The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, July 20, 1876, Image 4

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    FIRM, GARDES AXI HOUSEHOLD.
Pennonnblfi lllntn.
Constant ruUiyntion is very important
for corn. No oilier shows so much bone
fit from it. Our plan is to cultivate on
the level, going cloro to the rows. If
there are many weeds in the rows be
tween the stalks, we throw a little earth
to the plants to Bmotber the weeds.
Afterward, if necessary, this soil may be
leveled with the hoe at the last weeding.
Hilling corn is not, as some farmers
thir.k, needed to steady the plants.
Potatoes suffer more from weeds than
any other crop. One weed will take tip
and evaporate a good deal of moisture
from the soil, and rob the crop of what
it greatly needs. The loss of moifitnre
is not often thought of in considering
the effect of the weeds, but it i.i very im
portant. When too late to be killed by
cultivation, the weeds should bo hand
pulled.
Peas and oats, grown for fodder, may
be cut with the reaper if they have not
lodged. Otherwise the best plan is to
out them with the scythe, not as grass is
mown, but by driving them toward the
mower in bunches, with the blade of the
scythe, when the loose bunches may be
left to dry until ready to haul to the
barn. When out in blossom and well
cured, this mixed crop is worth more
than clover hay.
The best time for cutting wheat is a
ni-itter of dispute. We choose that time
when the greater part of the grain is in
Huch u condition that it can easily be
cru-li. d to a soft powder be,wen the
thumb and finger nails, arid tlii re is uo
sign of milkiuess or uiilMhiiiss ubout it.
If cut earlier than this tli- grain shrink,
if cut later it is lust by sln-Hintr, although
H-t quality for seed and tor u luiir i.
best when cut dead ripe. Tlie. titii" f
cutting is a mutter of economy ami c li
ve nieiiee.
One of the common small wastes of
the farm arises from careless biuding
and Hhoeking grain. Sheaves fall to
pieces, or shocks overturn, and grain is
waited as well as mnch time. Bee that
the bniidH are Ftrong enough, long
enousrh, and well bound, and the shocks
well put upaud sa'ely capped. Although
the caps may not be needed,
yet the grain is safe, aud in
case of a sudden thunder shower
oue can rest easy, knowing that no harm
can happen to this crop.
To tfej-ash the grain as soon as it is
drawn from the field, and to maiket it,
if it is dry enough, is generally the best
plan. The loss of weight, and that from
vermin and other risks, are saved; the
labor of stacking or putting it in the
barn, and a sucond handling are also
saved, and with the cash iu his pocket, a
lurmer avoid any loss in value, and if
he misses a rise, he will on the whole
have saved mere than this might have
amounted to, and has had the use of the
money besides.
Farm Notei.
Sixty-five in every hundred acres in
Ireland, aud forty-two acres in every
hundred in England, are pasture.
The largest farm iu England measures
3,000 acres, and is divided into four
great crops wheat, barl-!y and oats ;
soeds, beans and peas, eto., and roots.
The live stock consists of sheep, horses,
bullocks and pigs. The sheep are
claimed as the most profitable of the
stock.
Horses average about four hundred
pounds of meat each. Six thousand
eight hundred and sixty-five were given
over for consumption iu Paris last year.
The raising of winter wheat is claimed
as a success in Arkansas.
The farmers of Missouri cannot make
the raising of winter wheat profitable.
The wheat bolt is enlarging its area.
There is a general tendency to raise
more and buy less throughout the States.
In China agriculture is considered
one of the noblest of arts. The soil
there, cultivated for thousands of years, L
produces as wen now as wuen in its virgin
state, because the people save, manufac
ture and apply manure to it, waiting noth
ing, either liquid or Solid, tLat will make
plant food, or that contains elements of
fertility.
At the annual meeting of the Flax
Supply association of Ireland, the chair
man reported a decided diminution in
flax culture.
In Denmark there are six institutions
for giving instructions in dairying.
Southwestern Minnesota for the fourth
time is visited by the grasshoppers.
Potato bugs are appearing in immense
quantities in many places in the Dela
ware river valley.
Farmers in Georgia report a prosper
ous year. An increase of ten per cent,
is claimed in the acreage planted to
corn, iiij-l the acreage in oats has in
creased thirty-five per cent, over thut of
la 4 year. Wheat has an increased
avenu'e of eighteen per cent. Forage
cv'h s liavo also an increased aevenpe.
whd.i the acreage of the cotton en-jii-te.ii
per cent, less th in 1-u-t y n.
S chiiiiiand sugar cane oi ps ,.r- in t)i
condition, with an incp s i.f fulls
twenty-five per cent., and iii. nil w an
increase of over one-third.
I'erTuI Hint..
To Wash Colored Table Linen,
Eto One teaspoonfnl of Migar of le .d
dissolved in one gallon of water. Soak
the article to be washed thoroughly in
the solution, then dry. The color will
be set sj that the article may be washed
in the ordinary inauner.
Kats. A handful of fresh chloride
lime sprinkled in rat holes will keep
them away for months.
For Beetles or Roaches. Mix equal
parts of brown sugar and Indian meal
with park green.
To Wash Colored Goods. Black
calicoes cbould be washed with the con
tents rf a beef gall put into one pail of
warm water. This will set tne color.
Stiffen with a weak solution of brown
glue. This inauner of washing is nioe
for u .vy blue dresses and dark batistes.
Postal Matters.
The report of the committee of con-
ference on the TJuited States Post-Office
Appropriation bill recommends the
adoption of the following provision con
oerning third-class mail matter :
AU third clajg mail matter except unhealed
circulars shall be transmitted at the rate of one
oent for ever; two ounces, or fractional part
thereof, and oue eent for each additional two
ounces, ana tne sender may wr.te lug name
thereiu. or outside, preceded by the word
' from or may write briefly, er may print on
any paokaue, the number aud name of articles
inolosed, and publishers of magazines, eto.,
may priut thereon the time at which subscrip
tions were paid, and the address on postal
cards or unsealed circular may be written,
printed or affixed, at the option of the sender.
The section prohibiting the sale of
envelopes and newspaper wrappers be
low actual cost, including clerk hire,
legal postage, and all otner expenses
connected therewith, is retained without
alteration.
An exoursion was advertised in Boston
" to go down the bay and see the water
onoe out by the keel of the Mayflower."
A Merchant's Magnanimity.
A young man stole $2,000 in May
last from a Urooklyn warehouseman.
When the case was called the court was
astonished by Mr, Robinson, the com
plainant's, statement that he did not wish
to prosecute the complaint. Mr. Rob
inson said :
" I think that the ends of justice
would be served jnst as well, probably
better, if Lyons was lot go. 1 always
entertained htrong hopes for the young
man. He was a bright, intelligent boy,
and I never thought that he would turn
out as he did. But as the case stands
now, the money is gone, his parents are
poor, and I don't ever expect to get one
penny of it bock, so you can see that
that is not the motive which moves me
to this course. The boy is young yut,
and there may be hope for him. I pre
fer to lose my money and give him
that chanoo. It may be the salvation 6f
him, and I think that justice would be
better served if the stain of imprison
ment was not placed upon his name. He
will have a chance to begin again, and
will, I have no doubt, turn out better
than if placed among criminals for a
term of years."
" This is certainly a very Christian
act on your part, Mr. Robinson." said
Justice Del mar.
" It is " hat I feel to be my duty,
sir," said Mr. Robinson, his voice be
ginning to waver. " I have been in
busiiief-s fully one years in this city, and
during that time I have beoa robbed
probatily tifty times by clerks. Never
have I prosecuted one of them, and I
have found out thut in nineteen cases
out of twenty my uotion has been the
salvation of them. Why," he con
tinued, after a moment's panse, I had
once in my employ au unusually bright
uud intelligent young man, but he had
several little weaknesses, and on three
occasions he stole money from me. I
bore patiently with hit.., and now he is
a member of one of the largest firms in
New York, and a respected member of
society, I will take my chances in this
ease, l'robaiilv 1 may be mistaseu in
the boy, but if he turns out badly he
will never have it to say ibat it was I
who put npou him the brand of a crimi
ual." Mr. Robinson was so overcome by
his feeliugs that ho could not speak
further.
Justice Del mar gave the boy a sound
admonition, and discharged mm.
The .Newspaper.
I am a farmer. My farm is named
Pasturefield. I take great pride in it
and work as steadily as I can, for I am
sixty-six, and was not inured to farm
labors in early life, but trained to the
dry goods business. Well, no matter
for this. I work and enjoy it. Then I
get tired, then I smoke, and then 1 sit
down to the newspaper. Ah, then my
fatigue is forgotten ; I revel in enjoy
ment and am recreated. The great,
good newspaper 1 I used to read books,
but neglect them now. What becomes
of all tue books published ? I used to
take agricultural journals, but there was
too much agriculture. I get hints
enough in the home newspaper to satisfy
me.
All around mo are men who work hard
and are honest and faithful iu their aims
aud ways, who take no newspaper. How
do they do to live ? I should have died
twenty years ago without them. I lend
and give miue to my neighbors.
Aud the newspaper grows and grows,
and will continue to grow. Better and
better men continue to go into its labors.
The best only will live. Oh, men of
the newspaper, great teacher of the peo
ple, accept the law that " honesty is the
best policy." Cast out the cowardly,
the weak, mean, and wrong headed, and
let but the brave, the manly, the clear
eyed, and courageous help iu making
this great, growing gospel, this big
book, this daiiy teacher, this household
preacher, this hopo, comfort, help, and
enjoyment tf the common people, the
American newspaper I Make it clean
and true, and faithful.
As I believe the newspaper has al
ready lengthened my life, I doubt not it
will still lengthen it, to the extent,
probably, of twenty-five years, which
will give me a quite respectable span.
And I think of what its character must
be to me I But theu I know the strong,
the true, the bravo will live and flourish,
an 1 that the puerile, foolish, and false
will soon die. Aim.
Mental Food.
Good bread is the staff of life, and ii
we lean on that we grow strong and
healthy. If we i ling up our children
on plain, wholesome diet, tliey grow
tall, erect, strong and healthy. But if
we feed tlieui on rich cake and fancy
pastry, and fill their stomachs with all
sorts of tot-h," spiced up to tempt the
appetite beyond what nature requires,
their appniites become depraved, and
they lo.ttUt) the food best calculated to
make them grow healthy and strong ;
an.l, in consequence, they grow pul.i,
poor, puny and w ale, .Tint so with the
mud. Our mimls .light to become
H-ar aud strong. ulwutenod and ele
vated. There in foo.t that is healthy
aud nutritious for the mind. But the
literary cooks have served the public
with so mu'-h highly seasoned food that
thu tastes of their readers, especially the
young, bale becomo vitiated, and tuey
turn with disgust from goo i, solid, iu
structive reading, which would improve
their mental powers,. and muke them iu
tollectuully strong, and help them to be
come useful members of sooiety. But
they eagrely devour literary pastry, if
highly spiced. They crave sensational
reading : romanoe and fiction ; pathetic,
comic, an i tragio. Aud this exciting
reading, so stimulating to the brain, is
tempting and they read too much. The
consequence is, their minds become
dwarfed and sickly. They gain no real
knowledge, but the uiam is weakened,
the memory ruined, and intellectual
vigor destroyed : and these mental dya
peptics are about ss unfit to grapple
with the stern realities of life as a worn-
out, haggard, physical dyspeptio is to
endure the hardships of a soldier's life in
a campaign against the JYlotloca.
Atlantic aud Pacific.
Some of my birds have been talking
to the sea gulls and they have brought
me this news:
The Atlantic ocean was named after
mighty mythical giant named Atlas, who.
as the Greeks believed, carried the world
on his shoulders the great Atlas who
has a great mountain range in Africa
lor his namesake.
The other great ocean didn't have to
go to Greece for a name. It just stayed
where it was aud behaved itself, until at
last, from its peaceful aspect, it was
called racitto.
This is as it should be, my little Amer
icans power on one side ot us, and
peace on tho other. And what is better
yet, they are permanent institutions.
iuty centennials from now, Jack, or
somebody else, will find trig and trim
between its oceans, with the peace of
power its brightest virtue, and the pow
er of peace its proudest boast. SC.
Nicholat,
A RAID IX BULGARIA.
Havaae Nmrdi the Urrnt Wnr Now Be
inning In Knrope.
A correspondent, in a letter from Con
stantinople, gives an aooount of scenes
witnessed by himself at a placo which
he calls jWraviio, on his way from liout-
sohouk to the Turkish capital. Bashi-
Jtazouks and their brethren in theft, the
Tchirkesscs, have been lot loose all over
this unhappy country to punish the in
surgents and to awe tho villagers from
imitation. It would be disbelieved were
I to state all the horrors whoso vestigos
I saw during tho four-aud twenty hours
which I spent near Dravno. Corpses of
men aud women and children lay about
the streets of villages through which
these savages have passed. At Karaki
lissi one entire school of fifty children is
said to have been butchered. I saw
a pope, or Bulgarian priest, hanging to
the rafters of a houso which had beeu
half burned clown, and, not a dozen
yards away, was the headless body of a
peasant, whose belt showed that he had
been taken while in arms. I intend to
collect the exact dates and sites of the
recent atrocities in Bulgaria, for tho edi
fication of those who still think that the
Turk is a follow being. For the present,
I shall only tell what I saw at Dravno,
where the raiders were making a gallant
stand ; they wero only about four huu
dred iu number"; their enemies mustered
nearly, if not qnito, three thousand, and
hnd, besides, a couple of cannon, with
which they wero pounding away at tho
old monastery in which (hoy hud tuken
shelter. Dravno itself is a village, or
rather a town, of about four thousand
inhabitants, which used to do a flourish
ing trade iu the cotton business, but it
certainly is not nt present a commer
cially attractive placa. Built at the foot
of a spur of the Balkan, it is sheltered
irom tue bleak mountain winds by a
succession of hills by which the monas
tery aud church, substantial stone bui d
ings, aro entirely commanded.
On these heights Hussein Bey, who
was the leader ot the Turkish forces, had
established his guim, which, although
they had beeu at work lor some six
hours, had apparently as yet done no
damage. They were tiring at the walls
instead of shelling the roof, and tho
hollow shot seemed powerless to injure
the massive granite which had stood
there for ceut'iries. Tho practice was
wretched, and nobody had any clear
ijiea of the distance, for many of the
projectiles fell short, although 'the bat
tery was at not more than two thousand
yards range, but the guns made
noise, aud after every discharge there
rose a yell of satisfaction from the
troops, mingled with a volley of curses
against the unbelieving dogs who dared
to dispute Moslem authority. The bey,
who was quite polite, told me that the
raiders had attacked and killed severe 1
small detachments on their way from the
river, and that he had only como up
with them here, where they had stopped
to rest and eat, for tho poor fellows had
marched sone hfty miles without meet
ing the re enforcements which evidently
they had been led to supposo would
join them in tho interior. The Bashi
Cuzouks had been hanging on their rear
for several hours, but had been repulsed.
and so resigned themselves to play the
part of bloodhounds. Brought to bay
at l ist, they had thrown themselves into
the old monastery, where they meaut to
sell their lives as dearly as possible.
Ot Assault had been tried, but tho re
sult had not beeu satisfactory, aud
Hussein Bey thought that it would be
far safer to trust to starvation aud to
distant "bombardment," as ho called it,
Au immense amount of powder must
liavo been burned without any effect,
and as I began to get tired of the mo
notony, J went down into the town,
where tho women and children wore
huddled into corners moaning with fear
of what was to come. There wero a good
many Tchirkesses, in high fur caps and
long pellises, with cross belts stuffed full
of cartridges, looking about tor booty,
and un occasional scream told of some
act of violence or murder, but even my
zaptiehs could not have protected me, if
I had ventured too intimately among
these demons, who were gruatly exaspo
rated by the loss of several of their num
ber iu tho attack which (hey had made
early in the day. The besieged, as
rule, kept very quiet, the occasional
singing of a bullet being the only iudi
cation of the resistance still offered in
the church. It must have buen about
eight p. m., when my attention was at
traded by a blight glare on the south
em side of the village ; there was a loud
shout of " Yuqan var !" (there is a con
flugration), a tumultuous rush of redifs,
Tchit kesses and Bashi Bazouks in that
direction, the artillery ceased tiring, and
the sharp rutt.e of musketry succeeded,
It did not last more than fifteen min
utes, and then there was a lead silence,
almost painful in contrast to the noise
of tho last six hours. The church aud
monastery were iu flames, and before
morning nothing remained but the
blackened walls and a few charred raft-
ters. As soon as tho first light appeared
I rod over to the headquarters, and,
little later, to the field.
It was as I hd supposed ; finding
tuat succor from outsido was hopeless
without food or water, and fully awaro
of the fate in store for them if captured
the besieged had determined to cut their
way out aud get to the mountains. So
thev applied the torch to tho old church,
and, under cover of the flames, dashed
into the ranks of the Turkish soldiery
which had crowded down in disorder to
witness the burning of tho Giaours,
With their yataghans between their
teeth and revolver in hand they actually
fought their way through nearly ten
times their number. I counted 130
dead Bulgarians, but did not see a singl
prisoner. The Turks say that the
wounded shot themselves rather than
surrender. I cannot vouch for the truth
of this in every instance, but there cer
taiuly was one case in support of the
assertion. A power: uiiooKing JJuigarjan
with his thigh broKen by a ball, was
lying on one side of the church amid
the bodies of rive T urns, au empty re
volver in his hand, and a bullet iu his
head, as if he had blown his own brains
out. How many men tne Turks lost
is impossible to state, as they always
conceal tne trutn, Din a snouid think
between five and six hundred killed and
wounded. The sally had taken theu
quite by surprise, and tho fighting was
ut such close quarters that, until the in
surgents had almost readied the outer
circle of their enemies, these could
scarcely make use of their muskets,
noticed, however, that the fatigue
parties were very busy on the field, and
that the best nouses of juravno were de
prived of their ordinary inmates
order to serve as hospitals. I rode away
as soon as the fight was over, for I had
no wih to witness atrocities which
was powerless to prevent, but from the
screams and yells which I heard in the
burning suburbs 1 well Knew that pan
demonium was at large, and the sicken
ing sight of Bulgarian heads camec
about on tho ends of Arab Janoes and
bayonets was not calculated to prolong
mw etait l
Cnstcr, the Cavalryman.
Nine vearn nan a nartv of fortv-eiitht I
disheartened aud weary men, most of are trying to make of it in Russia; this
thorn wonndod, and all suffering from in the conception of it, which will be in
thirst and hnnirnr. foueht under the stalled into tho minds of the vassal pop-
broiling sun of the Kansas plains
gainst a combined body of Cheyennes,
Kiowas and Arrapahoes. Ten days pre
viously this party had pitched their
camp, after a long day's march, on the
banks of Pond creek, a small stream in
tho extreme west of Kansas that helps
to form the Smoky Hill river. Having
seen no Indians for many days they felt
sooure, and their first evening on the
ttle stream was passoil in singing,
smoking and telling stories. At dawn
of the next day the two men who were
on guard saw three shadowy forms steal-
ma in among the herd of horses pick
eted just outsido the camp. Giving the
alarm the guards started iu pursuit, but
had gone only a few hundred yards when
they were surrounded by ut least a hun
dred redskins, and before relief could
reach them borne off captives, never
rnoro to be heard from.
In those broiling July days water was
obtaiuod only by tho darkness of mid-
ieht, and then iu small quantities aud
at the greatest risk. Provisions were
rapidly giviug out, but mule flesh had
been found not unpalatable. iNight af
ter night were seen tho innumerable
imp lire.i of the dreaded foe on the
bluffs of the little stream. Day after
iv the naked aud hideously paiuted
evils charged fiorcoly cm the little cor
ral of chained and slightly barricaded
wagons, their wild yella and storm of
hurling arrows being met by tho uner
riug bullet of the soldiers, aud many a
bravo bit tho dust. Thus for ten long
hv3 was the unequal conflict kept up,
hundreds against a handful; and while
hope waned, tho row of newly made
mouuds just outsido tho wagons in
creased in number, and the wounded
moaned and tossed under tho thin tent.
Their only hope was in the efforts of the
bold scout, who, under cover of dark
ness, had stolen from the environed
caup aud started for tho distant Platte,
where Ouster, with the gallant Seventh
ecimeut. was protecting tho settlors
aloug'tbe fertile Republican aud Little
Blue livers. The scout s last words
were: ' if l aiu t oacK in nve days
you may know that I've gone up." lie
was never known to break nis word.
Tho evening of tho ninth of July was
also the eveuiug of the hlth day of thei
imprisonment, Just betoro sunset, n
cloud of dust floated heavily over a tiis-
iut eminence. Beneath its shadow the
forms of horsemen were discernible, and
tho intensity of suspense was redoubled
At last one ghastly, blood stained,
smoke begrimed aud wounded man,
too weak to bear a carbine, cried out:
' It's Custer I thauk God, it s Custer !'
Ho had fainted from joy.
In a few moments more the dimmest
eye could make out the slight form aud
bold carnige of the rtebonnair cavalry
man, as, with his long hair streaming
iu tho wind, crowned with its white
sombrero and black plume, he dashed
up to tho corral and cried out: Here
we are, boys: are we in time t " xes,
thank God 1" was the answer, aud cheer
after cheer from the rescued band rang
out on the evening air. Even the
wounded crawled from their tent to see
aud deer the noble Seventh with Custer
at its head.
The Cnbau Rcbolllon.
The present rebellion in Cuba origi
nated in September, 1868, and grew out
of an earnest desire of the (Jubans for
independence. The demands of Spain
have always been specially severe upon
the unfortunate island, and whether her
treasury was to bo filled or her armios
to be replenished the demands upon
Cuba havo been out of proportion and
in excess of those upon other portions
of tho empire. The rising was general
among the native rural population of
Cuba, and on the tenth of Ootober, 1808,
Manuel Curios Cespedes, a lawyer of
Bayamo, issued an address to the Cu
bans, in which he declared the indepen
dence of tho island and its nnal separa
tion from the mother conntry. On tho
twenty-seventh of that month the first
conflict between the insurgents und the
national troops occurred at .Las lunas,
which resulted in a success lor tho uu-
bans, and a provisional government was
established at Uayomo, which promised
tho speedy abolition of Blavery. Jn
April of the following year a constit
uent assembly proclaimed Cuba to bo a
republic and elected Cespedes Presi
dent. Among other aets of tho assem
bly was tho total abolition of slavery and
tho introduction of absolute freedom in
matters of religion. Since theu tho war
has been carried on with great severity,
especially on the part of the Spaniards,
who liavn civen the insurgents no quar
ter, aud inauenrated a series of butche
ries unltuown to tne ounais oi even civil
war. Tho insurgents have up to this
time held their own remarkably well.
A 'ew aud Destructive Trco Worm.
The Columbia (Tonn.) Herald has
the following : Alltbrough the extensive
cedar forests in Marshall, north of the
river, and iu the extensive belt of
cedars iu the northeast portion of Maury
county, untold millions of a kind of
worm, incased in a cocoon or web, have
attached themselves to the cedar trees
haueincr to tho limbs of the trees in
niauv thousands apparently to the tree
The trees appear to bo thickly covered
with these destructive insects. In sec
tions containing many hundred acres of
the finest red cedar in the State the
timber attacked much of It is already
killed, aud nearly all that the pests aro
upon appears to be in a dying condi
tion; gave fears are expressed by many
that thev will, in the future, almost de
stroy the cedar timber as they multiply.
They seem to bo indigenous to the
cedar, having as vet molested no forest
tree but it. The young apples iu the.
orchards near the affected forests have
been attacked, the fly having apparently
laid the eggs ou tho bloom or apple
Thousands of little oblong cocoons may
now be seen sticking to tho young ap
pies; within the ball or cocoon is a small
black looking worm. The apples that
they have been on are knotty and
scarred, aud stunted in growth, aud can
not make good apples. The little worm
in his silken web seems to suck the ap
ple, as there are now many acres of tim
ber that have been already killed by
them. Some one skilled iu entomology
would tonfer a favor by explaining what
they are.
Coal Oil Victims. .
In his address before the American
chemical society, in New York, Mr.
Rufus S. Merrill, of Boston, stated that
nearly six thousand persons perl- bed in
this country last year, victims of coal
oil accidents. He claimed that oil should
stand a test of three hundred degrees in
order to be safe, and that no device could
be contrived which would render sate
the burning of an article inherently
dangerous. v
A War f Raco and Religion.
.
T in Pall Mall Gazette oonoludes a
Jn E , follows . n i, to be a war
of race and rcliaion. This is what they
nlation of Turkey, who are not likely to
faint for the want of stimulus. As such
it will be regarded in Turkey, and as
such it will be regarded by sympathizers
in our own country. If there is any
thing WDngiu regarding this outlook
with apprehension and dislike, we are
wrong. Nothing at present gives us
moro concern than tho prospect upon
which we have already entered of seeing
in England a division or opinion ana
sontiment to which the clashing of sym
pathy of the North or South during the
American war was as nothing. At a
time like this whatever government
ruled in England would need steady and
sober support from all sides, but already
tho ministers are threatened with the
hampering of enthusiasts, who declare
themselves ready to sacrifice our safety
iu tho East rather thau England fhould
sham'! herself by doing anything in op
position to so h"ly un t-iitei pviso as the
destruction of Turkey. How civiliza
tion is to be advanced by wars which
imperil a civilization like our own,
spread over half the world, is not a
question which those particular enthu
siasts of humanity aro likely to consider;.
nor can we now present the argumout iu
any proper form, but wo Shall be glad
if they will take it into consideration,
since, if duly understood, it may do
something to moderate a spirit which
must gladden those who aro as much
tho foes of the English as of tho Turk
ish empire.
A Curious War,
It is a curious war, this of the Turks,
and both sides are getting allies iu a re
markable content on European soil.
Two regiments of Egyptians, which
h.-ive lately been fighting in Abyssinia,
are on their way to Constantinople to aid
tho sultan, Tho liarbary bey ot Tunis,
who, though nominally dependent on
Turkey, is in reality independent, aud
possessed of absolute power, has iu
formed the sultan that he also will dis
patch a regiment to his assistance. Add
taeso to the European army of tho sul
tan, and then add the troops which ho
is drawing from tho Asiatic portion of
his empire, and it will be seen that ho is
ecui tug support from threo contmeuts
und ruauy races. On the other side, the
fiinee ot Servia is supported by his
Montenegrin and Herzegoviniau allies
uud by the insurgents of Bulgaria; and
it now looks as hough ho were to secure
aid from Roumania, the government of
which has sent troops to the frontier to
prevent certain apprehended movements
of the Turks. Prince Milan recently
announced his expectation of receiving
co-operation from the Greeki; but the
king of Greece has taken the pains to
assure Turkey of h:s peaceful intentions.
liiken altogether, it is a singular war.
Chapped hands, face, pimples, ring
worm, Bttltrhonm, aud other cutauooua affec
tions cured, and rough skin made soft and
smooth, by uoing Jumii-kb Tab Boap. Be care
ful to -get only that maae ty uaswoii, Hazard a
Co., New York, as there are many imitations
made with common tar, all of which are worth
less. Com.
Which Shall I Take.
This is often a eerious question with tho in
valid. He lluds the market flooded with pro
prietary medicines, f cores of which arerecom
luouilod ss ueiij&lu cuius fia uis peculiar ail
meut. lie roads tbe papers, circulars aud
almanacs, and finds each sustained by plausi
ble arguments setting forth its virtues and
specific action. Xhe recommendations are as
strong for oue as for another. The cures
claimed to have been wrought by on; are as
wonderful at tooso canned to nave been
wrought by another. In his perplexity and
doubt, the sufferer is sometimes led to reject
all. But it should be borne in mind that this
conditiou of things iB oue that cannot be reme
died. In the laud where all are free, the good
the truly valuable miH como into coniuett-
tion with the vile and worthless, and mutt be
brought to public notice by tho eatue instru
mentality, which is advertising. In such a
case, perhaps tho only absolute proof that a
remedy is what it claims to be, is to try it.
me "test or a puacnng is tne eatiue of lr. '
"1'rove alt things, hold fast that which is
good," is the apostolic injunction. There may,
iiowover, be stronger presumptive evidenoo in
favor of one remedy thau there is iu favor of
another, and this should be al!otred its due
weight A duo regr.rd to this may tave a vast
amount of expeiimenting and a nsnless outlav
of money. As presumptive cvidei.ee in tavor
of Dr. Pierce's family medicines, the proprie
tor Qoi-irts to say mat mey are prepared by a
new and rcientitic process by which the vir
tues of thu crude plants and roots are ex
tracted without the use of a particle of alco
hol. Not a particle of this destroyer ot our
race outers into tho composition of either his
Golden Medical Discovery or Favorite Pre
scription. This consideration alone onght cer
tainly to rana tncni tugti above the vile com-
poutids saturated with alcohol, Jamaica rum,
sour beer or vinegar, which are everywhere
offered for sale. Again, they aro of uuifoim
strength, and .their virtuos can never be im
paired by age. They are also made from
fieb hei bs aud roots, gathered iu their appro
priate reason, when they aro tlu-h with medi
cinal properties. Iu support nt these claims,
the following testimony is offered :
JXEWAltK, 4. J.. 1(470.
R. V. Piereo, M. D.:
JJrar hir-l havo sold a great daal of vonr
excellent remedies, aud I proti r to hell tueiu
before others, becauso they give good satis
faction to those who ue them. I hear such
reiuaikf aa " Sage's Remedy completely cured
me ; it ia a Fplemlid thing ;" or, " Pieroe's Dis
covery is ju-t what I wanted; I feel hotter
thau I ever did." One of our celebrated sing-
eis uses it for ieti6ngthening her voice and
sas ' there is nothing equals it ; and so
1 might give scores or remarks said about
your prepara'inns. A colored woman was using
your Discovery, ant af er taking three bott ts
was oompieteiy cured, hue, Doing in tne
stoie, said to me t "I don t want no doctors
round me so long as I can get the Disoovery ;
it beats all your doctors." And I might go
on. I am, most respectfully, yours,
Atha B. Crooks.
Married ladies, under all circumstan
ce", will nua Parsons Purgative Pilit Bute;
una in small donee, a mud cutuartio. Tue;
oauee no gripiog pam or cramp.
Nuthii'ig is more Larassiug than ulcers
or biaif. Fortunately tuey can be quickly
lii alcd Ly the use of Glenn 8 Bulfbub Boap,
wliicli iiurcod tne eore oi iu poisonous virua
or (rouJ fleali, aud thus removes tbe onjy ob
tuclo to Un bealiug. Depot, Cntteuton'e, No. 7
Sixth avenue, New York.
Urow jouuc in ten mmutea witn tiiu a in-
utautaneous Hair Dye.
BcHENca'l Bea Wud Tonio. In the atmoapbsr
xparleoMd hen dorlnc the lunimar month. th letii
krgy pnduoad by the hoat take away th dealre for
wholaaome food, and freqaant peraplratlons rednoa
bodilj energy, partlonlarly tboae Buffering from the
effeota of debUltatlag dlaeaaea. In order to keep a
natural healthful aotl.lt of the ayatetn, we muat reaart
to artiilolal meana. For thla purpoae Sohenok'a Baa
Weed Tonto la Tery eff eotuaL A. few doaee will create
an appetite and give freeh vigor to the enervated body.
For diapepala, It la Invaluable. Many eminent phyit-
olana have doubted whether dyapepala oan be perma
nently oared by the druge whlob are generally employed
for that purpoM. Tbe Bea Weed Tonlo In Ita nature ia
totally ditleranl from anoh druge. It oontaina no oorro.
lve mineral or aoldi ; In faot. It aaalata the regular
operatlona of nuture, and auppllee her denoleaolea. The
toulo In ita nature ao muoh reaemblea the gaatrio juloe
that it la aim oat Ment.uJ with that fluid. The gaatrio
uloe le the natural aolvent wbloh, in a healthy ooodttlon
of the body, eaueee the food to be dlgtated ; and when
thla juloe t not Inoreaaed in sufflolent quantltlea, Indl
gll..u, li all iu diatreaalng aymptome, followe. The
bea Weed Touui performa the duty of tbe gaatrle juice
ben the latter ia denolent. Sohenok'a Baa Weed
onlo aold by all Dr-gglata.
HALF A UGLUR
Will PaflerUi
CHICAGO
ledger
For th Next Half Year.
Thft T.ffDOFft t a late 8-purs, 64-antainn, fodftpoeitant
Nswipnpr, whlnb no lntllj(fnt fftmUv aboald IM wlU
tnt. TbsbMtbl'iTT Pir printed. TrT '..
AdltraM. TIIK liKUUKU, Chisago, 111.
MERIDEN CUTLERY CO.
Tb "Patemt Itobi" Handli Table Khits.
MANUFACTURE ALL KINDS OF TABLE CUTLERY.
Kioln.-lte Msrera of the " PATF.NT I VOK Y or Oellolold Knlfo, the most dorablo WHITE llAN'HjR
known. The Oldest Munnfaoturem In Amertoa. Original makers of the IIAKO KUHIIKK IIANIH.K.
Alwav call for " Trade Mark " ' MKRIDKN OUT1.KRY CO." on the blade. Warranted and sold b all Dealer
I , Cutlery, and bj the HFItlliK t'HTI.KH V I O l t himihera lrert, ork.
A fact worth rBmemborinp; five oents
worth of Bheriilan't Cavalry Condition Pom
rifrt, given to a noire twice a wek, will save
diub e ii-at amount In grain, and the borne
will be fat.er, sleeker, and every way worth
more tunney than though he did Dot have
them.
lie Markets.
saw YORK
B-l OaitliPrline to Extra Bullooka U8!(k in
Common to Oood Texsni 08 1 PS
Milch Oow m mi '' uu
Hotrs Live
Drnaaed.
Sheen
LnmSa
Citttmi Mtd-UliiK
Vluur Kltra AVnteru..
8'ute Kttra
Whi-at Rrt Weftnrii...
No. a Hpriiig...
It;e ftrati..
I'BHl
08 H
PS
o;
.
7 00
0 71
1 10
1 18
fc8
04 I
0ftfe
11V
S ) I
I VI
1 10
1 10
18
U
l)
(4
liarley Htle
Barley Malt 0 1
Oath Mixed Weatern 81
Omn Mixed Wsatfrn (3
Hay, perewt ....... ft)
Strv, per cwt 60
Hop....7' 10 1H olds 04
Peril M-es 30 00
lanl 11
k'lih Mackerel, No. 1, ii!-w lit 00
No. a, new U it'
I-'ry Cod, per cwt...... .... . . i 74
rtrt riiix. fei-aled. per box 31
11"
A 43
(a ex
( 1 CO
(4 1 30
m 0
(430 CJ
14 11
(H 00
fU 00
t 6 35
(4 21
-rttrole'iiii )rul Objf !!' Beflned,
11
Vool California FU-ocs II 4 3d
Tuas ' )4 (4 ?S
AuntrMian " A
Hatter HWo 30 (4 56
Woxtt-rri Dutry 31 (4 S3
'.Vivlcni Yellow 18 (4 S3
V,"nstern Ordinary 13 IM IB
OhKae PtM Factory 08 14 19kf
HEumDed I'D (4 0.
Wi-Btern 04 14 IPV
.:! State 13 14 (X
f'ox-x
W Ilea-
as
l :o
10 00
, i a)
1 .J-v
t '4
14
84
71
U0
'iy-j....
oar'-j.
IBILUILPBU.
Heof Cattle Extra.
Sheep......
01 a
04 K
H6
8 3)
76
r6
69
IS
83
HOfffl Drei-sed..
0(4
inonr Jfrnuu.yivan.-a Extra 6 75
Akrit Wiritfn Bed 7J
Uyo.... 7J
Om-u Vails,.. .....a 68
M;x. ) 66
.late-Mix 37X6
'cirolHiir Clrn. lVd&UX 3alnd
18
WATCIITOWN, KAH8.
Beef Cuttu 1'oor to Choice. 4 7S t 7 "Jtf
-tho-iv 1 CO (4 6 60
Mini 8 Oi) (10 0'
OOK. AGENTS
WASTED
to sell the I
TIlOl'SANUSof ciDTasseni hav answered
our call to cell this fnmout Dew book -and yet vo
want ..HlO more I Jt portrays life as it natty
is in Kgvpt, Turkey, ana the Holy Land, and
contnhiH KOO .Vn'mjirent urw Eiuravlnm. fiOO
Oulilts wrrcordfifd in ailmnre, and Aenti ar
riling to tn :iO a day. iiOlh thoiimwl now in
iti note m n'tur tunc to make
U' tuony u-i'h th? fastest
n it Fiii;i; to ail
in'ilft. w-ili i'TI; ti'rm. fief. Adilre.
. J). WuH J lllNJiON it CO., Hartford, Conn.
AQTTTftTA The on! Bnr remedy. Trial package I
TLL. CATALCMStTF OF ARTIOLFS FOR AAV,4a
Free. BOSTON NOV K LTV" CO., Maaa. Ageil PS
Tk-ftnt iioit. JTieaaant work : baDdrednowrnloveii .
Sl hnndreda more wanted. M. N. Lovell, Kris, Fa.
VKItV desirable NKW ARTIOLFH for Apenta.
j g.rrti ny u. u. uapkwell b uo., UN nan ire, iiom.
?J1 O n day
thome. A eent wanted. Outfit and terms
y iree.
A Orexs I K UK A UU., Augusta. Maine.
YVAVrf,:l AKNTK SompU on Outfit. fre.
v v ffr f 'mn uoia. a. uuuivi k.k a uo.. unioago
6 K -f a $OAi day at honut. Samp leu worth 91 aa t
PU LU C'J free. STIN6QN A 0(J., Portland, Me
i K LKxira Vine Mixed Oards, with Name. lO eta.
post paid. L. JONKS A CJO. , Nassau, N. Y.
l)OY mid MKIjS oan make Mooey dnrlnc their
1 summer vatsat loo. Kmid : -oent etirop for partlcn
iars w u s. nuujvAr rjujuan, rtumerriue, n. j.
61 0!K
9w ror MiLieHiiirn. nu puaaiera wan tea.
A'ldrcSH, monitor Man UF o uo., uiuotunati, LHilo.
Andres
$3
WATCH r. A Great Rensatlnn. Sample
nuten ort uwjtt free to A'rnt. Belter toaa
Gold. Address A. OOULTKR A CO., Ohlcauo.
A KL-atn vV tinted. Twenty 9x I Mounted Cromoa
n icr i . RunoiM by mall, poet-paid, is (Jo. uonxi
iWiiT.t. ' ii homo uo., 37 ftaaa wtreet, "Q.'.0
A PIIHTI'NK oan be made without eost or risk.
i Combtnatloa form In a: . Partloulara free. Address
i. n. PUhH,s, Manager, Kawilus Ulty, Wyoming.
350 sS
onln. Atcenta wanted. 30 best fell
articled In the world. One sample free
M - . ' -U-v.'t jueiroti.Micn.
opium
HABIT CURHD AT UOMB.
No publicity. Time short.
Terras moderate. l.UOU testlmo
nlals. Describe case.
Dr. r . K. Mabbh. Qulnoy, Mloh.
A WKKK rnarantCid to iala uud -
uue Asenta. tn Uuve loaiM.. in
NtrfllNG to tcy It. lHrttaol'-9 w
i. , VIOKKHV A Of)., Aa.J '-. '
OPIUM
and Fvlorphtne Flnble absolute'? and i
speedily cured. 1'alnlese; uo uuduouj,
Send stamp for Partloulara. lr. Oaf-.i-Ton,
137 WasblnKton St., ObJo&KO.Ill.
AGENTS
All Wart It lbocinlBof ll.'..aLad
m' Itlous of o roper ty aand by tt-fo anoj
maae wnii u pamouiftM irwe. u.
LiKwmyow A B ro. ,?i ew Yoi k A U!i jt
$250
A tKINTII Airents wanted everv.
whero. Bunlnesa honorable an1 tint
oihJ-e. Particulars ceut tree. Addroca
Yi UK I II A UU., Pit. LiQUla, MO.
S10'S2Ss
"1T.nw. Illnilmlwi .' " TO, of fat
ii. Vfarutii",. .rHvnni. and OrMiitilul Plrturi
.'ard.ofDnu-il iiivn.woin.r ni fretiilrDttol
u s. r
TKl A.l
.Vi.itinfc. Kt-wnrrt. Motlo. Comic, aon Trant.
parent CKr.lt. IVAf.iii
i.H. bUHOIUI-S SUA ii, Uual u. MASS. L.l.Ui.li.d 1U0.
I'lt.wiirllif,, .rut iwntimlit rnrMn emu.
A NOVELTY. IcrrT,rIrt
tJt. rda. con t auil uK a scene wbeu beld to the light 60
dcsl nttji, sent pot-t-paid lor Vi cents ; 6 packs, 6 oamni,
No other card irluterbaatbesanie. AKduta wanted;
outut it to. uarQ rruiier, wyjt poi u, Atmina, an
pSTCnOMAI.CT, or Sonl elutriating."
C How eUiivr lutiy lum iuultt ami sain tUv Ijt1 n.n '.
aflcttta ofauj jnrtiu tht-y cIioorv, tuuinuily. Thla art U: can
pnaavM, frt, by d11, fifrnli; tofetlittr with a Lovfi ;: QUiId,
Bgyptlan Oracla, Drunn, HmUto LawHi, l.seO.OOOeoi'J. A
oiar book, aadrs T. WllXlAMa k OU. fnb'a, ytdladstpinaji
fTlll A O The onoioeat in tbe World lmporteis'
i Aji.i pribos jLar.eat Comnauy In An.erloa
staple article pi Baa evurybody Traoe voutlnuaity
iucreaaluR Agents wanted everywherebeat Induce-ineiiu-ddn't
waate time send for circular to KOki'T
WKLL1S, 43 Vetsey bt., N. Y. P. U. box 1 87.
A BOOK for the MILLION.
MEDICAL ADVICE ttSStSSFSsS?.
Catarrh, Hupturf . Opiuiu Uabit, c.,litNT KJh on receipt
Ur. tiuiti' Oiineniary No. IS N. fth it, St. (fOuls, Ma
0 AGENTS WANTED FOR THE GREAT
CENTENNIAL HISTORY
It sells faster than an other book over published. One
Agent told Hi oopiea tn one day. bend for our extra
beriua w AKttnia. iiAliUMAOa rUBLUaUtiO UOUPANY,
ruiiaunipuia, a.
CWAK II1IOKB t'Ol.l.KfiK. TenlUUea from
ruuadeipMa Under Ihe care of Krieoda. Olvee a
tborouga oolieaiaie Education to Uitb aex-a, who here
Suraue the .ame cour.ee of atody, and reoetve the aaine
eriiee. iotal Kiponaea Including Tuition. Board.
weening. I'aa oi book, eto., W;t.iO a Year. No Kilra
Uhamea. 1-or l atalogue. giving tall partloulara aa to
Uoil'Wiaiil Btudy. lo.,addreaa, Kdwakd 11. MaoiLL,
Everett House,
North aide Union Bauare. Naw Vnrk nir..
Oooleet and Moat Oeutral Location la the
uity. n.epion tne r.uropean flan.
KKKNKK A WKAVER.
Clarendon Hotel.
Fourth Avenue, corner Kaat 18th Street, New Tor
vnt. ituiu g um: v. a. HKKNKK.
STONINGTON LINE
Between New York, Boston, and all
New England Points
Thm only relUbl L'ns manlnf , Avo'dtoc th daoien
uid 8u McLumm ot Pa tut J udi
mm
Nota
trlti mlMMii In
t-Tttn yettn. riatMt n-et ot totfuner oa Loug Ulivud
ouuuq. juat ievr 101E from fler SiS, ISurtta
Hivrr tuol of Jay mtreel, Otulr (txcpi bua
days). Ht 5 ill. urnvtiiff Iu ioiuu hi U
o't'lork uric uioruli.tf, tuv&tlabiy on tiro u. Le
Bus ton from the Hob too & Provldtue K K. Uept.
Park. S4ur tvnd Oolum ui Avenue, at P. ill., iv
Ing on bukvrd thm bUtuneri tn tin. for auppar aod la
Nw York t next ai'.rntiiK, htd of ail otbar lino.
J lokata to ail polnia via tola Line for aaia at all principal
Ticket OLtice. basaa obookd Uirouu. Aak lor
TiokvU l bUmioMton Lice.
L. W. i- ILKINB, Gw. Put, Agi.
D. a BiMOOCE.Praa'fc.
ttilt9
Hi
HALF A COLLAR
Will Ktj tor the
CHICACO
iimm
For the Next Half Year.
Th 1.1 POT a h a Ito apir, M-eolnran, tntfstwBilmt
Kowapspsr, which no Intelligent lmUj ahonld M wltb
out fh bMl Story Psyw printed. Tit It.
Addrwa. THE IKDVKR, Chicago, IlL
YU' R own Ltkenees In oil oolori, to ahow onr work,
vatiiled on oanTaa, ISx7), from a photorraph or
tln trpe, tree with the ffom Journal, Wli.ftO a year.
Hample of oar work and paper, tenna to aaente, eto. , lO
ote. U T. LUTHBR. Milrvillaae, Rrie oonnty, Pa.
BNNSVI.VANIA MILITARY AI1AOEMY,
1 Chester. Irnn.. Reonena SeDterober 112.
Thorough Inatrnotlon In nfrll a
the Ulaesloe, and Kngllah ttranohea. For Utronlara,
I mining Huanneenna.
i Knvlne
apply to mil, i n p.u. a y a i i, tree., l. m. a.
ACreat Offer!
During thim
ttitintti
will diMDOMM
of MM) nrw and nrrond-hnnfl PIANO ttntl
TC.KV, nt lower prlrM ihnn ever hrfnrn
nflrrrd. Nfw 7 l-ItOclnv I'lnnnn or Mtj?n,
Hnxrii mi ft Hhlpprtl. Term, 9dO cNh nu
M monthly until nnlil. INew 5 Orinve (i
Mlop Orflnn. vith bol elaneln an tnol, wnr.
rnntrri. for 1 ':." -H.j rnnh, n.! J.) mnnthly
until piitd. Illiiftmteri I'ninloaiif n umttlptt.
At-iKNT.H WANTKU. IIOKA K WATUKM
oV frtlNM. 4 81 HrcmiiwiiT, N. V.
CO YOUR OWN PRINTINC!
PRINTIH& PRES.
Kor JrofVtmiiil nnrl A mil ten
Irlntr. Helmut, NiH'ivtlvii Mm.'
iiTttct nrt't-tt, -II ii'caltutitwa ntnl thwi it it
the BEST wr invfiil-d. J :i.O0 In kei;
iTen atyU-, TrtrM from $5.00 to SICHV'U
BENJi O. WOODS Ik C". -Manutt;n..
fiairn fi. kiudt ot Prtntlna Mat:r '.
FAMILY
FRUIT and JELLY
T II USE I
One-third more inloe than by the old
? rot-ess. A liou-ehoid nei-e sliy. Kvery
mlly will tiu one. tuart and gillon
sires. Liberal dlscU"t to the troe.
For clroul r nn-l t"tmv sddresa with
stimp, AMKttlOAN FKUIT AND
JELLY PBKSS t'O.,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Apni Wnntrd In Kverv Town und founty.
Madame FOYS
Corset Skirt Supporter
Increases in Popularity every
year, and
For tlF.MTIt, CM POUT tw4 STYLE Ii
rkti' nledg'd li&AT AUTlCLg of
the kiad tr mid.
Fr 1-7 all lidin jo' Vr an r
tftlltM, Llewar of imitation and in.rln(
nieot.
MANTTPACTtmKD BOT.ET.T BT
JOY & IIAIOION,
New Haven. Conn,
mm
IHNfnP. llk-i rlvem.BDrina; from onuse. The
roaring river may not b- eolly divetid from It courne,
nor the Dofrleutd dlsefe from its datrncttv-e work.
Taken in time, dle;ae, which l merely an Interrupted
mnction, may be averted by toe use oi nature s remeoy.
Tarrant's Soltzer Aperient,
It oorebtnfm the medical properties of the best mineral
waters ia tbe world-
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
For a nauMrul White Oro"e,
e'iUti'iH'1 in l e u'if'tl rosea
o-i dark b.iulaKronndl la
f rf-n- h oil olor-.ll v14 iicif
and the tnn v. o-k y Glohe
an 8-p-igH tiUiiil' "lory puper,
tor tiir- lticnfhv. ('h-nmo
nid pnperji mailed pr nit'tJj-.
Tj1 fcpst ofTHr ont. Ad'IrrM
GLOKK PUU. CO.,
IN Wa'b tun U'rt ot.,BuBton(Mass.
10
I'KNTH and a H-cm stamp for5P
Wnlt Bristol VMtlnir Cards Print d
by a procpes. No nicer ones ver
seen. PHcei nevwr before named. I-anr-et
arl tv everabnwn. All o n-r kinds
Gorrerpoiidna:'y low. Circular", 3 -cent stamp. Induce
ment oever ueioro uiierea :o ageuis, iwrruory last
being taken.
vy , u, Uiwnii.i, dot ziu, nosToo, man.
GLENN'S
Sulphur, Soap
eradicates
Ali, Locai, Skin Diskases;
Pkrmankxti.t jUkautikies Tim
Complexion, I'kkvknts and Wkme-
DIES HlIKUM.tTlSM AND GOUT,
Heals Souks and Injukieb
of the Cuticle, and
is a IIkmablb Disinfectant.
This popular nud inuxpi'iisivo reme
dy accomplishes the hamb uf.bui.ts
as costly Sulphur Hatiis, sinco it
permanently removes jKhuptions
aiul Irihtations of tho Skin.
Complexional lii.EMisiiKs aro ui
w.iys obviated by its use, and it ren
der's the cuticle wondrously lair and
sin- Otll.
SoitEi, Sprmvs, UitnsKn, Scald?,
IHinisand t)ut8 are speedily healed
by il, and it prevents aud remedies
(Join uud Hlieiimatism.
It removes Dandruff, slrentrihcns
thu roots of tins Hair, and preserves
its youthful color. As u Disinfectant
of Clothing and Linen used in lliesielt
room, ami as a Pitoi eci ion iintinst
Contauious Dike asics it is 11111411 .led.
Physicians emphatically endorse it.
Prices, 2." and 50 Cents per Cake,
Per Box, (a Cakes,) OUc and $1.20.
X. B, There ii economy lu buying the lare calcea,
gold by all Druggists.
" Hill's Hair an iVhlttker Dye,"
Black or It row 11, 50c.
C, N. CR1TTEXT0N. Pro r. 7 Siith Av. N.Y.
ELECTRICITY
For
the Million. An Electric
Battery for 25 Cents.
COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTER
Cures Fains and Aches.
It aq a all em the Circulation.
ItaubdotM ImUininatory Act loo,
It onrea Hunturua aud Mraina.
It romuvf Palo and S tre-.eaa.
It ora Kidney Ocmplaiut.
Itatreng he. a the Muscle.
It cure Rh a mat Urn and Nenralgta.
It relaxed 8Utf ued Corda.
It oura Nervoua Shocks.
It ia Invalnnhle In Ptialyali.
It oure I nil '.mniaitlna of ihm Lirer.
It reiaovee Neivoua Pabia.
It oorea S inai Woaku' aa.
It la Grateful and hotblug.
It ourea Ki-Uep-y or 1 'U
ltUhafe, Heilitble nua Kconomloai,
It 1 p'acrir.ed ur Pbyrlciana.
It la laiioraed by Kleo ululate.
COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTiR
Ia warrant!, on the repuiaiiou of Dr. t)oj int.lU lnven.
tor, an old pbiaitilan, to be tbe tett ulaater in tiie ttorld
of nudloln. 1 be union ot tbe two icreat medical agnta,
via. : Kteotrioity aod Medical (jumi and KfesebOca, fully
juatlbea tbe claim. and eatillea ibla remedy to rank fore
moat imoiif ail coxauve Oompouuda tor all external
Acbea and rilut.
Prloa, 95 eenta. Sold by all Dm lata, and eent on
rttwipt of price, If 5 cents tor one, tor aix.or
or twfl, oarHiully wrappea and warranled
by WEEKS POf 'l EK. ProprteUrr, Butt-n. Mm
N Y N U
? uletuc M) t(a fftft. u.W ihh 9rU