J E1BGIACM tight on the wostom hill I th Of lirison glory of inn tot flinging a mantle of lira oror the f itrlh and air. Bd M the Wood of the brave that flows In the torrlble orlsot Leading to victory'! arown, or to dofrit and despair ! Light on ydur galAen tnwses, flashing' and gleaming and bnrnlng) Light In your Mttro ty'Mi shining lft iUtpw doe. plto; tight on the woods and tho waTor, and light on the river mist, turning It'i chill into warmth. all round, ever and every where light I Ah I but within our heart, 'your and mine,) my dar ling, my own lore I Parting to meet on earth, never, It may be, again Rot on gleam of the glory Aat tblnea around us la known! love I All li dark at the grave, shadowed and watted with pain. One hut klie I Mow take this rase t have plucked for your boeom Fraught with a fragranoe oa aWoet, love I aa your love is for me i Not a pale, fragile bud, but a full-blown, crimson-dyed bloeeom Glowing and bright, aa my heart's wild adoration may be I Bo If I come not When years shall have fled till your cheek shall be faded. Rot till your eyeshall be dim with tears that have fallen in vain. Hot till the gold locks be gray, and the little feet weary and jaded. Treading a desolate path darkened with tempest and rain ! When you shall take forth the rose, end look at it scentless and withered, Murmuring words like these t " Roo, let the world say its say, We know him net falso, but dead ; and know when our Father has gathered Itis harvest In, we shall meet In the light of a change' less day." -f Ferguton in the Dark Blue. Sixteen Months in a Mad House. According to a morning paper a once prominent banker ot tnis city yesterday inade his appearance after sixteen months' absence, during which time he has been confined in the Bloomingdale .Lunatic Asylum, though to all appear ances, and according to the admission of the keepers, he is questionably sane, lie was arrested last year while sitting at his breakfast table, and was taken, with out a word of explanation, to the above place. Although subjected to no special indignity, ho says that the treatment of the insane by the keepers is simply re volting, lie kept a minute diary of all that occurred during his incarceration, and has given it to his lawyer, John D. Townsend, who will make it the basis of an affidavit on which to begin pro ccedings in behalf of the gentleman named and three ladies who will be brought before the court on a writ of habeas corpus next week, lho amda- vits of all these persons, and a former keeper at the Asylum, will also be pre sented to the Urand J ury lor the pur pose of securing an investigation into the management ot the institution. Mr. Townsend, in conversation yesterday with a reporter, stated that the gentle man just released had not buen dis charged on habeas corpus, for as soon as it became known at the Asylum that proceedings were to be taken in court. word was sent that the prisoner was suf ficiently recovered, and had been released, Mr. Townsend said he had instructed his client not to accept voluntary release for the reason that to avoid public inquiry the (Superintendent discharges those for whom habeases are issued in order to make return of " not in custody " to the writ. In three instances, he said, in which he had Bued out writs, premature dismissals by the Superintendent had prevented publicity being given to re volting cases of the incarceration of the sane persons without even the form of law. Mr. Townsend mentioned the cases of , aa olderly lady from New Jersey, com mitted by her son, who made no opposi tion to her release; and another of a merchant, who, after many months' con finement, was dismissed before the habeas could be served, and who is nw doing business in the city and as sane as any other merchant in it. The gentleman who was dismissed yes terday was never treated medically dur ing his entire imprisonment, and his manner and general intelligence prohibit the belief that bo is of unsound mind. He does not yet know by whom he was incarcerated or on whose medical certi ficate, but his lawyer visited the Asylum at a late hour yesterday to examine the papers in his case, and those of the three ladies alluded to, in whom the gentle man released takes sympathetic interest, and who are declared by him to be sane. N. Y. Mail. An Extraordinary Feat. The North China News tells the follow ing: An extraordinary feat has been per formed by a Buddhist priest, with the View of raising money to build a temple at Soochow, whence the man has come on a begging expedition.- He found people indifferent to his holy object, and very unwilling to part with their dol lars. With a devotion more than worthy of the cause, h .: resolved to stir up some Interest and cause money to flow in by an extraordinary expedient. He an nounced among the Chinese that he would allow himself to be locked up in a wooden box for seven days, during which period he would remain in an up right position, and without food or sleep. On Wednesday af ternoon he was accord ingly placed in a cage about two and a half feet wide and live and a half feet high just sufficiently large to admit him standing upright. The bottom of the cage was studded with nails so that his feet should have space only between ' the nails sufficient for them to rest on, and a couple of slight bars in front formed a rest for his arms. The native public were invited to prove the genuine character of the mortification by locking the good man in themselves if they pleased, and about thirty peeple came with locks of different kinds and secured the door as many times over. The cage was a close one, with a few open bars near the bottom for the admission ot air. It was placed in a ioss-room in Hoopeh Koad, passing in and out of whlbh a crowd of people might be seen day and night, during the seven days, religious exercises being engaged in the while by the priests. Th devotee eDdured his painful incar ceration with remarkable fortitude, the only relief afforded him being an occa tsional glass of water, and he emerged looking to all appearance little the worse. On examination, his pulse was found to beat Bixty-four. and was steady, while his skin was moist, though hot. After his release, the cage was broken up and sold piecemeal to the Chinese, every nail bringing more than its weight in silver. The desired result of calling forth liberal Buoscripuons was aiso attained. Fifty years ago tomatoes were called love appies, ana considered poisonous. The Cannes of Bad Breath. t)r. Dio Lewis contributes the follow. ing to Home and Health : Most persons think that a bad breath oounes irom the stomach j that the stomach, being out of order, sends up an impure something which escapes in the breath. Ihis is impossible. A bad breath never comes from the stomach. Nothing ever comes upward except in vomiting and eructations of wind. 'ihere u no open passage through which an odor can rise to the mouth. The passage into the stomach from above is always perfectly closed, except at the moment- when there is no chance for an odor to escape from the stomach upward. The oesophagus, or meat-pipe, closes upon the thing going down, and grasps it all the way, from the upper to the lower end. ror example, a whole chest nut passes down the oesophagus. The moment it enters the upper end of the passage, the walls of the passage grasp the nut, and squoeze it from above so tight as to force it down. The part of the canal immediately above the chest nut all the way down is so tightly olosed upon the nut, that the squeezing presses it on until it is forced into the stomach. Whenever there is nothing in the pas sage it remains shut; the sides are pressed together ; nothing, whatever, can escape from the stomach up through it. And even in vomiting, it is very difficult to force even solid matter up ward. In most persons jt requires a tremendous effort to get anything up. And yet, strange to say, most persons imagine the passage to be an open pipe through which bad odors may constant ly pass up, and escape in the breath. There are three sources of bad breath, the mouth, the nose, and the lungs ; of twenty cases of bad breath, 1 estimated that fifteen came from the mouth, one from the nose, and four from the lungs. As generally, when the mouth is a fault the lungs contribute something to the odor, the above definite classification is probably too precise ; but I think it a close approximation to the truth. THE Motjtit. I need hardly argue that rotten teeth and diseased gums may produce a bad breath. I have but rarely met a cae in which the teeth were white and the gums healthy. In every case ot bad breath the mouth is to be suspected and examined. In a ma jority of cases, you smell nothing while the patient keeps his mouth shut, and breathes through his nose ; but as soon as he begins to speak, then it comes. That man must go at onco to the den tist. He is the doctr for tho mouth. He will remove every cause of offense from that cavity. The Nose. The various forms of ca tarrh are more or less productive ot bad odors. Ozena, which is the worst form of catarrh, produces a peculiar and sick ening odor. The cure of this malady is somewhat difficult, but the odor arising from it can be mitigated by a thorough cleans ing of the nose with water, or soap and water, several times a day. But a cure should be sought, and let it not be sought at the hands of one of the ad vertising catarrh quacks. The Ltjxgs. A man eats and drinks, say five pounds in a day. Now, unless he is gaining weight, he must part with five pounds. If we place on the scales all that comes from his bowels and blad der, we shall find it weighs, say, one Eound and a half. Three pounds and a alt have left the body in some other way or other ways. These other ways are the skin and lungs. Joy iar tne larger part should escape through the skin. Sometimes the millions of holes the skin, through which this worn- out, effete matter should escape, become in part closed, from lack of bathing and perspiration ; and this effete matter can not escape Ireely in that way. nut the poisonous stuff must be gotten rid of in seme way. Now the lungs come in to supplement the skin. To a certain ex tent, the lungs and skin are ever ready to substitute" for each other. If the lungs, for any reason, leave a small part of their duty undone, the skin at once steps in to assist. If the skin fails to accomplish its whole task ot the work f excretion, the lungs are ever ready to assist in working on the impurities. But, whenever the lungs are obliged to perform this extra service, they cannot do it as well as the skin. They are obliged to work off impurities which do not belong to their department, and so they take on a morbid condition, and the excretions are so changed in charac ter as to become offensive. Three persons out of every four whose bad breath comes from the lungs, can cure themsolves, or greatly mitigate the nuisance, by washing themselves all over with Btrng soap and water, and follow ing this by the vigorous use of rough towels every day for a month, and exer- cissng at least once a day, till there is free perspiration. By this time, the im purities which should escape through the skin have free escape in their natural course, and the lungs return to their own proper work, and the disagreeable odor disappears. In a small proportion ot the cases in which bad breath comes from the lungs, the difficulty is a foul conditio:-, of the svstem. not dependent upon the condi tion of the (kin. In such cases, the whole svstem must be cleansed before the bud breath can be removed. Singular Use of a Newspaper. The advantages of newspapers are every day developed, and new and un susDected uses for them are discovered. Witness what betel a gentleman ma nis wife recently in the Holy Land. W hile thev were travelling toward Jerusalem they were beset by bandits, and robbed not only ot tneir money ana oaggage, but even of the clothes in which they were standing, or rather kneebng, for mercy. What were they to do '( If they had been going to the Gardea of Eden it weuld have been all well enough ; but how were they to enter the ancient city of the Lord in a state of primitive nud ity ' In this horrible emergency they begged back from the plunderers a copy of the London Times. Was there ever such lack before? For they received not only the usual copy of the great journal, but it so Happened mat mere was a supplement, which was just the thing for the lady I Thus clothed with advertisements, leading articles, foreign correspondence, the money market, and the parliamentary debates, they entered Jerusalem panoplied against all fierce Mussulmans for these religionists, it will be remembered, respect every inch of paper, sinoe baply the name ot uoa may be written thereon. Systematic amber mining is to be commenced on the Prussian peninsula of Samland, which extends into the Baltic Sea, northwest of the city of Kon igsberg. A blue clay, in which amber deposits are believed to be quite numer ous, underlies this enure district. AGRICULTURAL. How Best To Utiliza Liquid Ma nure. The Boston Journal of Chemistry tells us in this wise : " How strangely we overlook the value of the liquid excrement of our animals I A cow, under ordinary feeding, furnishes in a year 20,000 pounds of solid excrement, and about B.uuu pounds of liquid, The comparative money value of the two is but slightly in favor of the solid. Ibis statement has been vennod as truth, over and over again. The urine of herbivorous animals contains nearly all the secretions of the body which are capable of producing the rich nitrogen ous compounds so essential as foroing or leaf-forming agents in the growth of plants. The solid holds the phosphoric acid,the lime and magnesia which go into the seeds principally ; but the liquid, holding nitrogen, potash, and soda, is needed lor forming tho stalk and leaves. The two forms of plant nutriment should never be separated or allowed to be wasted by neglect. The farmer who saves all the urine of his animals dou bles his manural resources every year. Good seasoned peat is of immense ser vice to farmers, when used as an ab sorbent, and the stalls of animals should be constructed so as to admit a wide passage in the rear, with a generous passage room for peat, to be used daily with the excrement." But we think there are very few of us who overlook the value of liquid ma nure, even when we see it running away before our eyes. The trouble is not that we under-estimate its value, but that it calls for labor so often at a time when we have no labor to attend to it. Suppose, for instance, we have a dry time in May, and we conclude to get a liquid manure cart, and, pumping the vehicle full, draw it over the parched grass ground. We dicide to do it ; but then come in the demands of corn-planting time, when every scrap of labor we can command has to be called in to get the work done. There is no doubt it would pay if it could be done ; but so does the corn crop pay ; and what we have to do regularly when the season comes as corn-planting time comes will always enlist our attention before the exceptional jobs, however profitable they seem to be. There may be no doubt but that, pound lor pound, liquid is ot more benefit to a plant than solid. But solid manure will always have this advan tage, that it will keep till we are ready to use it ; while we must be ready when ever the liquid manure cistern is full. In winter, or in slack periods when our time is worth but a dollar or so a day to us, we can fill in the time by hauling ' y a I manure J but when tho liquid tank is lull we must go 10 worn as n, luuugu time be worth ten to us for other pur poses. x et, we tuinK, with a little thought ful arrangement, we might do more than we do with liquid manure. Where it can be had in any quantity it may be led, as recently remarked, down hill by its own weight alone to whore it can useu xeruiize tne son. 1 There may be even many instances where it might be hauled on to grass ground with benefit. But perhaps one of the best means of utilizing it would be by having at command, somewhere under cover, a large quantity of dry clay or earth, which from time to time may be put into position to aosorb the liquid manure. It has been asserted that dry earth so employed becomes an excellent fertilizer that one load of this is worth two of stable manure. It ought to be richer than common ma nure to make it worth as much, as there is much more labor through so many handlings. In fact it seems to us in all these questions there is not enough thought given to this one of labor. It is labor as much as essence that regulates value. Experiments in Ditches on Wet Land. The New England Farmer cm- tains the following correspondence : " Some thirty years ago an old larm came into my possession, upon wnicu was what was called a meadow. It lies at the foot of throe slopes, and it conse quently gets the wash from them all. A majority of the soil has a " prairie" look very fine and dark. There is but a small portion of it that can be called muck. Two brooks came down trom the upland and united near the upper end, and formed one of the finest trout brooks in the neighborhood. Numerous springs came in from the upland, and with the brooks, kept one-half of the meadow so wet that a team could not pass over it. "The crop was a vile mass 01 nat grass, weeds, ferns and rushes, not to mention the. Indian poke that is ever present in I looked upon the mead ow in its then condition, as a nuisance. The crop when in tho barn was no less 80i . " The first thine was to dispose of the trout brook. An open ditch was made in the centre : but lo and behold 1 In O -a. thnsnrino- down came the water from the hills, and down went cart-loads of rich alluvial soil to the pastures ot my ne.izhbors below. That would not do, go a channel was cut along one side, in the edge of the upland, into which the water wag turned, and there it now runs. JJi'iuns were opened winy ieei apart, and forty rods in length, through the meadow, and Tut as low as they could be and have the water run off below. They are from two to three feet deep. Tho consequence is, I now har vest as many leads ol good hay as 1 us. Q to have of ferns and bulrushes. - The material first used for the drains was stone from the upland. This mate- rial was good and abundant ; but there were two objections to drains thus made. First, there were soft places and the stones were liable to get out of place. Second, there was a great deal of work in it " The next resort was to wood. After some study and a little experimenting, I selected smooth, thick hemlock slabs from peeled logs, from piles of four foot slabs at the mill. These were placed in the ditch, rounding sides together, the npper edges meeting and resting to gether. Between the slabs and the bank were placed stones, usually two to each slab, which held them in place. The stones should be bo large that they will not drop to the bottom of the slab. Upon the stones were placed all the sticks that were taken out when open iner the ditch : and often I cut small poles to throw in. Upon the whole was narlrul a thick laver of brush from pas- ture spruces and hemlock, and upon this was scraped the Boil, with a small ox scraper, xv win no xretKiuv swu iua, there are three drains in each ditch, one between the slabs and one on either side. This kind of drain has not yet failed me. " To try the experiment, i filled one I..,.! i i .niinii-wmm i mmwi ditch with brush, but it was soon crushed down and useless. "Another method was to place stones at the sides of the ditch, which would reach a little more than half wav across and about throe feet apart, arm cover with poles and then with brush. The stones support the poles and the water finds its way among them and passes off. The bottom should be hard for this kind of drain. It is cheap and quickly made and lasts welL This experiment of draining has given me more satisfac tion than any other operations of my farm life." Billings Wit and Wisdom. Kind Fortune, teach thi servant hu mility, but let no sneak of an upstart outshine him in things that are stylish. Giv unto me morality copious ; and may mi shirt kollars be stiffer than china and whiter than snowballs in winter. Smile, thou goddess dear, at mi inus tash, and may mi wisdom be grase even like unto Solaman's. Grant that i may a pattern be, worthy of all imitashun, and that i able may be tew wear a boot number 5 on these number 10 feet ov mine. Fill up mi cup tew the brim's very top with honor and honesty, and make mi neckties mine enemies tew smite with sorrow and confushion. Take away from mo all vanity, but grant that mi Sunday panterloons may tit me even az korn fitteth the kob. Remove far from me, O gentle For tune I all pride and vain ostentashun, but grant that mi name amung wimmen may ever be spoken in acksents'of glad ness. Make mi heart tew glisten with char ity, but teach mi taylor and shumaker how tew wait for their munny and be happy. Let mi heart feast on the truth, but smile thou upon mi kork leg and peri- wig nobby. all crlnfinnv V.,it. . ... m . . .. I preserve mi appetite tor toast with, a quail on it in all its original butv. Teach me tew shun all decepshun.but help me tew marry a big pile at last, making sum maiden or young widdo happy. Take away from mi heart all envy, but grant, kind Fortune, that mi hat kant bo beat, nor the lavender tint ov mi gloves be exceeded. Fill me with courage true and reddy, but if enny man offers tew Btnote me, give tew me the fleetness ov venison and mi legs the speed of the roebuck. itemove all attectashun tar lrom me. but enable me to keep up appearance, if i have tew cheat a little tew do it. Take away out ov mi site all kinds ov numiiii,, VIXV bVAUU 111 U HVVT JVGCJF 1. gekret, the grocer who sells me mi hair Running, but teach me tew keep j. Abuv all things with modesty shower me. 1 es I make me all dripping wet, but don't let me looze a good chance mi nu koat to spread before the eyes of men niled with envy. Make me at all times of the poor heathen thoughtful, at church not for- getting the plaiter to annoint with a 10 cent plaster. Remove from mo .all irra hares and nimrjles. all bunvans and korn Destiver- ous and grant that mi calfs still fatten on saw durst, and mi cheeks leed on plumpers, and mi h'arte ever bubble and telle over with mersy. leach me mi kano tew whirl so pecu liar, and mi niustash tew twibt into such long drawn out sweetness that all the people shall kali me " Tung Purity." Kmilo thou upon all hatters and bar bers, all shirt-makers and gloviers, all perfumers and dentists, all wash wim men ansl shu blacks, and forgive them the dets i may owe them, and kause me tew weep over man and hiz menny mis- tortins, Bless all maids ov estate, all widdo's with munny, all mothers ov fashion with daughters tew marry, all good matches laying around loose, but chiefly giv me a congruence full ov aroma. Lengthen out, kind Fortune, the days ov mi unkle, but should he happen to sup away sudden, bow me down with. sorrow bekumine:. Listen, dear i; ortune, listen ! giv me the style of heart breaking Adonis, let the virtews all seek mi acquaintanes, and leed with nu tires exquisit the soli taire that burns on mi buzzum, I will raize thee an altar, kind For tune, an altar as hi az a lamp post, it these mi prayers are answered farewell for the present don't go back on Beau Uennett, the beautiful I Aew 1 oris Weekly. Use of Fruit. Instead of standing in fear of a gener ous consumption of ripe fruit, one should regard it as decidedly conducive to health. The very diseases, says the Country Gentleman, commonly assumed to have their origin in the free use of all kinds of berries, apples, peaches, pears, cherries, and melons, have been quite as prevalent, it not equally destructive, in I - n. - seasons ot scarcity, ihere are so many erroneous notions entertained of the bad effect of fruit that it is quite time a coun teracting impression should be promul- gatea, naving its tounaauon in common sense and based on the common obser vation ot the intelligent. JNo one ever lived longer, or freer from the attacks of disease, by discarding the delicious fruits of our country. On the contrary, they are very essential to the preserva tion of health, and are therefore given to us at the time when the condition of -I the body, operated upon by deteriora ting causes not always comprehended, requires their erratetul, renovating influ ences. Unripe fruit may cause illness, but fresh, ripe fruit is always healthful. Eecent reports' by the Emigration Commissioners in Great Britain shows that the outflow of English emigrants bas become much greater than that of the Irish. Previous to looa tne contrary was the case, la 1864 the number of English emigrants was 5(5,618, and of Irish 115,428 ; in 1871 about 100,000 per sons lett England to about 70,000 trom Ireland. Tho loss of Ireland, however, in proportion to population, is much greater than that ot either England or Scotland. Nearly four-fifths ot all the emigrants from Great Britain find their nonius in the United btates. Information about anv Railroad Bond can be obtained if you will write to Charles W. Hasslek, No. 7 Wall St., N.Y. Tna 'Pttbust awd SWEETEST Cod Ltver On, in the world is Hazard & Caswell's, made on the sea-shore, from uwu. selected livens, uy vassswji uai,- ARD & Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and tweet. Patients who have ones taken it prefer it to all others. Fhysi cians have decided it superior to amy of I the other eils in market. A New Departube ix Medicine. There are "new departures" in medicine, as well as in politics. The latest and most successful of these is the bold move ment of Dr. Joseph Walker, of California, who has actually had the effrontery to produce a Vegetable Tonic and Restora tive, without any alcoholic basis, which is curing disorders of tho stomach, liver, bowels, nerves And pulmonary organs, with a rapidity that fairly entitles him to the anathemas ot the uia Hcnooi ot Physioians, and the praise and confi dence of the New I His Camfornia Vinegar Bitters may bo safely pro nounced tho most popular romody of the age. When it is considered that this now famous specific was introduced some two years ago, its present sale, which is at the rate of 3,000,000 bottles per an num, can only be ascribed to its intrinsic merits. It is believed that the history f "patent medicines " afford no example of a success so rapid and comxloto. 1 ho community insists that this success is thoroughly deserved, and wo have no inclination to dispute its dictum. Tho Voice of the People, if not exactly that of Omnipotence, is generally the voice of Common Sense, and as they have had ample time to take a sober second thought on the subject, it may be assumed that in this instance, their opinion is credita ble to their sagacity. Unmans share with horses the benefits de rivable from the world-renowned Mexican Mustang Liniment. The most irrefhifinble testimony establishes the fact that this wod drons bnlm exerts the entiio soothing- and hcnline Influence when applied to tho human cuticle, that it does in cases of spavin, foun ders, ringbone, poll-evil, scratches, windfall and other ailments of the borsc which require outward treatment. It Is, In fact, the most effectual of all external remedies for rheu matism, gout, stlfmcst of the neck, neuralgia, sore throat, swellings, cuts and bruises of all kinds. All the Year round. Sheridan1! Cavalry Con- dition Powdert should be given to horses that are " kept up." To horaes nud cattle that DrrnvA In aiitntTiPT graze In summer they should only be given in winter and spring. Offleers and soldiers who serred In the army, physicians, surgeons, and"cmiucnt men and women everywhere, join In recommend ing Johnsons Anodyne Liniment to De tne best Internal and external family medicine ever invented. That's our experience. In the nursery Burnett's Kalliston is peculiarly adapted to the bathing of infants. A few drops sufficient for a bowl of water. R. V. Pierce, M. D., of Buffalo, N. Y., will send his book on Chronic Diseases free to any address. 593. Flaoo's Instant Relief na stood twenty ycat-t test. Is warranted to clvo immediate relief to all Rheumatic. Neuraliric. Head. x.ar and Hack aches, or vioney refunded. CntSTADOIIO'S EXCILBtOR Hair Dyi BtAltds iin- rlvulod and alone. Its merits have been so universal ly acknowledged that It would be a supereropatlon to descant on theiu any further nothing can beat It. Tnn Ttt trk Ml.noD. When the blood Is well sun- plied with its Iron element, we feel vigorous and full of animation. It ifmn innumciency of this vital ele ment that makes us feel weak and low-cp rlted : In such cases, the Peruvian Syrup (a protoxide of Iron) can supply this deficiency, and its use will invigorate us wonaenuuy. Beat and Oldeet Family Medicine. San- 'ord'stirw Invlgorator. A purely Veeetable Cathartic and Tonfe for Dyspepsia, Constipation, Debility, Sick headache, Billons Attacks, and all derangements or biver, stomach and uowcis. ask your iruKgist ior it. Beware of imitallone. Medicinal Polran an the Wane. The patriarchs took no njcroury, no bismuth, no Iodine, no bromide of potassium, no strycborla, no qui nine. Happy old gntleme& I they did not even know of the existence of these "specifics," and yet they lived until It seemed ae If Death had forgotten them. Tbelr medicines were kerbs and roots. Thev have left this fact on record, and the world seems to be now taking note of it and returning to the first principles of med ication, nostetter'a Stomach Bitters, the purost and most .jfficaclona vegetable restorative of the day, la also tho most popular. Thousands of persons who only few yeara ago bellevod Implicitly in all the poisons which flguro in the puarmocoepia, now prononnce this palatable tonic and alterative an all-sufficient remedy for dyspepsia, nervous debility, constipation, bilious complaints, headache, intermittent fevers, and all the ordinary disturbances of the stomach, the liver, the discharging organs and the brain The time Is not fur distant when most of the powerful and venomous drugs now so recklessly administered by practitioners of the " heroic" school, in cases that might easily be controlled by milder treatment, will be utterly dis carded by all philosophical physicians. As It la, the thinking public who are generally ahead of the pro fsslenals,have already put the dangerous preparations aside and adopted Hoslettor'a Bitters in their stead as a safe and excellent household medicine, adapted to almost every ailment except the organic and deadly contagious diseases. For more than twenty years this famous restorative and preventive has been annually strengthening its hold upon the public confidence and it now takes the lead of every advertised mcdiciue manufactured in this country. TO CONSUMPTIVES. The advtirtlsor. having been perraaucntly cured ot that dread disease. Coiuumption, by t simple remedy. is anxious to make known to his fellow sufferers the means of cura. To all who desire it. lie will send a copy of the prescription ued, (tree of charpe), with the direction for prepurinff and uiiiK the canto, which they will tind a Sure Cchb fob Conscmptiun. Asth- ! m, Bromcuitis, &-C. Parties wUhing the prencripiiou will please address iter. cuwAitu a. niLsun, 194 Peuu St.. WUliamtbunrb N.Y 4 lie Arteii Erbschaften und Schuldea schnells- . ten. arkobpn durph die Airoutur Ton J. Jr lltUCiUffi Kecut Anwalt, Columbia, Lancaster Co., Pa. f PIUltf BATIWO ANTIDOTE. discoTered v.r and comuounded bv a surferer. Hend stanin for treatlw "Oil Opium Bating and Its Cure" toW.lt. by UlllK, M. D., WurtuiiiKUm, Urcene Co., Ind. rjKT WESTERN Ilretch-toadlDff 8bot Guns, $40 to $301). D , utile Shot Guns. SB to f 1 10. Blnele Gui-.. S3 to 10. Kirles. 8 I to $75. Revolvers, 6 to $85. SsKD 8T1IIP FOR PalOK- 1.18T. Army Hunt. Revolver, tyc. bought or traded Jar. Tii 3 Gsttysjurj Katalysins Water, N.tnre's ereat remedr for DvsocDfia. Rheumatism. Gout, Neuralgia. Kidney, Unuar-, Nervous, Heart, and other Chronic Diseases, is bottled and sent direct from the spmie- at uetty.burir, reuu., to invalids wherever residing. Price per sintflo case of two doEn quart bottles, $9.00. li per cent, discount in favor of clergymen and physicians on water tor their own use. Meuical and clerical profeHsion must be certified by tho nearest postmaster or oiner responsiDie persons. nuere nruKKisis uo not Keep ii,iuvaiius may en c1oe a ccrtitk'd cheek or Post-Umue rrouev order to WHITNEY UHOS..SS7 8. Front 8U, Philadelphia, Pa, VALUE TO EVERYBODY Old or Young;, htirh or low, male or female, sick or well, rich or poor. 8end a three Cent postiofe Ktamp for circular Address DOUSON, UAYNKS tc CO., hu Louis, Mo. AGENTS WANTED. lUil rr l TM V. M'HBFHT THR 51 ' magazine or children. BEST MIT- PER11LY ILLUSTRATED. JVou it tht Urn to tut- ecrtte. iva Hend etamp tor a sample number. JOHN L. 8UOKEY. 3fi Broicflelu tit.. Boston. Haas. WE PA AGENTS 30 IN CASH. PER WEEK allow exponsea and furnish everything. Apply at B. e His EX ac vu, Marshall, Mich. 1 ()00 &pM?lp3TS? and n"S m" AGENTS WANTED to sell our i ui u ulon and World. C. P. Bradway, DanvlUe, Pa. MOUNT PLEASANT INSTITUTE. Private classes for bovs. Amherst. kLue. Estahllshed IMA. II. U. MASH, A. u., rruuipsu. BeiLBWO Felt (no tar) for outside work and Inside Instead of plaster. Felt CarpetU gs, etc. Send i stamps fur circular and saniplea. C.J ay, Camden, N.J, RISING ..:' tm ikv- k For Bei.dty of Polish, Savins Unbor, Clean llne,DUrablllty A Cheapness, Urtequaled. nrWAIlK OF WMITIIIKS mutations, under other names, hut rescmljling ours In ali.ipe and color of wrapper intended to deceive. rtti Biuivfi are Pflimlt IV M'f.K. for Move dealers' vta, at twelve cents pir pound twenty-II H and Jftf mind, poxes. "Cheaper tfiuii any other Hulk rsllsli for THK rllMW f MUtlFIl rrTrtlNn Miarpenln Cheap mil Imralde mi.ercodrenthr.riirtlrleelor purpose, iIikhihim.mk hi.uk i.K4im;hnii'athh. Formica, bearings and lrmrMnery. Lats six times salon aaoll aloue. W lb. and 60 lb. boxes, 14 seats pur lb. Try It. - MORS! BR08.t Prop'rs., Canton, Mas. IRON IN THE BLOOD MAKES THE WEAK STRONG. The reruvlan Sirup, a Protect ed Solution of tlie 1'rotoxUle of Iron, i so combined as to have the character of an aCnuent, as easily diffested and assimilated with the blood as the simplest food. It increases the quantity of Nature's Own Vitalizing Agent, Iron in the blood, and cures "athousand ills," simply by Toning up, Invigorating and Vitalizing the System. The en riched and vitalised blood per meates every part of the body, repairing damages and waste, searching out morbid secre tions, and leaving nothing for disease to feed upon. This is the. secret of the won derful success of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, Liver Com plaint, Dropsy, Chronic Diar rhoea, Boils, Nervous Affections, Chills and Fevers, Humors, Loss of Constitutional Vigor, Diseases of the Kidneys and Madder, Female Complaints, and all diseases originating in a bad state of the blood, or ac companied by debility or a low state of the system. Being free from Alcohol, in any form, its energizing effects are not fol lowed by corresponding reac tion, but are permanent, infu sing strength, rigor, and neuf life into all parts of the system, and building up an Iron Con stitution. Thousands have, been changed by the use of this remedy, from weak, sickly, suffering crea tures, to strong, healthy, and happy men and women; and invalids can not reasonably ties-. itate to give it a trial. See that each bottle has PERU VIAN SYRUP blown in the glass, Pamphlets Five. eJ. P. DINSMORE, Proprietor, Ifo. 33 DEY ST., NEW YOKE. Sold by Druggist generally. READ THIS! The lowest price list ever published of WATCHES, In solid Gold and Silver Cases only. Benedict's ninio M'atcliess. PRICES. Silver Watch, Benedict Sn Gold, (IS karat) ' i'M 8ilver Watch, Samuel W. Beuedict SO Gold (18 karat) " " American Walthnm Watches. PRICES. Coin Silver minting Watches $18 50 Gold limiting Watches, Genu' Sir.a S79 00 Ladies' Siao ....S7J 00 Sont to all parts of the country by express with prlv HeKO to examine before paying. Send for a prico list and couipure prices before purchasing elpcwhnro. V 1 BENEDICT BROTHERS, Jewelers and keepors of tho City Time, G91 Broadway, near Fourth Street, New York. BAXTER STEAM ENGINE. Manufactured by COLT'S Aft.VIS CO. Kar.torj, Ct Sizes, 2 to 10 H. Power. COMPACT. SIMPLE. SAFE, DURABLE and EconomlcaU 03" For Pricc-Lfct and parti culun Address VM. D. RUSSELL. Mo. 18 Park Place, N. Y. Engine Ready for Csk. ECONOMY IN MOURNING ! 1 Choapnesal Durability 1 THE HEW PATENT ALBERT CRAPE Has been sold for Over Two Years, giving Uuiverttal BaUsfaotiou. t Opinions from Wearers "The Albert Crane which X have worn every day for nearly a year baa after tbe rouguetn usage turnea out to do moat ex cellent." V I have been so much pleased with the wear o f the Albert Crape, tbat I can strongly recommend It," I have found the Albert Crape to be a reaMy good trustworthy article, and much eucapcr man any j. ever uau. SOLD BY uii i itimu t. nov ftnnne nrAi rao m The Klghta of the glck.-It Is the riirht of ev ery invalid to kuow what his medicine is, and why it Js prescribed. Is any sntferer from dyspepsia, liver comDlaint. headache, costiveness, or heartburn, desir ous to know what Tarbakt'8 MaLTiaa Araaii.iT Is, and why he ouKht to luKe it r rue answer is simple. It is the chemlt:&l eaulvaleut of the Soltser 8oa water. and the irreatest physicians the world has ever seen nave pronouncea iliac waier m spccuio ior uia com plaints 111 question. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. THEA-NECTAR IS A PCRE BlfcAVOJC TELA, with the Oreea Tea Flavor. The best Tea Imported, for talt tveryicner: And for sale whole sale only by the Greet Allan tie and Paclflc Tea Co., No. m Fulton St., and 8 4 4 Church St, New York. P.O. Box, 5506. Send for Thea-Ktetat Circular. VtnttffAr ntttr are not a vile Fancy Drink, made f Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refill Liquors doctofed, spiced, snid switched tb please tl taste, calleij " Tonics," Appetisers,' "Restorers1 Ac, that leTid the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but .ire a true Medicmet made from the native roots and herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic St imulafftf Thev are the Ureat Wood runner and a lne-eivit.w Pnnfittlp.a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonons matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition, enrichingit, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy iff administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, we ana rennuic in u numnui uwaw, No Person enn take thpae Blttera accord ing to directions, and remain Jong unwell, providstf their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison orothel means, and tha vita, organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepsia or Imltjreatlqn Headache, Piia in the Shoulders Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dix giness, Smir Eructations of the Stomach, Had Taste in the Mouth, umous Attacks, raipitanon 01 tne Heart. Inflammation of the Lungs Pain in the regions ol the" Kidnevs, and a hundred other painful symptoms are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it has no equal, and one uotue win prove a oeuer guar antee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. For Female Coninlninla, in young or old. married or single.at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, llieseTonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon percep tible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Itiien mntiftm and Omit, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious Remittent and Intermittent Fevers diseases of the Blood. Liver. Kidnevs and Bladder, these Bitters have, Ibeen most successful. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Itlood, wlrch is generally produced by derange ment 01 tne uigestivc urg.ins. They arc a Urntle Purgative lift well na a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflam mation of the Liver and V isccr.il Organs and in Bilious Diseases. For Skin Diflcnftea, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Blotches Spots Pimples Pustules Boils Car buncles, Ring worms, Scald-Head, Sjre Eyes, Lry sipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Decolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature. are literally dug up and earned nut of the system in a short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convince the most incredulous of theii curative effects. rieuiiHe the Vlffuferl III nod whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, eruptions or bores; cleanse it when vou find it ob structed and sluggish in the veins ; cleanse it when it is foul ; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. Grateful thoiianinl proclaim Vinkgak Bit ters the most wonderful lnvigorant lh.it ever sustained the sinking system. Pin, Tape, and other Worm, lurking in the system of se many thousands, are effectually de stroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiol ogist : There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that worms exist, but anon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease No system of Medicine, no vermifuges, mo nnthelmin itics will free the system from wormi like these Bit ters. Mechanic a! Dlaensca. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Tyiie-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, will be subiect to paralysis of the Bowels. To cuard against this take a dose of Walker's Vinegar Bitters once or twic a week, as a Preventive. llilloiiH, RemUtent, niul Intermittent Fevers, which arc so prevalent in the valleys of our .great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Ten nessee, Onnberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Roan oke, James and many others with their vast tributa ries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons ol unusuil heat and dryness are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal Viscera. There are always more or less obstructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable state of the stomaclvand great torpor of the bowels, being clogged up with vitiated accumulations. In their treat ment, a purgative, xerting a powerful rTillucnce upon these various organs ' essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dk. J. Walker's Vineg R Bitters, as they will speedily remnve the dark-cot Jred viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, tt the fiame time stimulating the secretions ol the livei and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Scrofula, or Kind's Evil, White Swellings Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Af fections Old Sores Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., etc In these, as in all other constitutional Dis eases, Walker's Vinegar Bitters hava shown their great curative powers in ihs most obstinate and intract able cases. Dr. Walker's California Vinegar Bit tera act on all these cases in a similar manner. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected. The properties of Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitters are Aperient. Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious. The Aperient and mild Laxative properties of Dr. Walker's Vinkgak Bittkks are the best safe guard 111 all cases of eruptions and malignant fevers their balsamic, healing, and soothing projKTties protect the humors of the fauces. Their Sedative propertiet allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, and boyels, either from inflammation, wind, coiic, cramps, elc. Their Counter-irritant influence extendi throughout the system. Their Diuretic properties acton the Kid neys correcting and regulating the flow of urine. Their Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secre. lion of bile, and its discharges through tint biliary duels and are superior to all ramedial agents for the cure ol Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc Fort If V the boly auainit dine nsc bv puri fying all its fluids with Vinegar Hitters. No epi. demic can take hold of a system thus forearmed. The liver, the stomach, the bowels the k'dueys and nerves are rcnucrcu uiseusu-proui uy iimw 1 orant. Directions. Take of the Bitters on gmg to a 1 nil-111 irom m nan to one inu uhc-uau "i's-s1" Eat good nourishing food, such as beef steak, mut -L. aJ uanatllll.C ntwl I. I f IV! tc WW Pi-nnV It II Mrlll AljIJdaW it ei. .nl'p.n Atria. . K.i i KraiiriAcn and New V. ra- SDI.n BY AI.I. TRUnr.lST! W.M.t BLE ES Koleelcss, Link-motion. Look-Stitch SEWING MACHINE, Challenges the world In porfcctlon of work, strength and buuuty of stitch, durability of construction, and Irauiuiiyoi mouon. Call and examine, and for agencies and circulars, addresa ULEES BJShINU MACHINE CO., C3 Broadway, New York. HKW'ABI) For any case f Mind, Bleeding, ItchlnK, or Ul cerated Piles that Dk BiKo'a Pi lb RgitiDY fails to cure. It is prepared ex pressly to euro the PilrB and nothing eUe. Sold I y all Druggists. Price $l.ou. 1.01 THIS COKFESBtlONti OK A NERVOUS INVALID. Published for the benefit of vount men ana others who sutler from Nervous Debility, etc- supplying th umNB or KSLr-ockS. Written by one who cured him. self, and aeut free on receiving a po-t-pald directed envelope. Address NATUANIEL MAY AIR, Ifrook- lyn, t. DR. WHITTIER, Sett Penaa Street. PITTSBURGH. Pa. Longest engaged, and most successful physician of the ate?, lousuitatiou or pempuiei rree. uau or write. J ust published tor benefit of young men who sutler 6 urn Kervou.-uei, Debility. Ac, a treatise ol 36 pagtje, Kjj g stamps i a bouk of atw pegoa. illustrated, tut SO cenu. $30i PER WEEK and expense paid. We want rename agent in every county ui the U. . Address HonaoM Kivta Wibi (In. i ,o Maiden Lane. N. Y- or Chicago. 111. GENTS Wanted. Agents make more mone work for us than anything else. Pu.ri1riilar Sriaaog A Co.. fins Art PuHUAsra.P.fniand Ms Imoorted Animal and Fowls L. B. Silver, Salem, O August Mr-lali ree
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