Rensselaer Republican, Volume 22, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 January 1890 — Page 3
After 22 Tears, \ cored a man of chron--10 palas from sun'\.l/ll)lfllJ stroke, which took the Jt| v V-\ «r form of chronic / UIL HEADACHE* which was completely cored as follows: Paragon, Ind., July SO, 1888. I suffered with pains In my head from son* Stroke 22 yean. They were cured by St Jaoobs Oil and hare remained so four years. - - SAMUEL B. SHIPLOIt At Druggists and Dealers. THE CHARLES A VO6ELEB CO.. BaMnare. HA fjg|| vr ONE ENJOYS Seth the methjod end results when Syrup of Figs is takca; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts EgfEPtly yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, head* aches and fevers andcarea habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial mita effects, prepared only from the healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known, t Sjrup of Kgs is for sale in 500 end |1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will proenre it promptly for any one who Mfahas to try it Do not accept any sohetituto. cMUFotwA m smp co. v ***f*Uto*o6, CM. tmNmnu£.n, mw ten. s.r. simm acvntrcrii sc vanr S&MM Po otiro Biliousness. Sick Headache, Constipation, Malaria, Liver Complaints, the safe and certain remedy, SMITH'S BILE BEANS . T f BO SMALL SIZE (40 little beans to thebo*- **)• They are the meet convenient; suit &U was. Price of either size, 25 oenta par bottle. kissing “, 7 «i,a afuisrsr % «nte (coppers or stamps). # „ _ J- V. SMITH A CO., Makers of '‘Bile Beane.*' St. Louis. Ma
fair BuM & fig. MANCFA CTUIiERS OF 1FIUIRISI!! Jn WiAKK THE LA ROUT IMPORT IRv imol 2 SEAL SKINS la the country and make a specialty of selling |B SHI JACKETS Mr Ili a SACQUES A lif 'ini NEWMARKETS fjH fvHMftia, Ac. Ask your merchant for them. WALTER BUHL & CO. DBTUOIT, MICH. SYKLE’B Sure Cure. IKE GREAT REMEDY FOR CATARRH The large number of certificates rscelved of the virtues of this preparation In the treatment of this unpleasant disease, abundantly attest its •fflcaw It is the only medicine now on the market adapted to Catarrh, tnat performs what tt proaUaes and effeota not only speedy relief but a permanent core. Unlike many nostrums now hgtose the poblic, it does not dry up temporarily the nasal discharges, but eradicates the prodFstng <*“* , thus leaving the system in a teaind and healthy condition. Ask your drugguts fora bottle of Sykes' Sure Cure for Catarrh and you will m healed of the malady. For sale by all Druggists. *OBB (M*DOH|X,f»y#tts, lad, WholeIs Agent.
jA _ negr-f In TSK «i»nn. ,-■ .'iaHWh, town. Vm., wrtln “1 hare Imd ■ T TIMM Anthnia (or JO yoarw; found , 10 j&h«M»<ab relief until 1 triedyonr BaeciflMwMHp fte, wnleh relii-.od m« Imme diateiy ■' Sold by ,11 Druir - ■ » **■£ *: C.rfc.,i.by ,mui. Jr ftilAL PACKAGE FIEE. AxldreM, T. POPHAM, PaiuiMunpA, Pmot. WORK SHOPS ft Of Wood uIMM Works, vithoet Steam Para, In eIU OalAmat Mm BAINES' PATENT fl Foot Power Machln'y L^g&jfll •BowbeatWin lata, end (reeter j| ' •MfhttukHiMkwnwMfetdt- If W H ErtfiHtarsaasr MU HttUTliUlM HUino Itimi HME IAILMMB LARK ft FREE Government LANDS. SEJO FORttntS DETECTIVES Wm»l Wuewd m u set «,tir Iwmliu I, Tiwn gar,!,, VMIL l.,re.mi.itoa. mealae tke IwmOnd
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Information for the Agriculturist, Stock Baiser and Honsekeepar. Economy in Feeding Poultry —Save tha Beeswax —Easy-Blanching Celery—The Bight Soil for the Nursery—Sandy Soil for Potatoes, etc., etc. Improved Feed-Troughs For Poultry.' Soft-poultry-food thrown on the ground or on a board is quiekly trampled and befouled so that is unfit to eat. Placing it in a shallow pan or trough helps the matter little, if any. The best course is to use covered troughs or pans which permit them to obtain the food and at the same time keep them out of it with their feet For small chicks, a double trough is made of tin, as shown in Fig. L It is twen-ty-eight inches long and four .inches wide—each half being two inches wide —and one and one-half inches deep, with square ends soldered on. Tin is best, because it is easily
washed and kept clean. This trough is set inside of the box, seen in Fig. 2, the same in width and length, inside, and eight inches high. It has a hinged cover fastened down with a hook, and nandle to lift it about by. Each side is open and fitted with wire bars [ placed two inches apart, each end of these wires being bent a right angles, driven through the the strips of wood and clinched. The food is placed in the trough by raising the cover of the box. A tight cover is necessary to protect the food from their droppings when they jump on the box and make a roost-of it, which they are certain to do. Feed at one time only as much as they will eat up clean and keep the trough welt washed out Nothing it more productive
FIG. 2. HANGING FEED-TROUGH, of mouth, throat and bowel diseases in chicks than soured ; nti musty food, or a filthy feed-tough. Fig. 3 is a wooden trough for feeding grain and other dry food to grown fowls, or for placing bone, gravel, shell, etc., in. It x .s hung about eight inches above the floor, upon two large nails driven into the wall of the pqultry-bouse or other building. The wire bars in the cover are three
FIG. 3. BOX FOR TROUGHS, inches apart bent, driven into the strips and clinched, same as in the other box. Tne cover is hinged so that it can be raised when the trough needs cleaning out It inclines at such an acute angle that the fowls cannot make a roost of it, and the food is kept perfectly free from all impurites. It is about four inches wide and can be made of any desired length. This trough takes up very little room, and is especially useful for keeping granulated bone, gravel, shell, etc., in. No poultry-house is complete without three or four of them.
Making Beeswax.
I suppose that every beekeeper makes more or less wax, writes a correspondent, of Be§u Gleanings, if he doesn’t he surely is wasting material which Could be made into wax, and so save3.= I don’t like to see any scraps of wax or bits ot comb or anything that has beeswax in it going to waste. Wax is worth money. Tuere is always a cash market for all we can get. Wo keep at home a box into which we put everything we have which will make wax that is, scraps of comb, old discarded combs, or anything we are going to melt up into wax. We always take with us, when we go out to our yards away from home, a box holding nearly a bushel. Into this we put such things as scrapings of honeyboards, broken combs, drone combs, which we cut out, or any bits of comb. These we carry home, to be melted up. It is not then lying around, breeding moths. When it is made into wax, there is a cash value in it. and can be turned into cash at any time, or kept if we choose to hold it for a higher price.
A New Variety of celery.
A new candidate for the market gnrdener this winter is the new Giant Pascal Celery, an illustration of which we present herewith, it is an entirely new variety, beingoffered for the first tiihe this winter by the leading seedsmen of the country through their respective catalogues. The originator says of it that it is a wonderful keeper, being especially desirable- or .shipping during January and February, seeping crisp under shipment for a long time. The height is about two feet, the stalks very large, thick, solid and not stringy. The heart is of a rich, golden yellow color. nd the plant blanches very easily, in five or six days after earthing up. It has a fine, nutty flavor, entirely free from uny taste of bitterness. These are most desir. ble qualites, and should make this new addition to our list of veget; bles popular with both market and home gttrdners.
Soil for Nursery Stock.
A dry, loamy soli not exoesalvely
rich is best for growing young trees! for sale. There must be potash in the soil, but until fruit trees get into bearing, they need less of other plant-food than do most farm crops. In moderately heavy soils, potash is seldom lacking, and on these good drainage and cultivation are more important than manure. The bulk of growth of leaves and wood is carbon, and is; drawn from the air through the leaves. If nitrogenous manures are largely used they make a soft, sappy growth, that is easily killed by severe cold. And besides this young trees thus grown are apt to be too much checked when transplanted into soil less stimulated by manures. ,
Spring-Sown Timothy Seed.
The surest catch of timothy is secured by fall seeding, but it is worth while to sow some of this grass seed with clover in the spring. Timothy seed sown in spring is generally overshadowed by the clover, and does not make much show the first year. But the plants, though small, are not killed, and as the clover dies out they come in and fill its place. Where alsike clover is sown there should be a full timothy seeding, as the alsike dies after its first crop is cut The decay of alsike clover roots in the soil give an extraordinary stimulus to the timothy, which for a year or two thereafter will produce very heavy crops, and sometimes, when cut eariy, producing a large second growth the same season.
Potatoes on Sandy Soll.
Thirty or forty years ago potatoes grown on sandy soil were reckoned the best and it was thought that heavier lands were unsuited to them. But potatoes on sand soon run out, probably from deficiency of potash, and the bulk of the crop for market is now grown on heavier land and well manured. The Early Rose and in fact most very early potatoes need to have the land as rich as it can be made. Thus grown we think they are better in quality as well as in yield. The old Mercer potatoe wag.a sort that did best ou sand, and if much manure was used it always rotted badly. The Peaehblow potatoe was the first one to be cultivated on ail kinds of soils, and this, a 3 much as its good quality, made it popular both with growers and consumers.
To Get Rid of Rats.
Sprinkle copperas freely on cellar floors and wash the walls with carbolia acid. This will cause rats to leave the premises, and is better around the bouse than poisoning them, which cannot be done without danger of killing something else, noriwithout offence from their dead bodies after th« rats crawl into their holes and die.
Sinking Large Stones.
The cheapest and most effectual way to rid the land of large stones is to dig a large hole beside them, roll them in and fill up, adding enough additional earth from the roadsides to make the surfaoe level. 'lt seems queer that after roiling a large stone iu a. newly dug hole that more dirt will be needed to fill it up, but in most soils experience shows this to be a fact. Digging pulverizes the soil, enabling it to pack more closely than before.
Care of Horses In the Winter.
The winter is especially severe upon horses, and is usually a season when disease prevail. The troubles to which they are subject are commonly due to the condition of the stables and wautof care in the treatment of the animals. Epizootic diseases are most prevalent at this season, and these are all unquestionably due to faults in management and are entirely preventable. Basement stables are too often the cause of trouble in this respect, because of their dampness, darkness and want of good ventilation. Dry, pure air and liubt are indispensable to health. It has been found in military stables, and others, where large numbers of horses are kept, that impure air is the cause of most of the disorders to which horses in crowded stables arc subject — —
Hints to Housekeepers.
A creaking hinge Can be cured by the use of a black-lead pencil of the softest number, the point rubbed into all the crevices of the hinge. Keep large squares of thick pasteboard hung conveniently to slip under pots, kettles, stewdishes and spiders whenever you set them down. To extinguish the flame, should the oil in a kerosene lamp accidentally take fire, throw over a woolen bl naet,, a rug, a piece Of carpet, shawl or any other wolleu iabric at hand. Jewelry can be male to look like 1 new by washing with ammonia and water or alcohol, then rub, drying and polishing with prepared chalk applied with flannel or chamois skin. If, be ore grinding the morning’s coffee, the berries are heated lor four or five minutes, or until they take on a dm ker shade of brown, the flavor ol the coffee will be, much improved. Always mix starch in cold water untill free from lumps; pour on boiling water, stirring well until of the proper consistency; boil ten minutes, add a little iard, butter or shavings ol spermaceti or prepared gum arubic; then cool. For washing red table linen, use tepid water with a little powdered borax, which sets the color. Wash the linen seperately and quickly in weak suds. Rinse the tepid water containing a little boiled starch. Hmg in the shade,, and iron when nearly dry, Mittens may be made easily and look neat by knitting one 1 stitch plain and purling one alternately. They are nice made of black or any color o Saxony. Stockings knit of soft woolec yarn, with two stitches plain and twt purled alternately, fit well and are warm. « •
Do You Want a Job!
There are only five professional liontamers in this country, with over 200 lions to be kept tame and in a peaceful state of mind. The sal try of a tamer is never less than SSO per week, and some of them get SIOO. Itisalighl and easy embloy'ment, no -regulai hours, and always brings free ticket! with iu
A salutary revolution is taking plao* in the use of Baking Powders. The more intelligent people are fast discarding those containing Alum, Ammonia and other adulterants which are disgusting and dangerous. Dr. Prices Cream Baking Powder is free from all such substances. Pure and economical, it maintains its wellearned reputation of being * ‘the most perfect made.”
Anarchist and Policeman.
NewYerkPresa. - "That palm. Pd hate you understand,” Proclaimed a son of toll. The oop looked at the unclean hand And said, “A ton of soiL"
Nature in Convulsion
Is terrible. Volcanic eruptions, cyclones, earthquakes are awfully and tremendously picturesque, hut scarcely desirable to emulate in action aud eff ct by the administration of remedies which prodace convulsion and *90117 in j the abnormal portion of the human frame. ! Such is tbe effect of the old fashioned violent purgatives happily falling more and rdore into disuse, and of which Hastettetfs Stomach Bitters is the wholesome, pleasant and far more affective raccedaneua*. They weakened tbe Intestines—the Bitters invigorates them. They left the bowels inactive, became incapacitated by ensuing feebleness. The Bittern, on the contrary, and because it enables, not for.es, them to aet -avast and f rtvnate difference—perpeteatee their activity and regularity. The liver Is beneficially stimulated, as the kidneys also are, by this medicine, which eaai y conquers, utao, malaria, nervousness and rheumatism. It needs no coroner to discover that a blizzard victim dies from the effects of a blow.
$100 Howard. $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at feast one dreaded disease that nemnee has been able to cure in all it* stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Core is too only positive cue now known to the medical fratern ty Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon tho b ood and mucous surfaces of the svstem, thereby destroying tbe foundations of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list »f testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY <Js CO., Toledo. O. dWSold by Druggists, 75c. Nearly every article sold is cheapest in cost of production, at expense of quality. Dobbins’ Electric Soap is exactly today what it was in 1865, absolutely pure, harmless and uniform. Ask your grocer for it. It is wrong to suppose that everybody is penitent because he is on his sneeze.
What Everybody Says
must bo true, and the universal verdict of those who have used Hibbard’s Rheumatio tiyrup and Strengthening Plasters is that there is no doubt of their curative qualities, E. Larzeiere, agent 2L C. R. R., Albion. Mich., says “he was cured of Bright’s disease” by the use of Hibbard’s Rheumatio Syrup. Mrs. JfL E. Jones. Prairie City, lowa, says: “For three veers I have been afflicted with inflammatory rheumatism and kidney aad liver troubles. I have taken Hibbard's Rheumatic Syrup and applied their Piss tors over my stomach and am entirely cured. It is the greatest remedy that I have ever used.” First ask your druggist; should ho not keep it. we will send on receipt of price, $1 per Dottle or six for $5. Rheumatic Syrup Co., Jackson. Mich.
Hibbard’s Rheumatic and Liver Pills.
These Pills are soiensiflcally compounded, uniform in action. Ko griping pain so commonly following the use of pills. They arc adapted to both adults and children with perteet safety. We guarantee they have no equal in the cure of Sick Headache, Constipation. Dyspepsia. Biliousness; and. aa an appetizer, whey excel any other preparation, « These electric light .currents that kill are really very heavy current— Pitteburg Chronicle. A pocket cigar-case free to smokers of l Transill‘s Punch 5c Cigar.
Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers.
Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant Crops. Best fruit, grain, gum and stock country n the world. Full information free. Address heOregon Immigration Board. Portland, Ore.
Our Motto “ A dollar's worth for a dollor,” is the motto oi Hood’s Sarsaparrilla. This Medicine is a highly concentrated extract of Sarsaparilla and other well-known vegetable remedies, '’and is pronounced by experts the strongest and best prep station of the kind yet produced. It owes ID peculiar strength and medicinal merit to the fact that it is prepared by a Combination, Proportion and Process peculiar to itself, discovered by the proprietors of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and known to no other medicine. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, tl; six for 16. Prepared only by C. L HOOD A CO., Lowell. Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar.
unia to CBK*: CATARRH. A drooler deecrlb. THUPwra new and non inititinf borne treatment, cant wiUean Catarrh, Catarrhal Dcafneaa, H,y Fewer, Throat Afferttoaa, Bronchia*. and Consumption in It, InripMnt *t»gr. will be eent any one thO, affected, by addmering D. YLNGLINtt, 1 L D„ HunUngtoa, UuL GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. EPP’S COCOA. BREAKFAST. “By a thorough knowledge of tae natural law; which govern the operations of digestion uni nutrition, aad by a careful application of the -fine properties of welkaaiected Cocoa. Hr. Bop*, hos provided our hrvakfa.t tables with a deli cately flavored beverage whicn may eave u, many heavy doctors* bill*. It la by the JudJ elou* nee of euch article of diet that a eoaetitu tion may be gradually built up until atron,, enough to realat every tendency to diaeas Hundrwde of subtle maladies are fl<atiog around ns ready to atutok whatever these is a weak Slat. We may escape many fatal shaft by spine ourselves well tonified with pure bhxy! and a properly nouriahed frame.”—Civil S r vice OimUo. Made simply with boitins water or milk. Sold only in kali-poo ad Una, by Qrocars.labeled thus: JAMKk > FPS ft CO., ttoßUßopathi. CfcwlKi, Lsblsb, Raglans. (RUTUmU.'I EWftU TUBULAR WELL AND ffl “ c PROSPECTING MACHINE Ufl •Umntn bar# failod. fflf KOAiPTLI SELF CLEANING. ' OwUI tnpiMt, ee UauaLfTjlli cataioioTpree. IMD LOOMIS A IYMAN.JJH TIFFIN. OHIO, mggp* A SOLID GOLD RING7JJS for S 3. On receipt «t $3 we will send a Solid Oo 4 Rina with e Oenulne Diamond Setting and one Mara Uioiii Catalog ne (this le not an Alaska, Califo nla oi quarts atone but a Genuine Diamond, which is suae an teed by Lapp ft nerahaui whote»ale toweier* ui Siiacit}); or. on rece.ipt o! Burts., wswUl send th. ras C. 6. D. for examination. Kend sire of rimr wanted and n> -new bv r. O. order, expiwee. or drar V VI kD ft .»W rrv • -0.-ff st„ Chi ago. HI. DOrBLC otk (131 Jh Alt.inS,m«aa«rtaaa «*|l 11 if Pzsrss 2^7^ 86.75. |W I 1 Mk v \ C»uO®rii,. w Adlre.i □un PISTQU Vb» TSJg JUB. y fleel.eett. «U,
* Your Toilet I* incomplete without AYER’S Hair Vigor. It preserves tha hair, koMps thimlidiiii and is evarywhera the favorite dressing. “I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for promoting tho growth of the hair, and think it unequaled. For restoring the hair to Its original color, and for a dressing, it cannot be surpassed.”— Mrs. Geo. LaFever, Eaton Rapids, Mich. “I was rapidly becoming gray and bald; but after using two or three bottles of Ayer's Hair Vigor my hair grew thick and gfoasy and the original color was restored. I have no hesitation in recommending this dressing." Melvin Aldrich, Canaan Centre, N. H.% Prepared by Dr, J. C. Ayer 8k Co., Lowell, Mass. Sola by Druggiet* and Perfumer*.
1 “Oh! where shall rest be found I” The worn-out mother sighs; ~ ~ 1 “Trousers to mend and stockings to dam, , Dishes to wash and butter to churn. V - While my back feels to break, and need and heart bum. jA’i*-*. *.• I£r And life is a constant friction.” . ■ The Summer came and went, ' ‘ The matron no longer sighs; Elastic her step and rounded her cheek, Work seems but play, life is now sweet, And the change was made in one short week By Da. Pdsbcz’s Favorite Pbrbcriptcow.
As an invigorating tonic, it imparts strength to the whole system. For overworked, “worn-out,” debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop-girls,” housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, beingunequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. Contains no alcohol to inebriate; no sugar or syrup to derange digestion; a legitimate medicine, not a beverage. As a soothing and strengthening nervine, “ Favorite Prescription ” is
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets regulate and cleanse the liver; stomach and bowels. One a dose. Sold by druggists. FAMOUS CLASSICS.Large type, unabridged, handsomely printed, neat paper covara, prists -rtf
Evangeline,by Henry W. Longfellow Ac The Lady of the Lake, by Sir Walter Scott t#e Rip Van Winkle, by Washington Irving Jr I’oorßiebard’s Almanac, by Ben J. Franklin 2c Dickens’s The Cricket on the Hearth. lUnstreewl.it Shakespeare. Separata Ploys, each 7c.,0r 20for.fUO The Burning of Rome, br Canon Fomr. Ac l ine Buccaneers, by BlohordH. Dana. .3c I’.uskln’s Sesame and Lillee Jc .Esop's Fables, complete, illustrated. Ac An Essay on Man, by Alex. 5c lUb and hlB Friends. Dr. Joe.a Brown. 2c Hawthorne’s Twice Told Tales Me Enoch Arden, by Alfred Tennyson, Ae Cotter’s Saturday Night, etc., by Robert Hurna... Jc Selections from Buddha, traoa. by Max Mfilier 3c Utopia, by Sir Thomas More ...Wc Industry and 14 lea ess, by Henry Ward Beecher.. .3e The Village Uncle, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. 2c
Complete Catalogue of The Elzkvik Librakt, over 400 numbers, the above bring samples, sent free on request.' JOHN B. ALDEN.*PuWisher, 3'.i3 Pearl St.. New York ; 243 Wabash Are., Chicago ; 73 Whitehall St., An aft a. ADHPD ANY OF THE ALDEN PUBLICATIONS through the publisher of Ud* \Jf fC MJ E. l\ paper, who will show specimens to those who are pleased t-o call. By dabbing the orders of several customers, the cost of transportation may be partially saved.
§xfl Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians. M By-M Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the RA
IMPORTATIONS FOR 1889 Consist of Hackney “Coach,” Suffolk Punch, and Shires. Ota Coach Horses are Large Size. Fine Finish witn Magnificent Aett n. Low prices THOMSON ft BLAND. 225 W. Maryland St., - Indianapolis ■ I prearrfbe and felly ea> dome Big a, the only Owm.tn'wjS , per lAc for tbe certale cure JBi VO » DAVB. W of this diaeese. U. U.IMQRAHAM.M D.. eeeaeaanawae. Aatsterdam, N. T. KJ Vriaaty by the We have sold Bis O for .31 CUK»mWI*W faction. Ohio. VV »■ H. DYCHR ft CO.. W Chieaco. IIL Bold by Dsnulsta
Brown's BroodfflHTfeocbcs. hSaaaajjpU—thing* they see Imi rated. The —nfrs sjsVtid only In boxes. That opera manager performed quiet a feat who borrowed a toner from the baas. Ifhfflicted With Sore Byes, QMfiidsun Theap* ■on's Eye Water. Druggists seQlt. How it would take away the greatness of a great man if bis last words were ‘‘l feel sick at soy stomach.” No Opium in Pise's Core for Consumption. Cures.where other remedies faiL -Rtia • * A BmlMt Hu Would use Kemp’s Balaam for the Throat and Lungs. It is curing more cooes of Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Croup and all Throat and Lung troubles,than any other medicine. The proprietor has ml thorized any druggist to giro you a Sample Bottle Free to convince you of the merit of this great remedy. Large Bottler 60 cents and sl. . It is the tug in front of the pleasure excursion which has beilee on ite tows.
unequaled and is invaluable in allaying and subduing nervous excitability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms and other distressing, nervous symptoms, commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety A Book of 160 pages, on “Woman and Her Diseases,” sent to any address, in plain, sealed envelope, on receipt of ten cents, in stamps. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. T.
TheEvldaaoMofEvalutton.br Hazier la ■may om Hero4*m. by Ralph Wai*e Bamma.. .... Ja Oray’a Elegy and Other Poeam Jo The Deserted Village, etc, by finiilimltk. .fe The True Qraadeur of Nations, by CfcaitesSanmarJe The Love of Books, by Jehnßrfeh* la The Spectra Bridegroom, by WaeßlaaSoa rue rfed Ptper of Hamlin, etc., by IWwalagZT. Ie Jobe uUptaVpjde. by Cowper. " *> Ijgejd of Sleepy Hollow, by WuMNtei Inrtag .As The Bridge es Blahs, etc, by Thomas Heed, Jo Selective# from Epictetus, translated .......Jo The Brook aadOtherPoeam, Ttnayma..., The Pleamtres of Life, by Sir Joha laftaidr.. Me Carlyle’* Heroee aad Hero TTmlde I|* The Vicar of Wakefield, by OUverCaMemlth. Me Bunvan’s Pilgrim’* Progreae IUo The Eaves aad Other Poems, by Bdgar A.10e....A0
PUfioNspa r| ru qiYi ujohn wontinsi • yietalaet war. toast HOMEKtssiKSsaatiaaßa thoroughly taught by MAH, Cbtahanas hkTAftrfe BUSIa«W U)LLWMt, jMhki. I.T LABlES’i^b’VS'ul'S^f^rsri.? la. Woman’* SelTetion. Or. end swan taatieaoar •tpa. Pkl by -wail SI *t. Warranted. SB. OATOM. BoxaasTTBOHTON. MASS. PNICE-USTS BF MM BACMNOL OPIUIWSgTggp PATENTS _ _ Bead for etronlss. I M D 4—Bo DIBrU 4h*e wrMdagtw t d rartia-ra readers wt» confer a favor by aeeWiwag tftli paper.
