ssn. as i a A THE CROAKER, When it ain't a-goin' to blow, It'I1"snow, It'll snow ! When the land with cash is hammin’, There's a money panie eomin'! When the sky is beamin’ bright, There's a hurricane in sight! And you'll know, And you'll know, It was him who told you so! When the erops are growin’ fine, They'll decline, They'll decline! When the weather's kinder sunny, All the heat will melt the honey ! When it's lookin' rather wet, It will drown the cotton yet! And you'll know, And you'll know, It was him who told you so! He's a great one In his way, Every day, Every day! Heo Is aiways prophesying You aro either dead, or dying : And no matter what you do, It's exactly as he knew! And you'll know, Know, know, It was him who told you so! ~F, L. Stanton. THE ABANDONED HOUSE, QR fifteen years 1 passed nearly every day, and times twice a day, through a ’ street situatod the extreme limit of the Faubourg Ciermain, some | little i at | and | well. “Well,” replied the young prinee, ‘‘you can congratulate yourself, my dear sir, in having had such a rare trent. That melody is a song of the snilors of Drontheim, away out in Norway, and the beautiful voice must have been that of Stolberg, with whom we were all in love two years ago, when she made her debut in St. Peters- burg—that Stolberg wns the rival of her countrywoman Nilsson, and who would thave become one of the great- est singers of the century if she had not been suddenly snatohed from art, from the stage, from success of all kinds by her love for Count Basil Lobanof, at that time my © com rade in the Guards, when we were both cornets in the cavalry. Yes, for two years we were without news of Basil. He had given up his commission and left Russia without saying adien to any one. And wo only knew vaguely that ho had hidden himself in Paris with his wife; but we were ignorant of the pince of his retreat till you now revealed it by chance,” “So,” said I, ‘‘the wonderfully gifted artist has renounced everything for a little love affair.” “Bay rather for a great passion!” cried the prince. ‘‘Although very young, Stolberg had had numerous flirtations when she met Lobanof, 1 was there in the green room on the evening when Basil-—who, 1 should tell you, is ashandsome as a god-—was | presented to her, and I saw the diva | pale with emotion, even under her | powder axd paint, Oh, it wns start ly. I proceeded to sing it indifferently back, I beg you, your rash and pre- mature judgment upon him, Besides, he had before his departure an idea which should certainly seem affecting to you. That pavilion, where he has been so happy and so unhappy, be- longs to him, Well, he has closed it forever. DBasil wishes that no living being should ever again penetrate that abode of love and sorrow. You can pass there now, and see the house fall into ruin, and on the day when they put a notice upon it, on is dead,'” I left the prince, and the next day, reproasching myself for my injustice, I went to see the deserted house. The was the end of autnmn), covered the grass of the lawh., Weeds forced their way through the gravelled walk. The work ol destruetion had begun. Months passed ; a year; then anoth- er ; then the duily papers were full of Jackson and his compsnions, whom no news had come. that even to-day the world is ignorant of the fate of thoss brave explorers, Living always in the same vicinity and passing every day before abandoned pavilion, I say it decay, little by little, tors had lashed constantly the plaster of tho facade and covered it with a damp mould. Then the slate roof was damaged by wind and rain storms. Dampuess attacked everything, Liz- ards sunned themselves on the wall; Was the roof thi poor from the baloony h privy bent, he 1 loosened ; of BDpearancs 3 ling, and I thought that she would | Y our young friend that same evening, pell-mell, with the trium- | phant bouquets, after the fifth aot. But immediately he became ae jealous | | earry of | the house became lamentable. As for garden, it had returned juickly to its savage state. The flowers were not cultivated: the rose- bushes were untrimmed, and had onl v leaves and that day yon ean say, ‘Basil Lobanof | shutters ware closed; the dead leaves | of the great plane tree, half-bare (it the great anxiety felt over the fate of | You know | the The rain of two win. | Ti in MULCHIRNG, Mulching of strawberries to retard them is done by placing manure over the ground when it is frozen, and then Care must manure does not cover the crowns of the plants, Leave the covering of straw on quite late in remain scattering straw over it be taken that the the spring. The manure can permanently. New York World, CREAM THAT WILL NOT MAKE BUTTER, It is often the case that the eream of a cow due to ealve in not make the churn and The milk of a cow undergoes a change about this time, and some cows are so af- fected that the oream will not yield Every cow should be dried off, if the milk does not stop paturally, two months before the calf At any rate, good butter can- the milk so near This condition of the milk, of conrse, is at once evident in a sin- | gle cow, but doubtless there are cows but | feed that mibe scant or poor, and | of the milk two or three butter, months will but foams in rapidly becomes very sour. any butter. is due. not be calving. made from in herds in the same condition, are not detected. It shows how need- | di he whole apple. Still | H wnt in nitrogen, and ccount to be literally dairy cows with er than th apples are ought on 1 supplemendor and good II To obtain the best re- | n sults fiom @ing them to cows, the | early sortjuld be fed by iteelf, | Ii sour ones gs quantity than sweet | ones, fed fully ripe, after the | night's milg not exceed to six quarts to a feed. ~Americugriculturist, RYE A PASTURE CROP, oO | hb that most of in what is called “the West,” didpsufficiently appreciate the value org as a late fall and spring pass crop, writes E. i} Where conns are at sll favorable | i it furnishes pstonishing quantity of | , rich, sucenlj grazing just at a time | 4 of year what is most relished and | most needed all kinds of farm ani- mals, evengeluding poultry. It pieces out ‘grest advantage other while espedly agreeable to all the Ld six fect seven inches in height. I have baed for twenty-five years | fort for good. ' | this kindly sympathy is shown in a letter | from Mr. Enoch L. Hanscom, fshool 1 carly | Marshfl D Bays: yi * | state, Coburn ing New York Tribune. | bad knee and rh Lockjaw From Chloroform, A Norwich (Conn.) blacksmith, act- ing under the advice of a loeal veter- inary surgeon, fractory horse chloroformed a To in order to shoe him. 16 horse yielded reluctantly to the fluence of the anmethetic, but was finally brought completely under ite power, and the shoeing process was sccomplished with great ease. days later the horse be then was attacked with A few gon to droop, lockjaw and ed in a very short time. Chicago erald. ili se— A thant Cattle Dealer, Will Brown, a young cattle dealer wheat shofiran, oil cakes, clover | of Carter County, Kentucky, is only but measures His brother, who is, however, the { the children, ineteen years of age, ttle ldest but the smallest o stands mod estly at six feet two inches. The quantity should | — Atlanta Constitution. ———————— —— “omebody's Good. To make our own troubles the means of elping the troubles of others is a noble ef- A well {llustrated instance of gent, eid, Me,, an old Union Soldier, He “It may do somebody some good to { am a man of 60 and when 40 bad a eumatism set in. 1 was yd very bad most of the and put it on I am now ame three years al ! ims, I got Bt, Jacobs Ol hree times and it made a cure, n good health.” The Thames | ours 40,000,000 cuble feet of water into the sea every hour. Dr. Kilmer's Swaxyp-HooTr cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles Pamphlet and Consultation free, ¥ *w 3 hy { Laboratory Binghamton, N. ¥. } } y hed | #4 th . ful it is that a striet watch should be | stock, it wigake poorly nourished The wealth of the United States is est) kept on each of the cows in s& herd, New York Times, BLOW OR FAST DRYING, | cows practidy double their milk in quantity anguality. In fact, I have never seen ‘Kansas farmer so well { fixed that awd piece of rye pasture mated at 8460,475,000,000. Deafness Cannot be Onred by loea! applications, as they cannot reach the dlseased portion of the ear. There is only one { 0s n Mussulman—yes, jealous of the | very public when she sang. He was always there in the front seats of the | e Deafness, and that is by © nistitu. 1 Deafness is caused bY an in. ucous lining of the y this tube gets in. Te branches; the geraniui were dead. The grass had long disappeared under the dead h ¥, a1 d St. ending in of those magnificent boulevards which | ’ v4 hire : 33 a wasn't a ggine bonanza to him. one It makes a great difference in the | gs x There | , sen fodder whether Chere has wer b > it 1s cut s v . 8 CUE | the central fest when it alue of corn uring war when radiate about Invalides, cue tare Parisian by-ways where there is pot a single shop. I do notknow a more tranquil spot. Several gardens, enclosed in long low walls overhung | shed over the deserted | 4 { ome but Basil with branches, street in May the delicate odor of lilacs; inJune, the heavier perfume | of elderflowers and necacias, Among these abode even | pore isolated than the others. When | the porte cochere opened to admit al landau or coupe, the pedestrian (who beard the echo of his steps on the sidewalk) saw only a graveled road, bordered with a hedge which turned abruptly toward a house hidden amid the verdure. It would have been dif- ficult to find a corner more secluded. The place contained neither gardener's house nor porter’s lodge—uothing but that nest in the foliage. The pavilion was inhabited, The garden, gay with flowers, always care- _ fully attended to, was a proof of that. In winter, the smcke irom the chim- neys rose to the gray sky, and in the evening 8 light shone dimly behind the thick curtains, always closely drawn. Beveral times I saw going or coming through the lattice-door an old ser- vant in sombre livery, and with a cir- | cumspect, even suspicions, air. Evi- | dently I should gain nothing by inter- | rogating him. Besides, what right | had I to trouble with vain curiosity | the unknown host or hosts of the closed house? I respected their secret, but the snigmatioal dwelling continned to ex- e¢rcise for me its singular attraction. was one One July night, a stifling night, an- | der a dark, heavy sky, I came home | about eleven o'clock, and, accord- | ing to my uneual habit, I] mechanically turned my steps so as to pass before the mysterious pavilion. The little street, lighted | pnly by three gas jets far apart, which | flickered in the heated air, was abso- | Intely deserted. Not a leaf stirred on the trees in the garden. All nature | was dumb in the quiet which precedes | » storm. i I wasin front of the pavilion, when | some notes were struck on a piano | within and echoed in the motionless | air. I noticed with surprise that, | doubtless because of the heat, two of | the windows were partly open, thongh not enough for one to see the interior of the apartment. Suddenly a wornan’s voice, a soprano of wonderful sweet ness and power, burst forth upon the silence of the night. She sang a short melody, of strange rhythm and the most touching melan- choly, in which I divined instinctively 8 popular air, one of those flowers of primitive music which are never gath- ered in the gardens raked by profes- sional maestri. Yes, it certainly was a folk song, but of what country? I did not recognize the tongue in which the words were written, but I felt there the plaintive inepiration, and fancied that I detected in them the sad spirit of the North. The air was thrilling, the voice sublime. It hard- ly lasted two minutes, but I never felt in all my life such a deep musical sen- sation, and long after the song had died away, I folt still vibrating within me the final melodious note, sharp, penetrating, sad, like a long ery of pain. I remained there for a long time in the hope of hearing that de- licious voice again, but suddenly a storm burst upon the city. The wind shook the trees. I felt a large drop of rain on my hand. 1 was’ obliged to make all haste to get home, Some days afterward I was in the Casino at Dieppe with some jolly eom- panions, and took part in an anime ted discussion upon musie, I praised popular airs, which spring spontane- ously from ar innocent sentiment. In aid of my theory, I related my adven- Sure. ““What do you think of this air?” I asked Prince Khaloff, a young Rus- pian with whom I was very intimate, cle 8 It was | of those very | ! ataca stage, | ment. | then they have hidden then | over it. | Hercules, and they say poor Stolberg | that night of the storm. Well, it will | atrical paper the | “Wo announce with sorrow the death orchestra, and at each burst of ap- | plause he turned abruptly, and cast a sombre over the | That look secmeod to la desire to slap the sudience in the face. Everything went wrong. Even when the Czar was pres t, the prima donna had eyes for no look house. expros te) whole 5 1y es, | That easused trouble behind the scenes, and the poor girl decided to leave the She did so at the end of three months, at the close of her He married her- and since selves in Paris, in the retreat you dis- covered. They must be dead in love. But I will wager that Dasil will get He is built like the Farnese which is consumptive. They pretend even that it is disease which gives her voice its wonderful power and extraordi- nary sweetness and pathos. Her gift is the result of disease, like the pearl All the same, no matter how much in love with Lobanof the poor go is, she Will die Of WeArinoss In THAT eage In which he keeps her. Then she must sing very rarely, since in the many times you have passed before their house yon have heard her but once, end badly.” The conversation turned to other things, and the next day I left Dieppe to go with some friendsto Lower Nor- | mandy. 1 had only there ten days when I read accidentally in a the- following been notice ; of Mlle. Ida Stolberg, the Swedish | cantatrice, who shone so briefly and | brilliantly on the stage in Germany | and Russia, and who renounced her | lyrical eareer in the midst of her suc cess and has been living quietly in Paris for two years past. She died of pulmonary consumption.” I had never seen Stolberg. Once only had I heard that incomparable voice. Btill, the reading of this com- monplace notice, which announced to me the fulfilment of Prince Khalofl's dismal prophecy, broke my heart. I knew now the whole mystery of the closed house, It was there that the poor woman had languished and been extinguished, deeply in love, no doubt, but stifled also by the captivity to which she was condemned by the jealousy of her husband. No doubt, algo, sho was full of regrets for the former triumphs of her abandoned art. The fate of Stolberg seemed so sad to me that I fairly hated the man who had sacrificed her whole life. He seemed to me a fop, an egotist, a brute. I was certain that he would soon console himself for the loas of his wife, that he would soon forget the poor dead woman, and that, un- worthy of the love which he had in- spired, he would also be incapable of grief or fidelity. On my return to Paris, one of the first persons I met on the Boulevard was Prince Khaloff. 1told him how much I had been moved at the news of the singer's death, and 1 could not hide from him tho instinctive antipathy which I felt toward Lobanof, “Behold, you people of imagina. tion!" cried the prince. ‘Youn were charmed for an instant by this wo- man's voloe, and you feel a posthn- mons love for her, and a retrospective jealousy of my poor friend. I own to you that I have always thought Basil a more sensual than sensible man, more passionate than tender; but I have seen him sinoe poor Ida's death, snd he is prey, I' assure you, to the most horrible and nincere despair. When I uxpressed my sympathy to him, he cast himself in my arms, and ropeated to me, ns he wopt on my shoulder, that ke could live no longer. And it was not pretence. He at once to Senognl, to join the Jackson mission, » i of explorers, who will bury emselves, probably for- ever, in frightful Africa. That is not common, you will own. It is to be feared that fever or cholera, or a shot from the gun of a savage, will end the “1 shall never forget it,” I said warm- poor boy's life and sorrows. Take stalks of the weeds were y the butterfli ing grew there but thistl pale poppy. It was a glo Years rolle possible to hope the high dained even by Jackson party. | trepad sang always to Basil |} pioneers hanger and tl iesert or ages, and Count jead with them, faithful be re. The absolutely into rains, been [ ¥ i} deserted which was near the house, and , Ab foliage was no longer kept in check by trimming, had thrust one ime mense branches through the window, I'he shutters had fallen off, and the tree had pushed its way into the in- tarior of the disembowelled house. There might be mushrooms within and even grass growing on the floor of the salon. Fach time 1 passed be- fore the old ruin which had come to to the last stages of decay, I thought, ¥ fh, oe . Hi (8 rd a ved 80. desth, the heirs no doubt wodld have caused steps to be taken at once for its restoration. They would have broken it open brutally, and let in the garish light of day, to desecrate those hal- sociations of love and { has done well to disap- ] gestrove lowed « Basil Lobano pear, and nature slowly this old love-nest, aud keeps 1t from profanation.” The other day saw t the branches of the through the roof, and there were lit- tle trees growing in the rocks. Then I met Prince Khaloff, who had not been in France for a dozen years, We walked and talked together, and i told him about the house, its slow destruction, and thoughts it suggested. The burst into laughter, “Decidedly, my dear fello will never be anything but poet jasil is married again, the father of hreo children, and holds the office of First Secretary to the Russian Ambas- sador at Rome.’ “The Count Lobanof is I eried, stupefied. “On my last visit to Rome he was as well ns you or Lr” “He did not go with the Jackson party? Ob, the perfidions man!” 1 cried, furious at my wasted sympathy. “I should have suspected him. scoms that he forgot his dead love at once.” “Oh no,” replied the prince. ““Bagil is not so guilty as that. Wild with grief after her death, he would, for good or bad go with the party, and he set out for Senegam- bia, But on the sixth day of their march he fell seriously ill and was taken to St. Louis by a caravan, in the greatest agony. There he re- covered-—but it was not his fault. His friends profited by his weaknoss and lack of energy to carry him bask to Earope, and since then, after waiting a long time, he has consoled himself,” “But then the deserted house? What does that comedy signify?” asked I, in a bad humor, “How severe you are, my dear!" re- plied the amiable Russian, “It is not a comedy, but it proves on the econ- trary, that the count is a man of honor. What did he promise? That as long as he lived no one should go under the roof which had sheltered his love, And he has kept his word, though it has cost him a great deal. Besides, who knows if he does not always mourn his delightful singer, and regret bitterly tho evenings passed in that closed house, listening to the divinely sad musio of that voice which eaused him so mach happiness, so much sorrow? All that I oan tell you,” added the prince with an ironical smile, ‘is that with a large fortune, a beautiful family, and a home 1a the Eternal City, a despniring love twelve years old ought to be endurable!”—Translated for Romance. BOTTOW, inulv lovingiy He rain again; great tree came abandoned the priuce 11 mic ws you a EP Cloves grow wild in the Moluoons. 0 | If they had heard of the count's | 1 Some , dry weather, 1 11 3 | eure rapidly, or later, when rains Te Ye FR. Old THA it dry out moreslowly. KInoist # Foye in nite r bec They are dry, tasteless, and the wiki not the partly. ninge! the dried winter, 1 Y stalk Mach at the begin is said about waste © in the silo. There is such waste, but it Is trivial compared with the waste £ 4 makes the nutrition more available by partly cooking the LCultivaior COLIC IX NOREES. Irregular feeding in she matter of hours, long fasts and too great quan- tity given at long quent causes of the York We Irregular work without 3 inilivence intervals colic, are BAYS Now is F Oneo 8 y f WesE Is to than likely "Ty 5 Tht } 2 ¥ nore miscalel tance every day. to work at intervals kept i adition, be fed bs the hard cannot be Horses ought to ! BS ng: they should have ours to consume ning feed before to work, stable and digest the taken out and if nat returned to the the next feed is due, should be provided with nose bags, Changes of food be intro- Horse LL may be fod with impunity on what will make them seriously ill if care is not to being when should duced gradually taken make the change gradually. green food, when it first comes in, and is young and succulent, often causes gripes, because fed too largely to the exclusion of the accustomed dry material. If a small quantity is cut with the hay chaff to begin with, the horse is less greedy about it when a larger quantity is allowed, and the digestive organs as gradually become accustomed to the change. Attention | to the prevention of colic is much bet- It | ter than the possession of a recipe for its cure, for some day the recipe misses fire, and death wins the match. Apart | from this, an attack successfully dealt with still means loss of service for time—very often at a busy period. FEEDING APPLES TO COWA, There has long been a practioal opinion among farmers that while sweet apples might be fed to cows with satisfactory results, sour apples were very injurious for them; bat this opinion has been founded upon very slight actual knowledge of the real feeding value of apples, At the Vermont station apple pomace, en- silaged, and used supplementary to and in part as a substitute for corn ensilage, wae found to be relished by cows, and the results of four teste found it to be about equivalent in feeding value to corn ensilage. At the Massachusetts station Dr. Goessmann found apples to contain about eighty per cent. of moisture, the apples hav- ing been gathered October 6th. The {farther advanced apples are towards maturity the more sugar is found in them, and their value depends largel upon the amount of dry matter whie they contain. Laboratory tests show that the feeding value of apples is some- what higher than that of an equal weight of Sarnipe Apple pomace it ho be equal to sugar beets, it be- ing a somewhat mngular chemical fact that the pomnee is richer in ni ne ous matter thaa the apple from which it has been produced, and the feed: ing value of pomace is assumed to be, pound for pound, one-third high- waste 1» ent them readily, as they dol nutrition by fermentation | cornstalks by slow drying. The silo | food. — Boston | feo- | a twenty mile | be | A horse put ] night and early in the | at least | Thus, | that sort wamore of a co yssessor thygt will likely be within next nirgponths, Hence I would 0 ever farmer who Te MM the . well and go yl. : can't seare the seed readily, heat inst ¢ vou would rye; if it is } ] 3 sle, that nd figure 1f sour t a plump high gre ie arti will cut bu a small . | If of small « shrunken berry I would not sow Jes than five pecks to the acre; if plump a bushel and » half would be nae too much ; atall events, use plenty and don't be afraid of | having too many acres I haven't | discovered anything that was a*botter | regulator ‘or the pigs, the colts, the | calves, the cows or the old blind mare | than a good bite of green rye or whest. 1 calient ia years of greatest abuhdARes n. ye Bhan thar food is scarce or poor, it is simply indis- | pensable—really a benefaction. Bow {it with a drill or broadeast as you think best, but do a good job, as if you desired success and meant to de- | serve it. N $1! FARM AXD GARDEN XOTREF, A little vaseline and earbolie acid | applied to parts of the horse that he t« with tail or head will such him much relief by keeping flies cannot give AWAY. Producers who bave formerly de- pended on ensilage may be obliged to | at least partially substitute grain to make their winter dairying for 1804 and 1835 profitable, Professor Roberts, of Cornell, says the great difficulty with farming is too much or too little moisture, and too little enltivation, thus indicating the necessity of drainage. Before storing articles in the cellar | take a day for the purpose, use a peck | or more of sulphur, if necessary, and | fumigate it two or three times, in order | to purify the walls, floors, ceilings and bins A. W. Pope, Wellesley, Mass., says of alfalfa: It goes down further and | comes up faster than common clover. | The quality of the hay is good, but it is hard to cure. 1 get three crops the year following the planting. Foals should be taught to eat grain while yet with the mares, and then the weaning process is not so likely to check their growth. Feed any spare milk to the weanings until they get well started on regular rations of grain and hay. Dairymen should wake up to the fact that it is quite as easy, at a well-man- aged creamery, to make good butter in winter as in sammer. When they realize this we shall not see so many idle establishments just at the time when they should be running at their fullest capacity. It is not only unprofitable but erael to let milch cows wander about in grassless fields under a merciless sun, Under such conditions keep them in a small, shady enclosure if you have one, and there feed them their forage and see that they have plenty of cool, pure water at regular intervals. Select a bull from a good dairy fawnily, and then breed the very best of your cows, {eed the resulting young- sters well, and train them so that they oan be easily handled when you are ready to put them in the dairy. This feeding and training is a necessary supplement to the breeding, in order to make a perfect dairy animal Cold weather shuts off the egg su ply among poultry keepers who do not understand their business, and then they ery that there is no profit in fowls. Bat the wise man makes his houses warm and snug, feeds li Deafness is the rosuit, mation oan be taken of stored to its normal of destroyed forever; caused by eatarrh, wh famed condition of ti We wil ’1 % (ORT conse of Den wr 3 ’ not b ol by Hall kh Cur Send for p free. ¥. J. Caexey & Co. Toledo, o.f ragiista, 70 circular Bold by When Nature eels assistance it may be best to rénfler it Lut one should remember 10 use even promptly, " he & vert remedies onl hen needed. the most perfect Tex * vr A The best and most simple ar 4 gentle remedy is rup of afactured by the Call. the Sy fornia Fig Syrup Co. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Fj y for children teething, softens the gums, recuces tnflamimas. fon, aliays pain, cures wind colic. 5c. 8 bottle Capex Colds and Bronchitis with Hale's oney of Horehound and Tar Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier, ves freshness and clearness to the compieX- on aud cures constipation. 35 cts. 50 ote. SL. | If afMicted with soree | son's Eye-water. Druge Excelled by None “ For some years 1 o lE beeti a severe yes use Dr. lsanc Thom, ists sell at 28¢c pet hotiie na, N Remember, Sarsa~ Hood's Be Sure to get Hood's Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. Bcenta. For the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Biadder, Nervous Diseases, Loss of Appetite, Headacha, Constipation, Oostiveness, Indigestion, Billousuess, Pever, inflammation of the Bowels, Pil and all derangements of the Internal Viscers. Purely vegetzb o, containing nomercoury, minerals or deleterious arugs. OBSERVE the following symptoins resulting from Disease of the Digestive Organs: Constipation, Teward Plies, Fullness of the Blood fn the Mead, Acidity of the | Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Pall | noms of Weight In the Stomach, Sour Eructations, | Sinking or Finttering of the Heart, Choking or Ruf. | tocating Sensations whea in & ring posture, Dim | ness of Vision, Dizziness on rising suddenly, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Pever and Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of the | Bkin and Eyes, Paln tn the Side, Chest, Limbs and | #mdden Flushes of Heat, Burning ia the Flesh. Afew doses of RADWAY'™ PILLS wil iree the system of all the above named disorders, Price 25 ota, por box. Bold by all droggists, ERADWAY && ©0., NEW YORK. WALTER BAIER & G0. The Largest Manufacturers of. PURE, HICH CRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES £3, On Wis Continent, have reosived SPECIAL AND HIGHEST" AWARDS on all their Goods at the CALIFORNIA and a variety of food, com the fowls to take exercise and Lis reward in a bountiful harvest of emis which sell at good prices, :
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