Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 44, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 April 1885 — Page 7
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•'.THE MAIL "!?,
Th &
A
PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
Continued from, Sixth Page.
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I didn't buy it. It come ashore.n 'What! Whon you "come ashore" your•ml tt 'JTo fear!' she answered. 'Last winter when the big ship went to bits oat there.' "'Oh, I seel Then it was a portion of a wreck "'Yes, it come ashore and look ye now, this jacket caine ashore too. On a sailor •chap.' 'And the sailor chap made you a present of it, I suppose/1 "'No fearl' she repeated, with hor sharp shako of the head. 'How could he give it JMO, when ho was drownrled and como ashoret William Jones ga?e it to me, and I altered it my own self—look ye now—to triako it fit.' "She was certainly an extraordinary young person, and wore her mysterious finery with coolness I thought remarkable, it being quite.clear, from her explanation, that all was fish that como to her net or, in other words, that dead men's clothes were as acceptable to her unprejudiced taste as any others. However, the time was hastening on, and I had my promise to keep. So I got my crayon materials and made Matt sit down before mo on a stool, first insisting, however, that she should divest herself of her bead gear, which was an abomination, but which she discarded with extreme reluctance Directly I began she became rigid, and fixed heraelf, so to speak, as people do when being photographed—hor eyes glaring on vacancy, her whole face lost in self-satisfied vacuity. 'You needu't keep like that,' I cried 'I want your face to have some expression. Move your head about aa much as you like, laugh and talk—it will bo all the better.' 'Last time I was took,' she replied, the chap said I xnusn't move.' 'I suppose he was a traveling photograph err 'He had a little black box, like, on legs, and a cloth on top of it, and ho looked at me through a holo in tho middle. Then he cried "now," and hold up liia hand for mo to keep still as a mouse then he counted fifty—and I waa took.' 'Ah I Indeed I Was it a good likeness '"Yost, master. But I looked like the black woman who come ashore last Easter was a year.' "With conversation like this we beguiled the way, while I proceeded rapidly with my drawing. At the end of a couple of hours Matt had bocomo so fidgety that I thought it advisable to give her a rest. She sprang up and ran ovor to inspect tho picture. The moment her eyes fell upon it she uttered a rap* turous cry. 'Look ye now, ain't It pretty! Master, am I like that}' "I answered her it was an excellent likeness, and not too flattering. Hor face fell, howevor, a little aa she proceeded. 'Are my cheeks as rod as that, master?' 'You are red, Matt,' I replied, flippantly 'so aro the roses.' "She lookod at me thoughtfully. 'When it's finished, wiii you give it to me to keep!' 'Well, we shall see.' 'I gave t'other chap a shilling for his frame aud all, but Fve got no more money,' she continued, with an insinuating smile which,as a man of gallantry, I could not regist. So I promised that, if die behaved herself properly, I would, in all probability, make her the present she coveted.
'You must como again to-morrow,' I said, as wo Bhook hands, 'and FU finish the thing off.' I' 'All right, master, Til oome.' "Ard with a nod and a bright smile she walked away. "During the whole of this Interview Tim had not iwen unobservant, and so soon as was It*' alone he looked up from the work he was engaged upon, vis., potato washing, and gave A knowing smile. "'Sure, she's a fine bold colleen,1 he said. *Doee your honor know who she tef 'I have not the slightest idea.* 'They're saying down fccyant that she's a my fondling, and has nei&er father nor mother, nor any belongings.' 'Pray, who was your informant?" 'The mau who picked her from the sayWilliam Joaia hisaclf.' "That name again. It was becoming too much for flesh and Wood to bear. Prom the first moment of my arrival I had heard no other, and I had begun to dettat its very wow) •••X {To Odrtintod.)
Handwriting: of the Prtddrat*.
In the fcxocuti vj o21co of the United State* seun:« there aiv jweaerved all the executive mesaagHssof presidents of the United States from the foundation of the government. Though not often referred to, some of these documents are becoming worn, recently the secretary of the senate caused selections to be made from the files, with a view to preserving some tt the interesting autographs in a cabinet by themselves. It appears tram thiscoilectioQ that none of the prvektcnta, with the exception of Washington and Jeffiersoo, would be marked above 60 for penmanship by a civil service ooaunissioa. Washington's first contribution to the collection embodies nominations for judges, marshals and attorneys for the districts of New York and New Jemy and at the end of the same documents are the nominations of Thomas Jefferson, Edmund Randolph and Samuel Osgood, far secretary of state, attorney genenJ and pu«t master general respectively. The signature Is written in a fair, legible hand, which would pass to-day for that of a man not entirely careless of appearance, yet hating confkteece enough in his own work to let the details of penmanship take care of tbemselvea The documents, N whole, fail far below tbe pressntetaadard at clerical exceUeoca
The Flower Garden. BALD-HEADED HOUSE.
Some time since, one early September iay, a farmer's wife and daughters were showing a
caller
They
their new home. The father and "started poor," in a two-room house.
bad got on in the world. Their children, eons and daughters, were good-looking and well educated. Yet there was a hardness, a want of ideality about them that was painful in young people. They showed no
appreciar
tion of beauty in nature, of the exquisite coloring and splendor of cloud and sky, of water and flower and leaf. It was as if their eyes bad never been more than half opened. If there is any creature to be pitied it is that dumb, stupid person who sees no beauty in a flower or sunset. His mind is only partly developed. He loses some of the* keenest happiness mortal man can enjoy.
In the handspme new home of this prosperous farmer there was a painful lock. The house stood in the blaze of the sun. A half rotten apple tree a hundred feet away from it was the only shade in that blessed yard. There was not a flower about it. Ducks and chick""* held conventions in the front yard. There was scarcely a blade of green grass. The new boose, with all its fine finish aud bay windows, vras something painful to look at. It was, in short, a bald-headed house. It was as naked as the barn, and not nearly as picturesque in its surroundings. A few trees, lilac and rose bushes and flowers would have changed the whole hard, angular, ugiy place into a paradise. More particularly if the hens had been kept off the front steps. if
Therefore, O gentle country reader— PLANT FLO WEBS. The subject is a very large one. There are trees, flowering shrubs or bushes, perennial or ever-living plants, and again annualsthose that are planted from the eeeed in th spring, bloom through the summer and fall, and die at the approach of winter. This week we give a very brief tyst of flowers, so easily raised that a little girl 10 years old may make her home lovely with them.
Tljp beautiful family of
&
HLOX z'l'T,
is to be mentioned first. The richness, brilliancy and wonder of coloring in a bed of different varieties of phloxes is something to be remembered a life time. They may be planted in what are called ribbon beds—that is, in stripes, each variety to itself. The seeds may be planted in the open ground as soon as frost is out of the ground. The little plants will come,to maturity very soon, and bloom early and late, first, last and all the time. *3
Ipiil
SNOWSALI. CARNATION.
The pink family produces some of the most valuable of our garden beauties. The sweet, old-fashioned May pink ought to be in every garden. For fragrance and delicate beauty of color it is unequaled. It lives forever, too, though the clumps of it should be divided and reset about every third year. Any florist's catalogue will give lists of desirable varieties of the pink, or dianthus, family. To them belong the carnations, a new and fine variety of which is shown in the picture above.
I JTTVKJTA CHRYSANTHEMUM. The fashionable fall flower beyond all doubt is now the chrysanthemum. The ono in our illustration is reproduced by permission from Peter Henderson's last catalogue. It blends in its feathery petals the colors of gold, dark brown and pale crimson. There are, however, a hundred or more varieties of this favorite flower. Every woman \jrith a yard ought to have half a dozen kinds at least. They light up the lawn in late autumn with a glory all their own. If the buds are pinched back in summer, they can be taken into the house and made to bloom in winter. The chrysanthemum, too, lives forever. It needs to be worked around and manured occasionally.
The aster is as pretty as a rose. Flantseeds in spring, early, and all summer your eyes will be gladdened with their bright prettinesa. The aster is an annual, dying out in the fall. If the seeds are started in a hotted or in a box in the window, and set out as soon as frost is gone, they will do better.
A pot or two of mignonette, ever lovely and fragrant, should be always ready, so that a sprig can be nipped from it for the buttonhole bouquet. The hardy sweet-scented violet is another modest blossom that must not be forgotten. It lifts its little purple bead through even the mow in early spring, and fills a whole room with fragrance. The few plants here mentioned may be all propagated from the seed. Yoa can obtain packets of it from florists, with directions for planting printed upon them. Often the packet will cost you no more than five cents. Send for florists' catalogues to know what is going on in tike world of flower* and vegetables. If you have a reliable seedsman near home get your supply from him. Two of the best florists and seedsman. In the ocmntry—men who have really done much to develop floriculture and gardening in the United States— are Peter Henderson, of New York, and James Vide, of Rochester, N. Y.
ITAU lM IB 8U8S.
Ffcr the tiny seeds bare mentioned, fiH shallow boxes with light, rich earth, pulverised very fine. FBI to h&lf an inch of th* top of the box.
TTPM
the soQ down anootfa with
board. Soatter the seed lightly over the stxr» fittt OtfPtr ttr dfttnff earth vary thinly fvar tkaeofi wnhaaiev% fiprinkiea
Mbf wMt tie faaif MliwlBriif
P* ttm
As they grow, thin them out, and when larf* enough transplant. TXJOi TO PLANT.
The asters, chrysanthemums, carnations and violets should besown in March, although it is not yet too late to plant them. Mignonette for potting may be sown at any time. It also does well planted in the open ground, tho same time the phlox seeds
are
An Oregon wheat grower gives the following method of treating seed wheat to destroy smut germs: "Take finely pulverized blue vitriol, using at the rate of one pound for every ten bushels of grain. Fill a 40-gallon barrel about half full of water, put in say three pounds of the vitrol, letting it stand 12 to 24 hours to dissolve (using hot water if haste is needed). Put a bushel of seed in each of three or four sacks (burlaps or gunny are best), drop them in the solution, and [dace on a wide plank, that will run the drippings back into the barrel. As the solution is reduced add more. Let the seed stand over night, so it will dry before sowing. The work may be done on wet days, or before sowing time, as the grain is uninjured by standing after the blue vitriol application." The quantity mentioned should be sufficient for SO bushels of seed.
A Wisconsin farmer gi la different remedy, which is as folio "I dip wheat from the bin with a screen from the fanning mill, shake a tew times and pour upon the floor, and repeat until I get as much as is needed. I sprinkle the pile with a pail of chamber lye to the bushel, then throw on air-slaked lime, stirring, and letting it take up all that will stick to the kernels. Stir often, till ready to sow. To remove oats and other foul stuff light enough to float, add water and salt to the lye, put in a tub and slowly pour in one bushel of wheat Skim, stir rnd thoroughly skim again pour the liquor into tub No. 2 and the wheat from No. 1 change basket to No. 1 and proceed the same way. Empty the wheat on floor, nnrl so on until sufficient seed has been thus treated. The lime will kill the smut germs.1"
Asparagus Again.
Here is another gardener's way of making the bed: Do you want an asparagus bed? It is the easiest thing in the world to have one. Spade up the plot as deep as possible. Mellow the soil and make drills lengthwise every four feet and one inch deep. In these sow the seed two inches apart. One ounce of seed, which will cost 25 cents, will suffice for five drills, 12 feet long. Now, it is only necessary that this plot should be kept free from wOeds and the soil friable. In the fall the bed should be covered with well rotted farm manure.
The plants should be thinned out to 18 inches apart in the drills next spring. We have in this way an asparagus bed that, without the laborious old plan of loading the soil with manure two feet in depth, that the plantation mfty "last a lifetime without the labor and expense of transplanting, will in three years give as vigorous sprouts as if the one year plants were transplanted or brought. Of course, the land must be well drained, and it is better to select a sandy loam or, in the absence of it, to mingle pure sand with the soil
Cotton Seed for Horses and Mules.
A southern farmer tells a curious bit of experience under this head. He had two men farming distant fields on the shares. He furnished the mules and their feed also. His "croppers" carried the mules' feed for midday with them in the morning. "I was troubled about how to manage the feeding," said the farmer, "as I knew that if I gave them the corn for the proles I would not sell them much for bread."
The idea was that the scaly fellows would steal enough corn from the mules' dinner to largely keep themselves in hoe-cake. The cool unconsciousness with which the farmer tells it is very amusing. At last he devised a feed for the animals that fixed both them and their drivers. He mixed two bushels of corn, two bushels of oats and one bushel of cotton seed, and had them ground all together. He fed the work mules on this. They liked it, kept perfectly well, and were sleeker and fatter than the stock he fed at home
To Encourage Silk Culture. The commissioner of agriculture a Washington has issued a circular in which the department offers to furnish gratuitously silkworm eggs to all persons who are unable to buy the same and yet are desirous of engaging in silk culture. In order that a proper amount may be sent, the applicant is requested to fill out a blank that will be furnished them on written application as to the amount of silk worm food they have at their disposal, and also any experience they may have had in the industry. Eggs will be distributed in December, and instructions as to their keeping will be sent with them. All applications should be made before then, as the worms are liable to hatch after that on being exposed to warmth, and, therefore, a certain risk attends their shipment.
Things to Do aad to Know. The hardiest raspberry is the Ohio blackcap. r-
Give stock plenty of light in their pens and stables. Cotton seed is an excellent fertilizer for fields.
Unimpregnated eggs will keep good for a great length of time. All hardy vegetables that have not yet been sown, such as cabbage, beets, radishes, turnip, lettuce, onions, celery, peas, parsley and potatoes, should be planted at once.
The greatest improvement in corn cultivation in half a century has been the invention of fenders, an attachment to keep the young corn from being covered when it is plowed.
To distinguish oleomargarine from batter pnt a lump of the suspected substance into a vessel and melt it. Then put a wick into the resulting oil and set it on fire. If it is butter it will send up a faint, pleasant odor. If oleomargarine it will smell like nasty, rancid 'ease. So it is said.
For the improvement of heavy soils Heiden, Voigt, Gints, and Wetxke recommend lime for the first dressing. Thsy say also that the crop for the first season should be potatoes fcr the second, oata for the third, tares or peas, and for the fourth, potatoes again.
A belt of timber should be planted or left •long the north side of every farm as a windbreak. If you have a river or stream running post your place, set willows all along its bank, to keep the ground from crumbling. During trea^ets, sediments and earth will catch in the trees, and in time really make the bank higher.
A Frenchman has invented away of mak ing batter by electricity. Into a vessel of eplaoed a pair of electrodes and a current of electricity passed through the fluid. The hotter gaihers in little balls on the electrode*. After they are thus formed the balls detach themselves and float about upon the surface of the milk, jnst as they do when batter is churned. Thru thegr must be gathered and the batter worked in the ordi» nary way. A ilinaimi ilw tik of 40 DtataU di&i tETbottor In tbM to five minute*. The discoverer of All
M. Tint an or. kas patented Ma tan*
TERRB HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
sown—that
is, as soon as there is no more danger from frost To Prevent Smut In Wheat.
:i
Monkeys at Breakfast.
An Rngl iah gentleman who lived in India during his early life tells an amusing story of some pranks played by monkeys. They were almost as tame and playful as kittens about his home, there was a great number of them. He says: "I was married in India, and engaged for our home a little house 14 miles or so from any other habitation of white men. On the morning of our arrival my wife went in to change her traveling dress, while the servants laid breakfast on the veranda overlooking the river. At the clatter of the plates there began to come down from the big tree that overshoded the house, and up the trees that grew in the ravine behind it, from the house roof itself, from everywhere, a multitude of solemn monkeys. They came up singly and in couples and in families, and took their places without noise or fuss on the veranda, and sat there, like an audience waiting for an entertainment to commence. And when everything was ready, the breakfast all laid, the monkeys all seated, I went in to call my wif a "Breakfast is ready, and they are all waiting," I said. "Who are waiting she asked in dismay. "I thought we were going to be alone, and I was just coming out in my dressing-gown." "Never mind," I said. "The people about here are not very fashionably dressed themselves. They wear pretty much the same things all the year round."
And so my wife came out. Imagine, then, her astonishment.
COMPANY AT BREAKFAST.
In tho middle of the veranda stood oui breakfast table and all the rest of the space, as well as the railings and the steps, was covered with an immense company of monkeys, as grave as possible, and as motionless and silent as if they were stuffed. Only their eyes kept blinking, and their little round ears kept twitching. Laughing heartily, at which the monkeys only looked all the graver, my wife sat down. "Will they eat anything?" asked she. "Try them," I said.
So she picked up a biscuit and threw it among the company.
ATTER A BISCUIT.
Three hundred monkeys jumped up in tha air like one, and just for one instant there was a riot that defies description. The next instant every monkey was sitting in its place as solemn and serious as if it had never moved. Only their eyes winked, and their ears twitched.
My wife threw them another biscuit, and again the riot, and then another and another and another. But, at length, we had given away all that we had to give, and got up to go. The monkeys at once rose, every monkey on the veranda, and advancing gravely to the steps walked down them in a solemn procession, old and young together, and dispersed for the day's occupation.
A Warning to Sir Sleepyhead.
Sir Sleepyhead, Sir Sleepyhead, Shut up your mouth and go to bed Don't sit there yawning, yawning,
On this bright May-day morning If that's the way you try to win, I think you had bettor not begin
For the boy who means to earn a prize Must shut his mouth and open his eyes, And never sit yawning, yawning. Sir Sleepyhead, Sir Sleepyhead, In all my life I have not read
That pouting, sulking, yawning, Gained aught but the world's scorning So smooth your hair and ruffled brow .v Remember, too, my warning now,
That tile boy who means to earn the 5 prize, Must dint his mouth and open his eves, And give up yawning, yawning.
Gen. Grant a Good Son.
Gen. Grant's love for his father was shown by his treatment at him while be was president. He also carel kindly for his mother, and she bad a great influence qpon his life. When he was at West Point as a cadet, nearly 50 years ago, he wrote this letter to her: "Your kind words of admonition are ever sent with me. How well do tbey strengthen me in every good word and work! Should I become a soldier for my country, I look forward with hope to have yon spared to share with me in any advancement I may gain, and I trust my future conduct will prove me worthy of the patriotic instruction you and fitter have given me."
Hatching Teeth. (Harper's Butt.]
"What is the matter with the baby Tasked lady of a little girl, whose baby brother she had understood to be ailing. "Oh, nothin' much," was the "He's only hatching teeth."
What All the People Oogkt to
What great events In United tor? took pttei in tfc* rinrift ci April II ywraacpf it*. j*-i-iibYa .r tuyto
Pore Blood and Strong Nerves.
At 19 years of age I was afflicted with fearful pains in my head, eyes, shoulders and right side, ana began to spit blood. I tried quite a number of physicians, whose rcedicinee only brought temporary relief. They called it oold, and. after exhausting their treatment, said I was sure to die. Being an orphan, and in poor health all my life, I thought death would be a relief. Thus, for twelve years, I suffered. My only solace was in morphine. For two years I never slept day or night without morphine, so intense was my suffering. During the spring of 1881 I was induced to try SwiftTs Specific. It acted like a charm. It was a God-send to me. After using it that season, I was completely restored. It gave me pure blood, strong nerves, sound mind and good health. I am now thirty-five years of age and am in perfect health as any lady in .Atlanta. Ten thousand tongues could not express my gratitude for finding this wonderful medicine. I commend it to suffering humanity. Jan. 1,1884. ADAMSE COLLINS, Atlanta, Ga.
DRY TETTER CURED.
•i
have been afflicted with a disease termed Dry Tetter, and have applied various remedies, but to no permanent good. I saw an advertisement announcing that Swift's Specific had cured Mr. James Dunning, of Louisville, Ky., of this terrible disease. I procured thirteen bottles at once and began its use.. At the end of seven months there was not the least sign of tetter on my person, nor has there been a single symptom of its return up to date. Therefore, I cheerfully recommend Swift's Specific to all who are afflicted with this painful disease. I am very thankful that I ever heard of Swift's Specific. It has brought health and happiness to my home.
Feb. 16,1886. S. W. PEAK, Winchester, 111. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
I WOULD RECOMMEND Ely's Cream Balm to any one having Catarrh or Catarrhal Asthma. I have suffered for five years so I could not lie down for weeks at a time. Since I have been using the Balm I can lie down and rest. I thank God that you ever invented such a medicine.—FRANK P. BURLEIGH, Farmington, N. H.
MY SON, aged nine years, was afflicted with Catarrh the use of Ely's Cream Balm effected a complete cure.—W. E. HAMMAN, Druggist, Easton, Pa. 60cts. a package. See adv't.
Universally Approved
J. A. Rogers, M. D., of Kenton, O., says: 1 must say Warner's.White Wine of TarSyrufl has been universally approved by my customers never hear any complaints about it here sold it for years. ll-4t.
Thirty
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HUNT'S BEftfBDr CO., Providence,
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It. 1.
TUTT'S PILLS
25 YEARS III USE. The Greatest Medical^Triumjh of the Age! SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
LOM of appetite, Bowels costive, Pain la the head, with a dall sensation In the back part, Pala ander tbe shoalderblade, Fellness after eating, with a dieinclination te exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected oome daty, Weariness, Dizziness, Flattering at the Heart, Dots before tho eyee» Headache over tho right eye. Restlessness, with ftftl dreaaio. Highly colored Urine, and
CONSTIPATION.
TUTT'S FULI are especially adapted to each cases, one dose effects such a change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer.
They Increase the A ppotlte^uKl cause the ttetn Is Boarlahod, and by their Tonte Action on the Digestive Organs .Rejtntar Stools ore produced.<p></p>TU1T8
body to Take on Fleih.tto tbe sy« by their Tonte A«il
HAIR OVE.
Priceaffe. 4 Horray Wt..lf .a»
godneedL___
GKAY Warn or WSHKEBS changed to a GLOSSY BLACK by a tingle application of this DYB. It imparts a natural color, sets instantaneously. Sold by Drnggiste, or sent by express on receipt of fl* Office, 44 Murray St., New York.
Many a Lady
ts beautiful, all but her skin and nobody has ever told her how easy it is to put Beauty on the skin. Beauty on the skin is Magnolia
Balm..
1
'Advertising Cheats!!!
"It has become common to begin an article, in an elegant, interesting style. "Then run it into some advertisement that we avoid all such, "And simply call attentien to the merits Hop Bitters in as plain, honest terms as possible, tr— "To induce people"To give them one trial, whioh so proves their value that they will never use anything else. "The Remedy so favorably noticed in all the papers,
Religious and pecular, is "Having a large sale, and is supplanting all other medicines. "There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bitters have shown great shrewdness and ability "In compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palplable to every one's observation."
Did She Die & T*''£:
«Not "She lingered and suffered along, pining away all the time for years, "The dootora doing her no good "And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about." "Indeed! Indeed!
I ,c_,
"How thankful we should be for that medicine." A Daughter* Misery. "Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, "From a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, "Under the care of the best physicians, "Who gave her disease various names, "But no relief, "And now she Is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bitten that we had shunned for years before using it."—The Parents* ,.
Father Is Getting Well.
"My daughters say: "How much better father is since he used Hop Bitters." "He is getting well after his long suflbrlng from a disease deelared incurable." "And we are so «lad that he used your Bitter."—A Lady of Utica, N. Y.
WNone genuine without a bunoh of green Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their name.
No. 4x5} OHIO STREET,
TF.RRE HAUTE, INDlJ|N^
(Katabliihed 1878.)
For all Diaeaieoftho Bye, Bar, Hpad,Kttt Throat, Lungt and all Chroni* DtoeaMt Especially CERONIC DI8XASBS of Wommii
ChIldren 'yistuU, Piles, Lu»es,Oweers, Oftgr Habit, Rbsumattsm, Msurslria, Sfcla. Dtuww, EASES of the STOMACH, LPVSB, 8PL8KK,
Of»nito-Urln*rT
By the art of this REMEDY, tUo Stomach and Bo vein speedily regain their strength, and tbe blood
DXBBASXS OP TUB /KXDKXTS
in
purified.
It 1B propounded fry hundreds of the beat doctors to bo tbe ONLY CURS for all kinds oi Kidney Pis-
LTVKR
9LAEDER AND 'TJRINARY
OR9AKS DROPSY GRAVBL IXABXTZfl RBXQ-HT'S
It is purely vegetable, and ouroe When other medicines fiiil.
Hl«t
diaesses of the Kidneys sod Bladder, and all diseaswer the
Bystem. ALL_ WBRTOHS WW
KA8ES: Paralysis. Chorea or St. Vitus Dante, kft* lspsr, Catalepsy, SCROFULA in all its forms, aaA sM those diseases not sneeessfolW treated by tbe "hw Pbysletan'' and Deformities ef all kinds, aaaJostrmsmfefurnished.
ELECTRICITY and BLMClUpBAXMt All eases of Ague, Dumb Agae or OMk IP* sad revet, Fistula, Pues, Ulcers and Ftaniea of tbe Reetusa, Lupus, most Oaaeers, meet BklnJMesases, female Diseases generally, Oraautated UN, Uleers ef the Cornea, Weak sad Sere Hies, OaWSfi of tbe Bye, Bar, Xoee, Threat er Skin 7Beseesa|Uicr SpersssterrhoBa er diseaees peculiar te Mm1 and T—las,
Sere Legs, Old Seres /anywhere upon the bodyi meUra, Aeuts or Chrenie, Qsnorrhma, Bypnlltf Chancroids.
Bright'*
It la prepared expressly for these diseases, sad has never been known to fall. One trial will oonvinoe you. For sale by all druggists.
MMMS
aad Bflltn Oolie, Ite.
OeasaltsUoa free aad iavtted. Address irttb
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and bv a careful application of the fine properties of well-selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many a heavy doctors' bills. It is by the judicious u*e of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendracy to disease. Hundreds of subtle meladlM are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."—[Civil Service Gazette.
Made simply with boiling water or milk. Hold only in half pound tins by grocers, labeled thus: JAMES EPPS
to
CO..
Homoeopathic Chemists, Ioadon,
Eng.
CONSUMPTION
I hare a positive remed tor tbe abore disease br ite us an so as so or staadlnc hare been eared. Indesd. ^ostrengls njrslth In Its «ffie»ey. tbat I will send TwO BOTTLES torttbar «Uha VAL.UABI.ETBKATI8B on thlsdlse4s to say sufferer, CITS express sad R. 0._addyss._
1
P*. r. A. BLOOtru, lit rsarlSfc, Xew Yoct. O S
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS
OUTZ
No Hons* wvj* or Lcxo •ML If route's
I'owr'
*nr-
wr: io
tinw.
'IM': ''cut Ho*"} Cnoi.KBA*
Font?-* Prt*-.""-* *tt 'Uww .1* {•o•:(' «M quantity of
8oM everywhere. DAVID B.
raulc
SB«I cent aM ni*kettie butter Ira ^Fon^/s'powd^r* w(H core *r pn»*ent almost mru*T DtfttAS* to wbirh Horses and Cattle are subject.
Fot'TZ'S PoimrM TCU CIV* 8 ATI STACTIO*.
TOVTZ.
Proprietor.
BAIiTJKOHB.HD.
LAST CHANCE
To obtain Government Lands free-that are suitable fcr general Canning aad stock raising purposes—befarc ffcftV pi laws at per btfis now pending in CongT»
cbofige of
320
IN THE DEVILS LAKE,
TURTLE MOUNTAIN,
And Mouse River Country.
NORTH *PDCC£"*'1£S dakota AuntOffir^
Over 2.000,000 Acre* of R* R. Lands Minnesota at the lew price of flOO per acre and «pw»
Ctat Paso. A«rot,St Pool. Minn-and E. JU Sr. Paw, Hum.
sr..
