iA.--- - . -art -7- Tr,T inr. PAtinc rd.ss Fan rssnoMJ 20, I A VI D f'F tXri-ANATlON. 1 have bi iu for ncany two years Wi.ine too, swrtta r-ad.r, po,ua a -1 I . i .i,:na in t he to life, pu..' laFtern n'lipr men 'metropolis. lo":a-r like, desirous cf seeing all j there is tf the world, I am in Have vou the Western metropolis aoy . . .1 the continent instead ol tne miat. now to i.r.T there. Take anv route you euooto i Chica?o. and then take tl.c t rnvgo nn i Northwestern I'.oad to Omaha, Take Pullman ears, if you have to go with oce meal a flay ji-, comfort of riding keeping in them a;l day in mem ana night, pays ii,an ten times mc com . - L you have anv regard fjr your bone?, take the Pullman car at Chicago, and i I. I .n in M i i r iiav t tio price wuuuut i.iu"""'u There is a blcssinir on any peat in then . At Omaha it is Jlobdsons choice, for there is bin one railroad the Union Pacific, leu can want; to San Francisco, but I would not j ndvi.-e it. A walk of 2.000 miles is no joke. I know something about it, for I not oaly had a substitute ia the nrrnv, who wns ia Sherman's march to the tea, but I was personally in the late blockade caused by the break in Cu ca River, on the I'nion PacifSe, p.r.ti was compelled to walk four miles arcund it. At the start 1 1 olijeetien to knowmpr porueiuiu ucamsuiiej uumc ucic uuu uie this cad of the world? 0 cour.-e not. hire that they can live Letter Lere So for a lew weeks at least, I f-ball i than ia China, and here they are fro-cr-d vou a letter from this fide of j ing to stay. The Chinaman cn this thought I couiu waih. me w uoie uis- j Wlln tilm tlje pet uTiarities which dis (anee to Sin Francisco; at the end of j tinui.shcd him at Lis home. Ireland the fir.-t mile I concluded to take the ! js not n3 r,pre?ente(l here as in cars again at Ogdcn. COO miles i vtw York, but tLe Italians. Oer- and by the time I got to where tne tra n was tbat was to take us on, I was fuita contented to eral ( Orient.'but leaving that out itis verv tLe Puliman, and permit steam to .iojmut Jike chicasro. There is the the walking fur me. Don't walk it. satne ttur, buet!e,"and puih; everv tliit is if you weigh 240 pounds. ! ;)0(r nl0vcs in a hurrr, business Is THE (oLVTIiV. From Omaha through the entire State of Ncbrat-ka, the eye is delight ed with a succession cf views cf the iinet-t country that lies out of doors. Yat plains of the most lxautiful lands in the world stretch out on either Land, intersected by the most lovely f-trcanis of clear papid ran ting "water, the tables riring one riV.ve the other. Bich, prosperous 1 '".vr.s are located at convenient di.-t-uecs, and everywhere there are visible s-igns of thrift and prosperity. 'iVhen you leave Xebra.-ka, how ever, yen strike another kind of roiiLtry. Through Wyoming Tcrri t'irv the sage brush and alkali plains abound, and th(-y continue till the eye wearies of them. Iiiicgine a vast plain, reaching farther than your nc treeless and crassicss. covered with wild sage and the Mill more disagreeable grease-wood, scd inhab ited by no living thing. A tomtit would starve on a thousand acres, and rti-iLe. grow poor t..crc. There is no water f'T vegetation, and no! vegetitoia lor water. 1 oe fagti ana :-rese-woed reem to grow there from a desire to m-.ke a naturally landscape wors--. After crossing tLe Hotly Moun - tjins you find tome pood lands till vou pass Ogdcn, Utah, then you come to f-age orusa as thrown in to add dreariness of the west slope of the ;ain, wita rocss to the genera! scene. On the Sierra Nevadas you get patches of the most del i d country till you get down to rt-, the ; California plain, when vou rike 1 country the benuty of which may be. imagined, but cannot be escribed. : It is simply gorgeous. I sb Jl have j s methiag more to say of the coaa- trv irotu umatja to Mia irsncisco 1 .Teafter. 3?y the way, if you want to know il! about Nebraska, send a postal rnrd toO. F. Iavis Omaha, Nebras ka, asking him to send you a copy of tLe I'iuneTt which he will do free f charge. It is reliable and truthful, and is full of valuable infor mation r.bout that country. san r.nNci.-i o h a modern wonder. Scarcely twenty years old, it contains nearly '(0,000 people, and os many fine I'tiildings as anv city ot its size ia lie country. Many building? in deed the most of them are low, three stories being the regular height, which gives the city something of a squatty appearance, but there is a reason for this. Earthquakes are somewhat common oa the coast, and when they come they shake up thincs rather lively. Put why they build low on this account I cannot sc. If a building tumbles down what difference does its height make? If a stone weighing ten tons is to fall oa me in an earthquake I don't see that it would make any difference whether it dropped from the top of a three or a six story building. Put there may be a difference. And if I e.in employ a Chinaman at a reason able price to make the experiment, I will do so and report. 1 am willing to do almost anything to get at fjc'.s. Speakin? cf OiitNAMEV. litre you Lave them in all tLt-ir native ugliness. They come here first, and a majority f them stay here. They do the most of tLe house-work, ail the washing and iron ing, and a very large portion of cob bling and eiirar-making. Tbey are n,U particular as to how they make a living, si that they make it. Tbey will wash vour linen, clean vour win- dows, scrub your floors, wait at your tables; or ihev will go out into the mountains and shovel dirt oa your railways. They are industrious, quick, active, and, as a rule faithful: and. accustomed es ther arc to strict obedience, they are easily managed. As conks and chambermaids, or rath er chambcrmen, they are faverits with California housekeepers, for they arc neat and trustworthy. A Chinaman waiting at table, with Lis clean, cottoa trousers and lrock, his noiseless nep auu uis cirauie move- meat, is a sight for sick stomachs to one who has inwardly rebelled at the greasy men waiters cf the East. P.y the way, why don't the people of the Fast, who have been so long un der the iron heel of Piddyoeracr, send here for Chinese servants? Think, O ve house keepers! how de- LgbituI it must be to have a servant ' coaipany; and it was the most popu who can cook, chop wood, clean win- I1" company; as ever went from dows, tlraa buggies, run on errands, Sussex county. All the women make up beds, and do everything wanted their husbands and sons to else with the silence and precision of 8 w'la rae. Tbev kaowed S3 I was a machine who can understand all ! n Ptratcgint. I didn't skeet 'round you say. but whose only answer is, ! after fighting men when I was re- Aileelite." That's the kind ofa tlave . cruitmff- I bunted up mr fellows to Lave. And you can pet them for 'tbat bad long legs, fellows that could from $12 to $25 per month. Tbey, run. What was the result? Wben are so cheap that I am going to Lave ! ever there was a ficbt other compa threc of tbeni. I have nothing un-' nies would go ia and after a while uer heaven for them to dx but thev orae out all en t.i ni Tt..t I aw so cheap that it seems a pity notjPdge you mv word and honor that to indulge in Chinamen j 1 never gut iu'to a Cght all through Tbey ought to be pat in the mines and on the railways of the East for the sake of peace and quiet. Thy doa't strike or combine, and ther jievcr get drunk Saturday nights. AiiJ it is & tuiitake to suppose that they are of no u?c tothe ccr.)tnun;t:es inwbich thej dwell. Thrj cra their toonev and ppond it os do other peo ple. True, tbey fare something every mouth, but 1 never ncara : thnttiac was a vko. ic w,, UmniT hurl- f n Prima tii an v alarniiBir extent. At the beginning, they did fro back vvnen they bad made their pile, but now thew they pat it in town lots, end star. They have discover c i .i i: i.. j iceasi is a u.cu iuci, ana pomiciaus , may as well get ready to court him. i He cannot Lc driven from work, he - Jjeannot Lc prevented from earning ; anj faving money, aad when he gets j moneji ic ;3 going to have political j jaguence jie ney g-et strong enough i here m time to Le alderman ana po- i an, mar rrCt un riots to till I off otter foreigners nay, he may do ii ; a iilmr f, irpi n-nprs hnri rinnp nn t hp AtlaiJt'C oast, run the machine so en tirely as to make it impossible for an (American to hold aa office; bat that is m the future. I p to this ti.ue, he is a gond fellow, aad a very useful one. I t-ball Lave more to tay about him hereafter, for I am going into his heme and see how he lives. OTHER rEOTLE. Leave out the Chinamen and you wouldn't know San Francisco from Boston, New York or Chicago. You find here the pure New Koglander, the same as Le is in Boston, the bust ling New Yorker and the risky I Chicagoian, aad each has brought C)anH ani rre:,.,n are vcrr rcntT. -The citv is a lilt!.-! tinCTd y, .u the quickly begun and rapidly concluded in short, it is the Chicago of the PaciGe. I like Saa Francisco. I Eball study its peculiarities and write of it more at length. I want to get m bide the homes and tLe business places, t!;o amusements and the churches. THI! CLIMATE. is delightful. There is no hot weath er here in the shsde one is always cool and comfortable. J'iF.T."0. ur:i Injnreil tj VVti.'lo (Itctii. A sul Co., Pa r-r!tir.i rfl.lintr i:y 1 Trfinr( writes that the White Grub! j was very abundant in his neighbor i hoed last summer, destrovin? entire 'cornfields as well as meadows, by j eating the roots of both corn and grass. They commenced upon the corn when it was abcut a foot high, and continued to work at the roots during tbc entire summer, We did not usually attempt to j name or identify an insect without ; specimens or a full description, but . in this instanoo we bave no doubts in j regard to the one referred to under jtbc name of White Grub, as they i are too common and widely known j to be mistaken for anvthin? else. These White Grubs arc the larva? of the numerous species of May bee tle, which frequently enter our bouses ia the evening during the spring or early summer months, as tbev 11 v about at nijrLt and are at- traorr;! Iiv the lio-ht fif a limn or fire. The female beetles usuallv --r-- deposit their ers in crass lands or unculti vated fields and the grubs feed upon the roots of various plants and live in this state two to four years. If pastures or meadow lands arc plowed and the grass killed, then planted with corn or other similar crops, the grubs having been deprived of their other food, would naturally seek the roots of whatever plant they could Cnd. These grubs are especially fond of roots of corn and strawberries and they will also feed voraciously upon potatoes; heace the frequent failure of such crops upan sod, al though otherwise it is usually con sidered preferable to land which has noi Docn sceuea down witn gras3. Xow, the giubs which were so destructive to corn last season, may all pass through this last transforma tion and become beetles this spring. seeking uncultivated fields for future depredarions: but of this we cannot be positive without an examination of the infested field. In plowing the old ctrnUclds this spring they should be carefully t-xamined for grubs, and if none or only a few found, then it will be safe to plant again with corn, because the beetles will seldom fre quent a cornfield for the purpose of laying their epgs there, preferring a less disturbed location. The Crow and Plackbird are tLe great natural enemies of the White Grub race, and whenever these birds frequent a newly-plowed field wo may rest assured that they are do ing us a favor in eating the larva? or fully matured May beetles. We have seen crows follow the plowman upon our fsrm for hours at a time, searching for these and other kinds of grubs. For these and other very rood reasons, we do not permit crows to be killed or frightened from our premises, and if they want a lit tle soft corn at the time their yocng are hatching in spring, we provide it and save them the labor of pulling up that which we had planted Far mers should remember that the mo.c birds, the less insects: and na n mis the former arc the preferalb to the 'latter. Soaking seed cora in tar water will prevent the attacks of some kinds of insects. We have had no experience with it as a preventive for White Grubs, but it might be worth trying. We do not know of any bet ter way of ridding a field of White Gruts than continued cultivation and assistance from birds. Hral Arte Yorlcr. An onirrr Who Wu Men. (nrrful of his I dropped in at the grocery store a few nights ago, and found ol 1 Crop per sitting with his feet oa the stove talking to a circle of friends. He said: "You didn't Iflow tbat I fit in the w ar? Well. sir. I had a snlendid u-j 1 a'"u i bring out onc- tbird more men than I took in. I ought to've been a rriga1ier Gener al, i could Cave doubled the annj uer a oattie or two Max Adder, The interest excited a conple of ycara Bgo by Mr. George Smith's translation of a fragmentary Chalde an ccccufit of the deluge from the Assyrian tablets discovered by Lay ard'is renewed by the fame featle man's recovery from the ruins of Kouvnnjik of missing part3 of that record, urarlv restoring the whole in scription, which is supposed to date from at .'east 2,000 years before the Cbr'-:.uu era. This Chaldean ver sion however, differs in many ro fpects from the Biblical legend, of which it is manifestly the prototype, not only or us minor details, bat cbiefly in the polytheism of its myth, Tia.sisadra, the Chaldean 'oah, is transformed into a demigod, who in his immortal abode tells an earthly visitor the story of his escape from the flood wherewith the gods pun ished the wickedness of the children of men. His floatine on the face of the waters were 0f much briefer du 619, the deluge described by him Lav ing lasted but six days, and Lis ves sel hating been stranded upon the mountains of izin on the seventh day, while the Noachian ark found no resting place until the ssventeenth day of the seventh month from its launching, and nearly a year elapsed before the earth was restored to a habitable condition. The graceful Scriptural legend of the winged mes senger of peace, from which the ol ive branch derives its emblematical significance, ia less poetically given in the older version, though enough to show their relationship. The ra ven first sent out by "oab plays no important part in the drama, the suc cessive journeys ot the dove, his late emmissary, leading to his ultimate release. In the Assyrian story these episodes are reversed in order of time and importance. Hasisadra is made to say : On the soveuth Jay ia course of I: I tent forth a dove mad it leX The crve went in1 turned, and A re?ting-ll-e It did not find, and it rctarac-l. 1 cnt f..rth ewllow od It left. The fwallow went and tamed, and A resting place it did not fir.d, anJ It returned. I tout forth a rarcn and it leK. The raven went, and the corj.ses on the water I: saw, and It ti'.l eat. It fwam, nj wanJero.l away, end did not return. I jent the animals forth to the four wiiiil, I jHured out a libation. I ! u;!t an alter on the peak of the mountain. J!y seven herbs 1 cut At l!ie bottom of them I placid reed.'. F'n?-', find imirr. The gM collected at it homli:;. the g.ls collcct e.I at its irood turning : TLe sou like flics over the i.iorihice gathered. In ad Jition to this most interesting discovcrv, Mr. Smith found in the course of his Asynaa explorations more than 3,000 fragments of ancient inscriptions relating, among oiner tLincs, the legends of the Creation, the Tower of Babel, etc., which may prove of irreat importance not only ia tbeir mythological but in their eth nological bearings. Turnln; Cattle eat lo Panttire. After a long confinement ia stables or barnyard, stock will be very glad to get a nip of grass or other green fodder in Spring. Iut they are sel dom any more anxious than their owners, who in many instances, have for weeks past been feariug a sight of the bottom layer of hay or corn stalks, or have already scraped up the last peck of ground feed, and cut the bushel of turnips. Buf. turning out stock to pasture too early in pring is a common mistake through out the country, and losses ia consc- queace. Cattle should not be al lowed ia the pasture until the ground has become sufficiently settled in Spring to prevent tbeir feet from breakingthrongh and injuringtbc sod, or before the grass has grown enough to furnish a bite. If stock are turn ed out while the ground is soft, and the grass short, tbey are compelled to travel much to obtain little food, thereby proportionally increasing the injury to the grass roots, as well as performing exhaustive labor in order to fill their stomachs. Many good pastures are seriously injured in this way, and their owners wonder why the grass runs out or grows so feebly upon land that is naturally rich and productive. Then, again, animals, after they get a few bites of fret-h srrass in spring, do not relish dry fodder, and if there is not a good supply of the former, they are likely to lose in flesh, or as in the case of milch cows, the flow of milk de creases. It is better to feed late, even if food has to be purchased, than to turn out to pasture too early. Ia localities where woodlands are abundant, stock may be turned into new clearings, or even into the woods first, where they may obtain considerable nourishment from the buds, and young twirs of various kinds of shrubs and small trees, and we hare known farmers to make good use of basswood, maple, and elm bush for their cattle in Spring, bv cutting and hauling it to their barnyards, especially when fodder was verv scarce. Of course not much food can be obtained ia primitive kind of fodder, but it sesses laxative and nutritious pertiee, and most kinds of stock this will eat these buds and small twigs evident relish. with Hanpy IT a o band. It is a man's own fault if Le u un happy with Lis wife, in nine cases out of ten. It is a very exceptional woman who will not be all she can bo to an attentive husband, and a more exceptional one who will not be verv disagreeable if she finds her self willfully neglected. It would be very easy to hate a man who, having bound a woman to him, made no effort to make ber happy; hard not to love one who was constant and tender; and when a woman loves she always strives to please. Ibe great men of this world have often been wretched in their domes tic relations, while mean and com mon men have been exceedingly hap py. The reason is very plain. Ab sorbed in themselves, those who de sire the world's applause were care less cf the little world at borne; while those who bad none of this egotism, strove to keep the hearths that were their own, and were hap pv in their tenderness. No woman will love a roan the better for being renowned or promi nent Though he be the first among men she will ocly be prouder, not fouder, and if the loses bim through this renown, as is often the case, she will not even be proud. But give her love, appreciation, kindness and there is no sacrifice rhe would not make for his content and comfort The maq who loves ber well is ber hero and her king. No less a hero to ber though be is not one to any other; no less a king, though LU only kingdom is her heart and home, A boy, who was told tbat the best cure for palpitation of the heart, was to quit kissing the rirls, said: "If tbat ia the onlf remedy, I sar let her palpitate." I.ois by Weeds and Iasects. It is estimated that the value of prodace annually raised ia this conn try is $2,500,000,000, of which amount nearly or quite one-fifth, or $500,000,000, is lost, according to the American Xaluralist, from the at tacks of injurious plants and ani mals. A single campaign of the ar my worm costs the farmers of Ha3 sachuietts $250,000 worth cf grass. Missouri alone loses from fifteen to twenty million dollars annually from insect depredations. The annual damage to the apple and pear crop from the codling moth amounts to several million dollars, and the work of the curculio is equally costly. A partial remedy is to be found in close study of insect habits, with a view to ascertaining what insect3 there are which bold the depredators in cheek to destrey them. It is hardly possi ble to estimate the havoc annually wrought by the grass-hopper aad the potato beetle, for example; and any bird or insect which would reduce such pests would be a substantial benefactor to the farmer. As to the "injurious plants," or ia the common vernacular, weeds, the only method that is feasible is to kill them at their Tery germination by mean3of proper agricultural machines. The Coun try Gentleman afSrms tbat the annu al growth of weeds in this country amounts to eight million tons, or enough to load a compact train of wagons long enough to span the globe. Precisely how the Country Gentleman arrives at this very deh-j nite estimate we are at a io i -terraine; but it would certainly be better for the farmer if the weeds were actually loaded into the "com pact train of wagons" referred to, rather than to hare them to choke his crops and leave an unwelcome legacy of liberally sown seed for fu ture seasons. Farmers have only to consult their own experience to real ize the extent to which the depreda tions ot weeds and insects ar car ried, and anv measures which tend to even extirpation of these pests arc worth the trying. I.on-et Lived Ilea ot JlOdern Tlnir. Ttamn do Waldeck. a French Daintcr. who has just celebrated his oae hundred and ninth birthday in Paris, is in perfect health, works eight cr ten Lours every day, and has a son on'y twenty-four years old. It is sorao consolation, observes tLe I'allMa 11 Ga:elle,to remember thatthe Baron must still live a considerable period to rival the fame of old Parr, who was born HS3, married when one hundred and twenty years old, lived to his one hundred aad fifty third year, and might have lived longer if Lord Arundell had not taken him to London from his na tive Shropshire in 1C35 to exhibit him as a curiosity to Charles I. Even old Parr, however, is not the oldest Englishman of whom wc have more or less authentic record. Ac cording to Ingulphus when Turketul, like a modern statefman, retired from the world and became Abbott of Croyland, Le found five very good monks there. Father Clarenbald, tbc oldest of these monks, died A. I). 973, in his one hundred and sixty ninth year. The second, Father Swarling, died at the age of one hun pred and forty-two The third, Father Tugar, was only one hundred fifteen at his death. The ages of the other monks, Prune and Aja, who died about the same time, could not be ascertained, bat both of them must have been very old, as they re membered the old Abby of Croyland, which had been destroyed by the Danes in 870. Another chronicler speaks of a Bishop of St. David's who died about this time, aged about one hundred and sixty years. Though aa incred ulous generation may now question the reputed age of these venerable Englishmen, they are, at all events, safe from the disparaging starch into baptismal certificate3 and sifting of evidence which must now embitter the last days of all aged people who hold themselve3 out as centenarians. "Tickets, Sir.' This was the way it happeaed in a town not far from Elmira: One of the regular attendants at Central Church is a railroad conductor. He is regular, not so much from any personal inclination fcr Culvanism as from the fact that he has a Grst-raie Presbyterian wife, who kcaps him in the way he should go. A few Sundays since one of the deacons was absent, and our conductor was requested to pass the plate. Of course he consented. For the Crst dozen pews, everything passed off well. There was a regular financial shower of nickels and dimes, and the railroad man watched sharp, but couldn't see that anybody "go, away" without responding. Finally he came to a seat where the occu pant was either busted or disinclined, for he shook his head but made no attempt on his pocket The conduc tor looked at him sharply, but no cash appeared. Then he nudged his 6honlder, aud softly called, "Tickets sir!" Again the man's head wagged horizontally, but the stamps didu't come. "Pass, then!" whispered the conductor. Still no response. Just as the railroad chap was about to call up the fireman and brt-akman to help pitch the impecunious worshiper out of doors, the regular deacon came in and relieved his proxy. The conductor savs he belie res in run- Ding a cburcb the same way you would a railroad train if a man wont pay or hasn't a pass, let him git. r-r change. f anaarenavat f Orchards. At the late vearlj meetiair of the renns jlrania fruit growers' Society we quote from the reported pro ceediogs "the subject of cultivat ing, manuring and pruning was opened by Thomas Meehan. He thinks much time is thrown away in cultivating orchards. He prepared a piece of bard rocky soil, by plow ing onder a heavy sod, and planting potatoes, followed with rye ;. and set in the fall on stubble, 1,500 fruit trees of all kinds and sorts, for his own ose dwarfs and standards. The work was done by common la borers in a rough manner, and the land seeded; since which Le had mowed from two to three tons per acre yearly for four years. All vari eties seem to do well and make a large current rear's growth. lie has applied surface soil, taken from along hedge rows and. bighwavs, each jear about the trees, as far as the roots extead; but the next year leaves the place where applied the year before, and puts the mould out side the former application thus getting the tree-food farther and far ther from the truck, and rlacinsr it where the feeding roots can eet it. lie also tpplies to the grass $i or $5 worth of phosphates every year. He prunes bat little, and grown Gne fruit with little expense." Germantoxcn Telegraph. A Chinese Horse Race. Good judges tell us that there is nothing funnier all the world over than a Chinaman on horseback. Bor den, a progressive little town ia Cali, fornia, had a dozen of them a few days ago, all careeriaj around at cacc on their fiery, ualaaied steeds, at oae time. That was funay ; but when it became kaown that these improved Mongoliaas were going to have a race, it a asfuaaier, and Borden went wild with anticipation of the fua. Everybody in town turned out to see the raco. "in fact, they made a day of it ; the butcher, the" baker, and the candle-stick maker all closed shops and followed tho pig-tail jockeys to the race course. Everything was done up ia approved style, and the horses got a good send off, and left the judges stand all ia a bunch, ketp insr neck and neck with each other, just as naturally as if they were not batki-d by a dozea grinning Chinese. The pace was not much to brag oa. though, aad just before they passed the quarter-mile post a group of dis gusted spectators thought to stir them up, and so broke out iu a sud den piercing yell, as if a thousand demons brd been Ietbosc all at once. Then there was a sight that would have made a dead man laagb. Each horse straightened Lim.-elt' out and went to win tLe race on his own hock, without any regard to his ri der. Seme took the shortest cut across the field, aud some picked the longest way around it ; and no two went the same way. H.rrlen will never taow who woa the race, and some of its citizens who lent horses to the CLinesu will never kaow what became of them. The white people remembered only that there was a sudden vision of a dozea affrith'.cd faces, faces that we:c everything but childlike and bland: j then there was a confused vision tf , fleeing horses, and riders engaged in I acrobatic feats more astonishing than j were ever witnessed in a circus. As i for the Mongolians, only ten of them crawled back to tell their story. The) other two may be racing to this day for aught that Borden knows, for nothing h3 bten heard of them since. The ten were packed off to j town and doctored. TlK-ir broken j bones were set and their bruises i rubbed, but nothing could be made of the story of that race. They talked enough, but every word of pigeon English had been frightened out of their heads, as no one could under stand a word of their heathen gibber ish F;cnlly thfy propped one up in a comfortable position in a saloon and plied him with occasional d.-iuLts of select concoctions from the couutc-r; and after three hours of this sort of attention, he got a twist with h's tongue around tie English lingo once more, an 1 delivered him self with solemn earnestness to the following effect : "-Me lunnum horse boss lacy, all a same Melieaa man ; bymcby hosse go ; we no come up, we no can do, you sable, by daninio. ' It wa3 enough, and Bor den is downcast ; for it fears tLat the first Chinese horso race was so much of a success that they will never be able t persuade John to try p.nothsr. What is Uranlj 7 Lord Byron observed justly, tbat the best part cf beauty is that which a picture cannot express. Lord Shaftesbury asserts that all beauty is truth. True features make the beauty of the face, and true propor tions the beauty of architecture, as true tnraauretb barraonT aad euuhic. It poetry which is all fubel, truth is still perfection. Fontenelle thus daintily compliments the sex when ho compares women to clocks the latter serve to poiut out tho hours, the former to forget them. There is a magic power in beauty that all con fess, a strange witchery that enchants us with a potency as irresistable as that of a maguet. It is to the mor al world what gravitation is to the physical. It is easier to write about beauty ia women aud all its p.evad ing influences than to defiuc what it is. Women arc the poetry of the world, ia the same sense as the stars are the poetry of heaven. Clear, light giving, barmouious, they arc the terrestial plauets thai rule tLe destinies of mankind. On Vt'Hkn Dg ilouite riant. Have a large pail or tub Oiled with warm soapsuds, then spreading the fingers aad palm of the left hand over the soil in the pot; turn the branches topsy-turvy into the warm soap-suds, swing the plant briskly in the water till every leaf ba.s become completely saturated, then put it through a pail of clean water, rub each leaf with the thumb and finger; give it a good fchike, and when dry, return to its place, ia tho window. The leaves of a plant are its lungs, each leaf being furnished with hun dreds of minute pores, whence the plants breathe in carbon and exhale oxygen. Tbc perspiration of plants is said to be seventeen times that of a human bedy. Many plants never bloom on account of the accumula tion of dust upon their leaves. A plant too large to be laid down in a tub, as above described, may be syr inged and each leaf rubbed clean with the finger and thumb, which are better for this purpose than a brush or cloth. Land and Baicr. An Orphnu. "An orphan boy Dijah as be banded ' announceil out Timothy Fruruniond. Tim had a fearful eye, a . bloody shirt-front, and bis short hair stuck up like so many wires. One coat tail was absent and there was a look to the man as if aa elephant had played witn Lira in a tin-yard fur bait, a day. "Where do you belong?" inquired the court. . "TIeejo," was tl;e gruff reply. "What are you dSu up here?" "Looking for my Iroti.er." "Have you found Liui?" "No, zur." "Well, bir continued tuC court, as be looked hio the apple drawer to see if it contained anything. "I am yonr brother your long lost brother. I have the strawberry-mark on my left arm, aud I now bejin to see some fahiiiiur lines ia your face. I bave been greatly com-t rned abut your health, aud alojt yotr j;cu .ia ry prospects, and I'vejuj-t made ar rangements with a man to bjard ; ou for three mouths. (Jj in aud sit down on the fca w-hor.-c uutii aiv landaulet arrives. "Am 1 sent up?-' "The tame." "Biast yer old pLiz for thai!"' ex claimed the pri.-ipner; and be mut tered so that his Honor did not hear, ; "Wait till I catch you in Tlejo!-' dray man lost a wheel in the! street, much to the annoyance of a I lady whose carriage was etoiiped bv I the broken vehicle. "Tho deuce ' take your dray !"csqlairued the ladr "Not according to Ilovle." said the j ,, ? J, k I draym.'in : a deuco can t take a trcv. i but it mav COnnt for low." " lUe'rieP;sitluIlllbeSlrca. Addresjasave. Xeia A da: rl ine m c n !s. J. W. PATTON. CO. HURST. NEW FIRM. N EW GOODS. THE NEW FIRM Gr PATTON & HUT, Xo. h Haer's Mock, ar nuir In rccrlpt o.' so-St fp"-'" ;!. to the iir".ot wants of the pci'!'?. I ui-h wit il ia Ibe lt ten iav and aince the .it i.ne In the irie-ol' Stuplwa'nJ Duinrji it. ihcy ure enal.letl to oiler siKthil imiueemenU lo all in wiir.t ot fcomlt of cverT tie wriplion In turn variety an cannot be found anywhere else in town, romprIlnir tit'ii- ersl rtmeuu Tliey call iiiai uticu.iua to their Lirjce u- n..rirc-nl ol CALICOES, Bleached t'lid UnbleacbeJ Muslins GIN'GII AJJS, SHIRTING, TICKING, BOYS AUD MENS' HEAVY PAXT STUFFS, in Cottoiiade, Double and Irish Joans, Satinets, Cassi meres, &c, DRESS GOODS, : oioii --.i i, o 13 Pla,n uRd Crdeu AlpaCWS, Pep- lins, Cashmeres, French Merrinoes, &c, ST A PLE .t FA NC V NOTIONS, HATS &z CAPS, BOOTS &: SHOES, TOBACCO AND CIGARS, HVIlDAVaVTiK The u-stassortrtfnt of Carpeting and Oil Cloths nerlP'njM to t( wn. A lawre tretk cr Uarea ware. IK IiM mine 1 lo be up to Uiy ti-i-? in assort mcnuniji.' ana pri.vi, we tw.ieciluliy .,!Mt a eau ir.itc inos in want ut gnwlt. ivi.l T W. DAVIS k BBO S CIEilELAJP Grocery ar.J Cor.fectiancry SOMERSET, PA. Weilcsirc inform o ,!f or thijc;mna city that ire have tiire.i.iii-U the Urocerj and Con Iwtioncry ol H. t. Kncopcr, t?o.., oyjKi?ile tlic Harriet HoU!e, and have muile VRluai'lt: uttititn. to tho alrmnlr to t.-fcol Ooio'.a. Wescllalltbe best uran:a o AND -MEAL, COFFEE, TF.4S, KtCH, SYKUPS, MOLASSES, FISH, SALT. SPICES, APPLK5, fua vop.t:;a r.xrn.vcTs, inn t) AN-icA?rNEr Fr.riTS. ALSO, COAL OIL, T'T.ACCO, ;:aAKS syvrr, ekoo.-js, BtH'KITS, TL'ES, Slc All k!u.! Ffncb r.i-1 common CJAXUIES, SLTS, CRACKER S FANC? CAKUS, FEKFCMEKY, AXD TOILET AKTICLES, COMIJS, F-KteHES, SOAP, ic. A'.so an a'ior.iccnt of Toys, foik. If yon wnnt "ar.ytMnir In f'.iior.cry line till at &.C, KT ihi liiUe n rot-cry an-I Con- Davis' Cheap Grocery OPPOSITE THE I.AHNET HOUSE, nor. v ly. C ""1HKAP SIDH G BOCK BY. Gheapside Grocery A f3V St 30k Of G33JS, NOTION'S GROCERIES, FLOUR, BACON. FISH. SUGAR, SYRUPS, .MOLASSF.: TKA, COFFEE. DRIED and CANNED FRUITS, 2C, iScO., &C. Of the !rt q'inlity, and will lie u;M at the very lowest cali prico?. Tail art. I sc5 our ?tck. Opposlto Somerset Houso, GOMEES2T, jP-A-. If. l cotai ! Co. IMPORTANT TO ALL. rroteotli-.n of yocr Fanjih- from noveriv. an,! In case of ?u Men ,ieith Vfureate Irum bantrujitrv: or in CTent of a lime life a eotnKetenev for mr !.i aire, ean be erurwl if yna dw avail Tuurclf of NEW JERSEY Iff Thernly Comrsr.y that ran or ilo mi theafcrrve kind of pi!ioici. tho mit liberal ami fair tail? rvislinii of any in tho worll. Thjo wlw wish to avail theaiwlves of it many nenonri can have the neermry ilocumenta lurnish ed them io nil out. and additional and Itnoorant : Informal! in, ly ajiyiyUiir bjr letter or ia iH?ra in F. E. GOODELL, IJ-VXAGEt: BRANCH OFFICE, ss rourt!i itc. IMt'xhiirr- l- - . , .A.n?n:' i" wanti inthisami a( jolnmn eouaUea to present the above plan of ln- unujj tothe pai.iie. to whom . 1 I ) A't'io Advertisements. JOHN R BLYMYER, DEALER IN Hardware, Iron, Nails, Glass, Paints, OILS, &c, &c. The following id a partial list of goods in Stock : C irpenter'j Tools, Planes, Saws, Hatchets, Hammers, Chisels, Plane Iron.'. dzes, ic, Ulaek smith's Goods, Bellows, Anvils, Vices, Files, Hammers, Ac. Saddlery Hardware, Tab Trees, Gig Saddles, ITames, Buckles, Kings, Bits and Tools. Tabic Knives and Forks, Pocket Knives, Scissors, Spoons and Razors, the largest stock in Somerset County. Painter'd Goods, a full stock. White Lead, Colored Paints for inside and outside painting, Paints in oil, a!! colors, Varnish, Turpentine, Flaxseed Oil, Brushes, Japan Pryer, Walnut Stains, Ac. Window Glass of all sizes and class cut to any shape. The best Coal Oil always oa hand. Our stock of Coal Oil Lamps is large and comprises very elegant styles. Pitston's Circular, Mu!?y and Cross Cut Saws. .Mil! fcawt ilea cftuebost quality. Percelain-'iacd kettles. Handles of all kinds. Mattocks, Grub Hoes, Picks, Scythes, Sneaths, Sled-cs, Mason Hummer Cast Steel, Step Ladders, Carriage and Tire limits of ail sizes Looukio Glasses, Wash Boards, Clothes Wringers, Meal Sieves, Door .Mats BakcH Tubs, Wooden Buckets, Twine, Hope all sizes, Hay Pullevs, Butter Prints' Mop Sticks, Traps, Steelyards, Meat Cutters and Stuffers, Traces Cow Chains, Halter Chains, Shoe, Dust and Scrub Brushes, Horse Bruhe Cur ry Combs and Cards, Door Locks, Hinges, Screws, Latches and everything in the Builders' line. Caps, Lead, Shot, Powder and Safety Fuse, Ac.. Ac. The fact is, I keep everything that belongs to the Hardware trade. I deal exclusively ia this kind of goods and give my whole atttention to it. Per sons who are building, or any one in need of anything in my line, will Cnd it to their advantage to give no a call. I willalways give a reasonable credit to responsible persons. 1 thank my old customers for their patronage, and hope this season to make many new ones. Doa't forget the place ISTo, 3, "BAER'S BLOCK" Aprils U. JOHN" F. BLYMVEll. BARGAINS! BARGAINS!! BARGAINS!!! AT r.Tlie Xov.' Store of Daltr Ixi Dry Goods, Fancy & Staple Notions, Eibbons, Embroidery, Laces, &c. "Would be pleased to have his Friends and Patrons call and ex amine his .Stock before purchasing elsewhere. Store Room on Main Street, opposite the "ISarneJ Ion.si Somerset Fa. arrllS. Cook & Beerits' FAMILY GROCERY Flour and Feed S TO IR, IEJ . Ye weal I m.i?r rsi;ertfc;l!y frirn !f ami the iuM le ueiw'nily, vicinity ! SuniiTt, that ire i,: .inn' cre t in the t n s;t.i V2 (in'iit'-i ouua MAW CROSS STREET, AnJ in Jilii.n Iu o T-'I line of ti.e tc.'t t'cnfeclioncri?, Xolion, Tobaccos, Cisars, lr., : We Trill cn'ic- ivi r, nt a'.i timcf, Winers wita t . t' hi; ;! ocr rns- REST QUALITY OF ; FAMILY FLOUE, COKX-MEAL, OATS, SHELLED COEX, oa ts & cor.x chop, BRAx.mDDuxas,: An I everything pirt:iln:n t) Vac Fec i licj-nr. men l ;it the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. FOR CASH ONL Y. Also, it tt.'.I select;! stock tr Glassware; StcncTrar 'Wwxlfnirarf, Braj'.ies ot al kiml", and STATIONERY Which we will sell as cheap as the cbeD;e?r. Please fall, examine nnr goods r,f all klr..;, he eutiKiied Irom your own judgment. Don't ferret where n stay On MA IX CROSS Street, SL.mcret, I'a. Oct. i is:i l!P!H;n FOLLANSBEE & CO. UltLlif "I Merchant Tailors, A.i;tl IrtiaUfiirtnr!- ol Gent's, Youth's and 3ays FasSsMfe Mtii anfl 121 V oy;i Simf, corner Fiftli Avenue, ; PITTSBURGH. at-rl. KEYSTOSE DiMNU ESOMS, 293 Liberty Klrert, riltabursh. I'll.. W. JL SLVrSOX. rtojrittor. J1EATS AT ALL jiorns. fa-TKAXSlEXT CISTOM SOMCl F.P. "J IS WIKK & YOUNG, BUTCHERS AXD DEAI.ERf, Wholesale ai3l liclail, FEZSH ilSATS, ALL KINDS, SVCII AS . .:f.f, ro:iK, mutton', vkai., lamb. SAVSAan, rfDDlXO, liOLfK-.XA AXD LARD, OUR OWN RENDERING. Market ihiyj, Tuesday, Tliursiav. and Saiur-d3's- ' marlO'TS KNABS'S TJHBITALED PIANOS Endorsed, rj the Ieai!!n sr:it. i sr:it. 1 PIANOS, HAINES BR0S. The cheapo! first, claw Piano In the market. ! l!EO. A. TRICE & t'O.S' OR(JAXS. j Wln-low and rvir Head. Finial. Turret. Chira- , ' ney Cap. Ventilntor. and all kinds ot Galvanu- Orcr DHy thre thonand of them now In niw. Xo i oil Iron Ornamental Work. Tin Koonnir. Spout other mu'ieal lutrument ever oOtaioxl the mid i Inj;, and ail kiniii of Job Work promptly attend p"I a!uri;y. , ed to. CHARLOTTE rLUME, No. 13 Sixth Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa., SjIo agent for above. SenJ for Priee Llt and Catalogue. Foil assortment of Sheet Music, Ma lic Books and small Musical Inslraincnt. . apr!4 SliiccUaneoiis. G. I ( ili'ton Uave n A Lar-? ari l Complete Assortment cf ('aotls for Fall and Winter Wear. They i I loop 3Liris. namiuls. And Felt over Shoes, MKX AND ROYS' otfiing, Boots and Shoes, HATS AND CAPS, GLOVES, &zC. CntliTx-l'stliing for Men and Women A iarj? asi Ttnient ol HAKDAVAKE QUEENSWARE, Carpets, on Cloths &c. A lir i(nk of fine an! .oar. SAL T lly the SSssrre! or ftnek Prices as Low ra Possible. C. & G. 1IOLDERBAU3I, Somerset, Pa. Oct. zx STORE! SrllFXL Ji WILSON w.ulj Inr-rm their friend anil the puMic enentllr, that tii-y Lave ui?neii a store at GAERE T T , on the line of the P. W. B R. R.. and now offer f..raleaa General Stoek of Menbanuize, coo :jtir.jof DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, QUEENSWARE, HARDWARE, HATS & CAPS, COOTS tt SHOES. Ac, kc, kc, i All ol which will be f!J, iLeap for CASH or cx- Cllnniren ii'r I'ruuure. HAM r.D Lomhrrof til kind?, II .p-r-Iea. ('piTie liark, Stave, ke., A!-s Wwl, Ku ter, I.g;., MAPLE STJGAE, naeon. Oraln of all kiml. Fur. Sheep Pelt, and Heewr.x. fT whlrh we will jay the big het priees in Cuh or Good. SALT AND FISH. alwayionhand. Givs o a call anl,be ecnvioeeU thl we tmecil to Uo tm;ine3 and canuot be ander S: IJ. SC1IELL & WILSON'. 'STEVENSON & CARTI EIGHT, Mauu'actnrerJ of Galvanized Iron Cornices, CI o. 158 .Federal fit., . Allegheny City, Pa. . may lliseellaneon?. "rS' F.H Aarnt rr th. hen e!l M-AAMf j,,, ;f priie parkap to t'iew,wM. Single parks;;'. wl:l i"nt prize, P"t paHl,"r,,.n,, Korothi'rnorelti'? sen! ?t.'imp. A.i.irc" p. p. (;i LCK. Nw lioiiunl, h. mavpi Dr. J. Walter cc;ar Hitlers r:c i : c; :i;.i;ii:i. r.'.ulo "s ralifornia Vin- ,i purely Vccrcta'do tliii-ilv fi'oni l!;o r..i- t.vc ! eil.3 foi::::l r:i ti 1 : xcr rn?zrs o; i:isof Cii.if.ir- ii:i i? ii.yjyi I. c ra .Nt'Viiii.i ::: : .a r.:c(..f:i:;ii r"' .1 i i t'..o f V: I f: ;:.; -; l.: :- . t'.i.'V IVii.ii'. rj :0 t:',"i.t 10 ire t:.o :: :..'. ;ovat ,1 I ; ir.itor :s I :t ...: s V..H f vst Lc "3 s i' Vin: .-. - a p zS..o. '.. t:.o i.iv Vi.vcer l...;ou 'UiO prov,erlics cf P::. alkkti's T.-Ni-tjAi: i:iri::r.sar3Ar-'-r:.-:.M,.ir:.r.rrr-c. C.s-:!::::at,r. NutriuO.... i'. :.vr,. M-d.t:;ro. ( i.n:::--I::.;::t fcutlor-i.c, A.lcvu l.vo. au.! A:::i-I::::uui Grateful Thousan J proclaim Vix. egar IJitteks the Eio wenderfu! Ia- I vi?orar.t that ever su3ta:ucJ ti" siukir.j o I'eison ean take these Haters according to (iirections, zrA reina;n lon unwell, provided tlieir bones are not de stroyed Ly mineral poison or other means, aud vitr.l organs wasted beyond repair. Iiilious, Kcmittent and Inter mittent Fevers, which aro so preva lent in tho valleva cf our fireat nvori throughout tho United States, especially those of tho Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan sas. Red, Colorado, Drazos, Kio Grande, l'earl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ro anoke, James, aud many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our cutiro countrv during the SuainuT and Autumn, and remarkably so during sea, sons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive de rangements cf the stomach and liver, mid other abdominal viscera. In the:: treatment, a purgative, exerting a po v. erful influence upon these various i.r gar.s, is essentially necessary. TI;-:c U no cathartic for t!:e purpose eu::al to Ln. J. Waikeu's Vinegar lUiiFr.s, as they will speedily remove the tl.u'k colored viscid ratter with wLich the bowels are loaded, at tho san;e t;:..e stimulating the secretions of the livor, and generally restoring the Lc.:l:Ly functions of the digestive organ?. Fortify the lioily asainst dise:t.i by purifying all its thuds with Vi.vi.t;.VB l-JiTTEns. No ejiidomio can take l:-ld cf a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Imliestion, u ache, ram in tho Shoulders, Ccuchs. Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, s. Eructations of the Stomach. Ra.l T.:-: .: in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks. Pal: :!.-. tation cf tho Heart, Ini!ani:nati'i;i r i' t:.o Lur.g.?, P.iia in the region of the- KA neys, and a hundred other painf.il syin;i toms, are tho oflsprings cf Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guaranty cf its merits than a lengthy ad'.c.tisu iner.t. Scrofula, or Kind's Evil, WLi SwoUinjrs, C leers, Erjuipvla.-!, Swehol Nc, k. Goitre, ijcrofuloas laflatnmations. InJolf-r Inflammations, Mercurial Affectiu. O. l Sores, Eruptions of tLo Skin, Soro E.vt, o'o. Ia these, as ill ail other coastitr.tiotul IX i cades, Yi'-itKEit's "Visecab Bittkhs h.ivn siiowa their great curativo powers ia ti.e most objtuiato and iatractabiu ease. For Inflammatory n:ul Chronic Rheumatism. Gout, Bilious, Kcmit tent and Intermittent Fevers, I iseases of tLo PiooJ, Liver, Kiiincys au.1 IiiaJiier, those Bitters have no equal. S.icli lisea.-e are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases. Pc rsons e:i gaged ia Paint3 and Mineral.?, such at J'lauibcra, Type-setters. Gi.iii beaten. a;;d Miaers, as they niivanco ia l.W: aro subjeet to paralysis f tl.o Bowels.' To apai::t this, taka a dose 'f V.'al:;;:3'j V; ; EUAti Bitters occasiunailr. For Skin Diseases, Eruption?, Tet ter, Salt-Ilhcnra, Blotches. Spot-!, l'mipic-. I'u.italcs, Bscls, Carbuncles, Kinc-worms, Staid head, Soro Eyes. Erysipeias. Itoli, Scurfs. Biscoloratiocs of tho Skin, II amor and D.sca?o3 of tho Skia of whatever Eurriii or nat-ire, aro literally ilnj p and carried out of the system in 3 short tifho by the tif of these B.ttcrs. l'in, Tape, and other lVorms lurkir.ir ia tho syttem of to many thonsatiil, ara etlVctuilly iestroyed aud reraored. system rif medicine, no verniil'ujcs, no aa thehranitics will free tho vstcm Lxmi w.'ra.s hke these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in young cr old, married or single, at the uawuYf wo nuiahood. cr the turn of lu'e, theso Tor.ic B.tten d:sp'..iy M decided an in2ucLCQ that irr.proven:er.r is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Dlood when ever yon f.ud its impurities bursting thronja the jkin ia Piaplea, Errtptions. or Sor ; cleanse it whea you fir.d it obstructed and slugrh ia troveias; cleanse it when it is fur.l ; ycir ;i-clir gs will tell voa when. Keep the lfood pure, aud the health oftho system will fjlinTV. It. II. JIcDOVALD & COl, DrrrriiU n-"..ir,rn. Arts.. San Krancisoo. Cailfiirnia, aad i-or of V'w!;inrtoa n::d Chnnn N. Y. Sold by all Ui ui.ts aiiU Uralcr. Ayers Catliartic Pills, For the roiief anil cure of all 'ierant-f. ujeiits in the toni 3' h, l:i er, ami eU. Thrjure a mil l :i-ne. t, ami .-m fxt'i-iieiit purr.'ttu (. J I -1 ; i SC I'ur.'ly vpc.--t.il'ie. lli.- Cdnuuii no tncrrury or mine, ral h.iieer. Jhicli eri.im sii-tnc.rf mi'i ii:T nn it is prevent r, l,v thr-ir tiinfl.- iic: Jin.l even- r.mi.Iy hniiM hive them on han I ftr t!ieir irnt-i-tii.! ami reiief, when r-'inm .). Ltms eler.ence has (.rove.i them tn !o the af ef, Mire-t. an.l l--t ol' all the I'tli w ith h the market aliouiKl.x. lly Uiir oeeai.ina tin; lil.l m iiuriiinl. tiic forrnvtiont of the ,v tern eviWli-l, oitmrt:on4 rranw i, an.l ii e who!.; uuc-hiiicry of life re-trrel tn iu heailhv artinty. Internal organs w!.k h x-rnr.r el. .-.-1 an.l -h:--i!i are Heuu-4-.l l.v .li(rr' 'iJ. .111 I stuuulatel int. artion. Thin in. i(,ietit ili-ea-n 11 rhaniil mto health, tlie value of hwh chance, when rerkontil on Use va-t niiUtitmU s who eiij-v it, can hanllr Ix; coinpate.l. Their urar cnai;r.it inakej.1111 pleasant to Ulc, an.l i.rr-,erve th. ir VMtn.. jri.inpaireil for any length of time. that tie .- are ever fre-li, an I perle. tiv reiiahle. Althoiizh .eareliintr. tiiev a!-e mil. I. ami operat-) without disturbance lo !!:.. e(!u:itutK.u,oriiet, o- OCcn(itMHl. K11II I'.i.-e-tionJ are i.?". oti tho wrajrer t' each box. hoir to n-e ihnii a. a Karailr i'hv-ie, an.l for the follo-.vin; coiuplaints, wtuch Uiee fit's npi.iiy cure: t or C,iirp.ia or dis'V.ilaa. I.itirM mr-n. Unjiar an.l Lmaof vrll. tney hot:. l.e Lii.cn mo.ieratelv to stimulate the stom ach, ami re-tore m healthy tono ami action. hor l.ivrr t'omitlainc ami its various sraip. toiiw, Kiliou ifruilucbr. Mirk HeaH-uchi-. junailirf or (.rrrn klL.rM. Hil too. Colic an.l liilioa ftVver,UieT photil.! u.i.icK.usIy taken f.. reach ca-e, to corre-t the (ii-e:L-e.l acti'ju or renure Uie ol..strnctioii9 whjdi c.-iii-.e ir. for IypaterT or nijrrbora, but oto miM i!..r- is s:cner:y icfiure.l. 'or Ithpamailim. oat, C ravel. Pal pitatioa of th lirarf. I'aia ia 3 sil, IliicU an.l l.oin., thev stwml.l be contin uonsiy t.tfc.-n. as re.juire'l. to char.ee the dieacl action of the rrle:n. it!i such chaago Uu-e complaints .i.-appv.-i.-. For lroreT ami IYrap.iral rlU.r. they siioulii ie t;iken in ianre an.l freoueut doses to pm.liu-e the etr.-ct of a .Irastic purire. Kor SapprrMO. a l.ire itose should be taken, as it ( rlii'es ti.e .iesirol effect by fjin pniliy. A a IHitnrr I'll!, ta'k.; one or twa Pills to promote it:'r"t! !i anii relieve the tomach. An occa-ional ilose tiinn!ales the stomach an l lKm-W, re-tores the appetite, anj invigorates th Kysteni. H.-nce it is often advantageous whera no s.noas ilevanceinent exists. tne who feeU tol.Tahir well, mien lln.ls that S los of tfcesa I'M makes him teel .ec(ile.y better, from their clesnsinz ami renovating etTeet oa Uie dijestiva r. par itus. rnEr.utED bt Dr. J. C. A TER X CO., PraetUaJ ChextM', LOW Ell, MUSS., r. . A. TOR SALE BY ALL DECGGI3T3 XVXErrTBiaE. J ir