » recent wonderful scientific invention— Jne Doctapbone. guWlc oy a), £nd Semaphone Co., » VlnTßtrect. CJnotonaO, OttoT RspDijto’s Russia Baivs has proved Its efficiency by itsdkf a century.
' * Osflftflito AftMfflearn* wf tiftwl * tk?u£ttoAßtota»lE tEhMerL*
THE MARKETS.
:V?> , . - New York, April 12, 1880. javBBTOCK-C8ttie......... r» ©»0 80 18 I IS WHEAT—No. 2 Red |£ * CORN—Western Mtx«d.. ..Vr WHO gH OATS—western Mixed »j ) • fffiSESS'——V—.': »8 it a* LARD—Steam........ 7 « I I 7 M CHEESE... ; H » If WOKHv—-Domestic Fleece ... 80 * « CHICAGO. - BEBVES—Extra. to 00 © $5 40 Cboioe > % *2 Good liS § * * Medium 875 © 400 Butohem- Stock 265 © 886 Sfcck Cattle 2 2 § HOGS —Live—Good to Cboioe 400 © 475 SHEEP—Common to Cboioe. 450 © <25 BCl’i'Eß—Creamerr •••• « § g Good to Cboioe Dairy 22 ft 28 EGGS-FnMb •• M© , IS GRAlN—Wheat, No. 2 Spring IUH6 IB Com. No. 2 SIHW 85 Oats, No. 2.......'. 27 Wye, No. 2 © n Barley. No. 2 76 @ 77 BROOM COEN- . Rpd-Tippjxl Hurl 6 © , «H Fine Gieen 7 © 714 Inferior. 5 © 5M Crooked .J* 4 PORK—Mess 10 20 © 10* LA HD—Steam. 66714® 700 LU Common Dressed Biding.sl6l)o 00 Flooring 24 00 © 80 00 Common Boards If 50 u gOO Fencing 18 00 © 15 00 Lath ....... ........ ... 285 © 2GO A Shingles 265 © 270 EAST LIBERTY. CATTLE-Beat to 00 ® 66 20 Fair to Good *O3 © 4 75 HOGS—Yorkers. . t 52 X t & SHEEP-Beet f ® Common.. BALTIMORE. CATTLE-Best $4 80 © $5 87H Medium 801 © 551 H n Gß—Good © 6TO SHEFP
VE6ETINE In Powder Form, 50 CENTS A PACKAGE. Fall Directions in Every Package. DR. W. ROSS WRITES: 4 ’ j Rrrofulee, Liver Complaint, Dye papmite, Mhmnmatimm, Wvnhnvam. H. B. Stevens. Boston: l bare seen practicing medicine 25 rear*, and as • remedy tor Scrofula, Liver Oojnplaint, Dt/tpepeia. Rheumatism, Weakness, and all diseases ol tho bio id I bare never found Its equal. I bare sold VEUETINK for seven yean, abd bare never bad one bottle returned, 1 would heartily recommend It to those In peed of a blood purifier. DE. W. HO6& Druggist, Sept. 18.187 A r WlUuoTfoNa \ • t VEGETINE. One Package in Powder Form Cnred Scrofula. How to Reduce Your Doc ton’ Bill* 86 Bremen St, East boston, Mass., t Sept, 80, 1876. i MX. H. B. STEVENS: Otar Sir —My little daughter Stella has been afflicted a long time with Set ofuta. suffering everything. I employed different physicians in Cast Boston, but they helped ber noue. I bought seme of your Fouxter-Form Vegettne, and my wife steeped it and gave It to the child according to tne directions, and we were surprised In a fortnight's time to see bow th • child had gained In flesb and strength. She Is now gaining every day. and I can cheerfully recommend your remedy to be the beat we bare ever tried. Respectfully yoon. J.HWXB& VEGETINE. PREPARED ET H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Xass. Vegetine is Sold by Ail Druggists.
A CATARRH Asthma A Contumptlor Aad B.Uami. which t eee. ■ _IOISJNm fe 1 yerted leto r.por, end Ukea 1 V» dlrec ‘ «« the diw.se. where It >'?4i h«u> .. quickly u the be.t , f Ji WtUDlmecl heal, an ordinary BewWor^Cire.lar.^U Wheat:^^ flood water. Breteropsof AIB 1 * mUd aad healthy. Winter Wheat and all kinds hm am ■ ■ | gfifl of drain; Flax, Hemp; Fruit 111 unnmsisLliUl I waKnss.as-sri . un e BaUMs-aa. I LANDS t»r* for Cmiaaif- H > the best cough mod- ■ se email.—bottle ■ >ld everywhere. Mk. ■ ■ d to first buyers. ■ mm Mnrss “A TRASH* ARBOAD.” flee* Time, for Agents Ahead. . aad beok MW reMy. Foopie waiting to tmr the book Speak qutek abdaecuretmttory. -A word to (fie wise is sufficient." Apply to m, «. anemtt, 22 aa cSld at. Chicago, m 'imm INSTITUTE. Boesea Bend fre Chcular to WJ> JaomertJ>ereertJU s # 2s
NICHOLS,SHEPARD & CO.BattleWm , ORI ° IWAL AND ONLY CEHUINE Threshing Machinery and Portable and Traction engines. THt STAMPARP of excellence throughout On work in y oww^ Foot rim of Seperaton., from mi IP w TiT** w—wti swaps an 4 gggfc Cmk t Kck*SSHHHHSBHBSHHfefei
t M. D., OFFIOB, ROOM 7, v 140 Madison Stre«t, Chicago, \ Tin >ll Cancer, Tuonrs, Etc., ft a lew an! Scientific Process. Jr£SsßtS‘As6r‘ T*' ' SEND FOR REFERENCES. TUTT’S PILLS •YHIPTOIfIS'OF A TORPID LIVER. Lom of Appetite. Bowels opetiye. Pain in the Head, with a dull eenaation in the bzuK port. Pain under the shoulder blade, fullneea after eating, with a dißinclinatton tt> exertion of hour or mind. Irritability of temper. IjOW ap&ita.with aifeeling of havgenerally over the right eve.with filial dreams, highly colored Urine ft CONSTIPATION. TUTT’S PILLS sr&s ■ i.. mum to siteEMi th. (ufllver. SOLD KVEBYWHkBC. PRICK * CENTS OMw, II ■array tree i. Mew ¥>Ht. ■ TTi^Onl^Remod^l Wth—m"iTTn r EAn"noio*R WTHE LIVER, y Q THE BOWELS, Q and tha KIDNEYB.M ftl This combined action gwet it v>on~\M Hdcrful povtcr to cure all diseases. ■ Hwhy Are We 81ck?l| I Because toe allow these great organtj/m Qto become dogged or torpid, onrfQ ■ poisonous humors are therefore forcedmk Umto the blood that should bt expeOet fTJ H naturally, H PEPi ll&y causing tree action of these orgardA U and restoring their power to throw n Whv frighteaea ever disordered Kldaeys IPT U Why endure nervous or sick headaches! !■ ■ Why have sleepless nights ! I ■ TJss KIDNHY WORT and re}oict in|B fl health. It is a dry, vegetable eompoundondWW U Owe wadhaqevrPf meke six Qteef Medletwqf J Q MU ’ r 71 ■ WILLS, SISSAX2COS 6 CO., PnprlstM Wm H 4 - 1 GRAEFENBCKti ifiPILLS BrifEBHlW Mildest ever known, cure HHflnUflE MALARIAL DISEASES, VmF* HEADACHE, BILIOUSness, INDIGESTION and 1 FEVERS- These- _ PILLS S2SaSwffla ! ' ia aa OeMLta per Bojc-, nViapHi MOfttCFOWfflV 7 If B HI w.ll Borina snd Reek H i Biffl n Drilling Msehins* I ■l&yLJmi Beet WVII Angers! nVTdmeTd Circulars Free! WrglTe.vniirmohfysfWHMHMß| worth In ffsehlneryl B|!ffVHV3 and Tools, and dttnT|liri||K| seU‘‘CeEElyflltlil«rfay|l3Bi AGENT® WANTED-Beet Book-Moat Money THECOMPLETEHOME psny. and max# Horn. Beautiful and Happy. * Endorsed by Clergy. bchoUnut th. Pns.7 " Vdiibb ui bt«Mli>|.”-K(L Dl. wrtlE. •‘Can uatf.il to do good. n —J. G. WBITTIAS. •‘Full of good mb*.."—J’xCKSTTtgl.S. ' _ Fla. paper. Ci«« trp*. BeanUful Uadiags, Low price, S.IU .eery where, rolldeirriutio. en 4 ter-„, free. AdtlreH J. C. MsCTKDT At CO., Obtest—, ML_ It was a saying of Confucius, “I am a happy mad. for If I hares fault, men observelt,” Now It 6 aaaying, “ 1 am a bam bisk for If 1 am sick and ailing, there Is Hunt’s Humect to can me” Triai^siw 1 . 75 tvntß_ a tape worm " INFALLIBLY CURED with tmsptessd medlotns la H. KICKxaORrI, NO. 4 Bt. Mill I PllOf, nOW IOnL nn Tft Tlse 01. DENT aad BIWT GU Tl) assretf^pagaLSrHEADQUARTER 5 AMD 10 CENT EPILEPSY! of address. LfTeVaSb. Druggist. Hover. Maine. II ft 11% WholesaleandTetoiL Sendforpriccf|A IK fist Goods sent C.O.D. Wigs made to oeler. IlffllllH. BURNHAM, ffl State street, Chicago. fret. W.6-BICYAN.Pub..KBS.4thSt..St.Louis,Mo^ nTShrsTAWTora UFK A. W. OassU, M. D (Aatbw es Oumm's Xedpe., Bapt. OPIUM fffifl A WEEK, in your own town. Terms and jDvtSowtfitfree. AtotsaHMlettAOa,Forttawd.Ma veEMXZ rvFssn.'tK’Bsns. a.n. k. ; m 7w.
