Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, March 04, 1874, Image 4

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    2Ticvi tural.
Stock fob Maktbs. In the vicinity
of large cities it has become prevalent
idea that it will not pay to raise cattle.
The ease with which they can Le
brought from the West by rail, and the
comparative low price of wheat in the
regular trade way, has operated largely
to produce the idea.
But experience shows that this is
wrong. It is almost impossible at
little distance from home to keep np
the fertility of the soil without manure,
and without mannre the farm soon runs
down, aud then farming rapidly becomes
a "poor trade." The only way to keep
up this fertility iu these cases is by
keeping a fair amount of stock to eat np
waste and make mannre to enrich the
soiL Even though the stock brings
little more than their firot cost, with
labor and food added, still in the in
creased fertilizing material will good
profits be found.
We have a young friend who pur
chased a farm about twenty miles from
Philadelphia some three years ago. He
saw few cows on neighboring farms ;
butfUrted with a dozen of these and
four horses. He was soon told that sort
of thing would not answer ; the cattle
wonld soon eat their heads off, and be
would soon "go to the dogs." But he
kept on in his course, increasing his
stock, till last full he raised six hundred
bushels of turnips to feed them with,
the whole of which will be fed on the
ground, besides the regular focd ; and
to-day he is making more money from
his farm than perhaps anyone for miles
around. While many are selling their
farms and moving away, because farm
ing does "not pay," he does not care
how many fro, as the lessened number
is all the better for him.
His example, however, is having a
beneficial influence on those who sur
round him. Many who had but three
or four when he first went there, now
haTe a dozen cows ; and the fertility of
most farms has been increased by the
greater number. Crops have thus been
larger, the labor has been no more,
while profits have been almost doubled.
Of course, increased number of cows
make butter, making hard work some
thing of a necessity ; and where this
falls on the female jxrtion of the family,
in the present condition of the labor
market, it bears rather hard on them.
But butter factories are becoming com
mon, and where this can be done, the
trouble is little more than for any other
crop.
Save tub Leaves. There is no one
thing that a farmer can save that is
more valuable, considering its cost,
than leaves. They can be made to sub
serve three purposes: as bedding for
cattle, and for this they are unsurpassed,
keeping the animal warm and dry, and
wearing much longer than straw ; as
absorbents, holding no small portion of
plant food vrhich would usually be lost ;
and finally, furnishing themselves the
best nutrition to s large number of
plants, a:id particularly that class which
is found in our kitchen and flower
gardens. One of the best means to gather them
is to fill huge bags, stowing them away
in some corner of the stable until they
are needed. Another is, to gather them
into heaps, near the barn if they are to
be used there, or in the garden, if they
are to be converted directly into mould,
and then cover with a thin layer of
earth.
As soon as the harvesting is done,
this should be attended to. We must
not allow material of this sort to be
wasted, and as hay is short, and straw
will be needed more for food than is
usual, all who can should provide as
large a supply as tossible of these
wind-driven remnants of the by-gone
summer.
Tire Foot of a Horse. The human
hand has often been taken to illustrate
Divine wisdom and very welL But
have you ever examined your horses'
hoof? It is hardly less curious in its
way. Its parts are somewhat more
complicated, yet their design is simple
and obvious. The hoof is not, as it
appears to the careless eye, a mere
lump of insensible bone, fastened to
the leg by a joint. It is made np of a
series of thin layers, or leaves of horn,
about 500 in number, and nicely fitted
to each other, and forming a lining to
the foot itself. Then there are as many
more layers, belonging to what is called
the "eoffiu-bone," and fitted into this.
These are elastic. Take a quire of
paper and insert the leaves one by one
into those of another quire, and you
will get some idea of the arrangement
of the several layers. Xow, the weight
of the horse rests on as many elastic
springs as there are layers in his four
feet about four thousand ; and all this
is contrived, not only for the convey
ance of his own body, but for whatever
burdens may be laid ou him. J.'itral
Home.
Wnr Potatoes lies Oct. Some one
asks why it is that potatoes so soon run
out. There are two grand reasons.
There are but few potatoes in a hill that
are fit for seed. Some are overgrown,
coarse, rank, and will not transmit the
original quality. Others are under
grown, and notf nil developed seed. A
potato of medium size, perfect in all its
parts, with change of ground, will pro
dace its like, ad infinitum. One other
reason, cutting potatoes between stem
and seed end continually, is wrong. It
requires the stem and seed end to make
perfect seed. If cut, cut lengthwise.
Single eves will run out any potato.
There is no other seed that "will bear
mutilation like the potato ; the only
wonder is, that it does not run out com
pletely. To Cleanse Tainted Barbels. With
regard to cleansing tainted meat barrels,
I would say that I have frequently seen
the experiment tried, and with decided
success. The following is a cheap and
simple recipe: Use the barrels for scald
ing tubs (if designed for pork), by put
ting therein say two quarts of wood
ashes for the first hog, and if more are
. to be slaughtered retain as much of the
first water as possible, and add a little
more ashes ; the more it is repeated, of
course the more sure the success.
Pork or beef are more liable to Fpoil
in new cask than after they have been
used, and the salt or the pickle has
thoroughly fermented them. Until
then they will need a more vigilant eye
than afterwards. Cor. of Wfefc'rn
farmer.
Bees are of three kinds. Every com
plete hive or colony contains one queen,
a number of drones, (the fewer the
better,) and multitude of workers.
"the more the merrier." The aueen is
the only perfect female, and lays all the
eggs irom which the other bees are pro
duced. The eggs are of two kinds;
the one hatches into drones, or male
bees, while the other produces, as a
general rule, workers, lhese, however,
are simply undeveloped females, and
every worker-egg is capable, under
special treatment, ol developing into a
perlect lemaie or queen.
Tools givex to Bora. When a boy
is put to farm labor he is gien an old
hoe, a fork with a broken tine, a round
edged ax, a scythe that nobody else will
use, and he is expected to work more
hours than a hired hand, to do all the
chores, to build fires in the morning, to
run on all errands, to tarn the grind
stone, and go to meeting in cow-hide
boots. With this experience he 'does
not like farming ; and lecturers, editors,
members of Congress, and petty lawyers
' mourn because so aany young men go
from the farm to the city.
The best soil for gardening in Eng
land is described as a sandy loam with
a reddish color.
Scientific.
The Railways of Great BBiTArs.
The leading features of the railway
system of the United Kingdom, at the
end of 1872, may be thus summarized :
A total sum of $2,815,236,730 had been
expended on 15,811 miles of railway, or
nearly $180,000 per mile. There were
10,933 locomotive engines, or about 1
to every i of a mile ; ani 37, 839 vehi
cles, or abont 21 1 per mile, besides the
wagons of traders and companies other
than railway companies By the run
ning of trains for l',920719 miles,
S2j6,520,570 were received during the
year, of which $123,251,915 were ex
pended in working and maintenance,
and $128,258,055 remained as net profit,
so that as nearly as possible one half
the gross receipts were expended in
earning them. There were 422,871,822
passenger journeys, besides 272,342
season ticket holders ; and 179,302,121
tuns of goods and minerals were con
veyed. The average rate of dividend
on ordinary capital was oil per cent,
and upon the total capital 4 95 percent,
including $lfil,507,3sb of ordinary cap
ital, part of $212,913,135 of total capital,
which received no interest or dividend.
The average cost of working each train
was CI C4 cents, per mile, and the
average receipt from each train was 129
12 cents per mile ; so that the average
net profit from each train was 4 58 cents
per mile ! whila the total cost of work
ing was $3,110 per mile, and $16,220 per
mile was received.
Meeting of the Ibox asd Steel Is
stittte. It is understood that the next
session of the Iron and Steel Institute
will be held in 1874 in Philadelphia ;
and in 1975 in England. The session
of 1873 took place at Liege, and was a
great success, large numbers of dele
gates being present from many coun
tries, and several important papers pre
sented. In a paper upon the "Bise and
Progress of the Iron and Steel Indus
tries in Belgium," read at the meeting,
it was stated that recent discoveries
seem to indicate that at the period of
the invasion of Belgium by Julius
Cicar, iron had already been made in
that country, while it was yet unknown
to the inhabitants of the British islands.
The oldest records of such works con
sist in vast deposits of cinder, in Bra
bant, which cover many acres of ground,
occupying the tops of the ferruginous
hillocks of that region. Along with
these accumulations of iron and cinder
are found Hint arrow-heads, unl frag
ments of coarse pottery, which must
have belonged to the pre-hitoric work
ers of these deposits. At a later period,
and dnring the Koman dominion, iron
was produced in various places in Bel
gium. Immense heaps of cinders are
still found scattered in many parts of
the country, some of which are now
profitably worked in neighboring blast
furnaces.
Electuii'itt to SrrEBSEPE Kenxet.
The Hon. Horatio Seymour, in his ad
dress before the American Dairymen's
Association at Utica, X. Y., said :
"There is a possibility that electricity
will take the place of rennet, and work
as well. Authorities say that electricity
will coagulate milk even faster than
rennet, and a cheesemaker who claims
to have used it for the purpose of cheese
manufacture says he has found the enrd
made by it to cure into fine-flavored
cheese. He reports it as having extra
ordinary efficiency in reducing the curd
of skim milk into salvy, rich appearing
cheese, bnt it did not restore the flavor
that was lost by the removal of the
cream. It was said to have just the
flavor which the milk in its skimmed or
unskimmed condition would produce.
The matter is now undergoing a thor
oughly scientific investigation, and if
the coagulation proves as stated, it will
be pnt to practical tests at the opening
of the season, and the result reported
to the next convention. So long as the
use of rennet must be continued, oi
until some future genius shall rise up
and make an inodorous extract holding
the active agent in solution, the objec
tionable features of the steepings may
be very nearly wiped out by putting a
bag of charcoal in the jar and weighing
it so it will sink."
Et.gs of the Octopcs Among the
most interesting results of the estab
lishment of the great Brighton aquarium
has been theopportunity of determining
certain peculiarities in reference to the
reproduction of the Octopus, or cuttle
fish. At the proper season the eggs
were attached to the glass ot the tank.
and were oval in shspe, about an eighth
of an inch long, and grouped in
branches round and through a central.
flexible stalk, two or three inches in
length, resembling the pendent panicles
of some of the larger grasses. These
eggs were carefully watched by the
fenale parent all the time until they
were hatched, the approach of other
animals, even of her own species, being
constantly repelled. Occasionally the
mother would discharge a stream of
water from her funnel upon the ova, as
if to assist in their proper teration. It
has lx-en ascertained that the period of
gestation of the Octopus is seven weeks,
ami of the incubation of the eggs t-x
actly eight.
The Quisise Sctplt. The cultiva
tion of the cinchona-tree in India, which
was commenced in jXia). is making sat
isfactory progress. Near Darjaeling are
two large plantations, one owned by the
government, and the other by an asso
ciation. The three principal varieties
ot the cinchona, oficinalis, calisaya,
and turcirubra, were all planted at
Darjeeling, with a view to find which
variety would thrive best there. The
officinalis, or gray-bark variety, failed
utterly ; the calisaya, or yellow-bark.
has fairly succeeded ; but the sncciru
bra, or red-bark, has prospered beyond
all expectation. There are now 2,500
acres under succiruora. A moderate
estimate gives the produce of these
plantations for the next three years at
2U0.000 lbs., calculated to produce
i,wu lbs. oi quinine, and an equal
amount of other valuable alkaloids.
Eattso Alcohol. It has been gene
rally supposed that the alcohol formed
in the primary fermentation of bread
was all expelled by the process of
baking. JUr. 1 homos JJolas. of Lon
don, has communicated to the Chemical
Jeu' the resnlt of some experiments on
this point. He shows that when about
two ounces of ordinary bread is mixed
with water and distilled, and the distil
late is afterward purified, a perceptible
quantity oi alcohol may be obtained.
He made quantitative analyses of six
samples of fresh bread, obtained in so
many shops in London, which gave of
alcohol an average of 0.314 per cent. So
that, when a man has eaten 100 pounds
of fresh bread, he has consumed with it
a little more than five ounces of pure
aiconoi.
Pekfthe Ast of Texas. Dr. Gideon
Lincecum, of Long Point, Texas, who
has published some interesting accounts
of the honey ant of that State, writes
that the dwelling oi Air. A. O. Lauder
dale has several times been visited by a
long-bodied nocturnal ant, as large as
that which the doctor calls the agricul
tural ant. The head is black, and the
abdomen yellowish, and when crashed
between the fingers the insect emits
perfume which, according to the account
of the members of Mr. Lauderdale's
household, is more fragrant than the
best perf ornery.
Cement fob Wood Vessels. A mix
ture of lime clay and oxide of iron.
separately calcined and reduced to fine
powder, then intimately mixed, kept in
a close vessel, and mixed with the re
quisite quantity of water when used.
This will render a vessel watertight if
the iagredienta are good. I
Domestic.
Pbofessioss am Trades fob Women.
We can scarcely pick np one of onr
city dailies without finding this subject
discussed in its columns. There is a
decided and growing sentiment in favor
of the opening to women of a large
number of vocations which have been
until recently entirely appropriated by
men. The visit of Miss Emily Faithf nil
to this country has called the public
attention to the increasing necessity of
multiplying the ways by which women
may earn an independent and honora
ble support, Already in the older
States and in our large cities, the num
ber of women who can find nothing
within their ability to do which will
yield them a comfortable living is large.
As our population increases, and as
steam power is made to do more and
more of onr domestic labor, the number
of incompetent women is likely to grow
larger. It is time now for parents to
anticipate this state of things, and act
upon the principle that prevention is
better than cure.
So soon as a boy puts on pantaloons
and jacket, there is talk of what he shall
be when he grows to manhood. Not
more pronounced are the tastes and
proclivities of boys than are those of
girls, and there is no reason why these
should be cultivated in their natural
direction in one sex more than in the
other ; nay, if either is to have the pre
ference, let it be given to the girL It
Is far harder for a women to face the
world than it is for men, bnt many of
them are compelled by force of circum
stance in procuring a living for them
selves and families to frequent the
thoroughfares of trade and business
just as men do. If they are skilled in
any trade or art or profession, fortunate
indeed are they, for it is the want of
skill that makes the lives of many work
ingwomen so pitiful. The artistic mil
liner, the thorough and competent dress
maker, the accomplished teacher, the
"elegaut" lonndress, seldom lacks full
employment and good pay. The expert
in telegraphy, in bookkeeping in en
graving, in designing, in literary com
position, is scarcely ever out of employ
ment. As the number of married men and
married women are equal in this mono
gam ic country, we are and have always
been of the opinion that boys should
be trained to be good husbands just as
much as that girls should be trained to
be good wives. Why not ? What pro
spect is there that a man without here
ditary fortune, without a trade or pro
fession, can do his just part in creating
a happy home ? Is not the same ques
tion quite as pertinent when applied the
women ? Is it reasonable to expect that
the girl who has shared bnt lightly in
domestic labors, who is not thoroughly
taught in any one thing, who is not com
petent to take charge on a house and
keep it in perfect order to roast a
joint in the best manner or make a per
fect loaf of bread it is reasonable to
expect that she can make a happy home ?
Love may abide there for a while, bnt
even love can't live forever on food
spoiled in the cooking. The very fact
that a girl has learned a trade, that she
has undergone a thorough training,
that she has been held np to a certain
standard of excellence, combined with
the consciousness she has of ability to
do well some one important thing, will
make her a better wife, a finer mother,
a nobler woman, a more valuable mem
ber of society.
Hitherto women have crowded into
the profession of teaching as quite the
most available aud honorable of any
open to them. But the avenues of in
dustry are rapidly multiplying. There
are over 100 "female physicians" in
practice in this country ; there are lec
turers, public readers, platform speak
ers, artists of various kinds. There is
no reason why women should not be
chemists, stair-builders, painters, pro
fessional florists, or workers at any
trade for which they have strength and
aptitude. Competition is the life of
trade ; it is a blessing to any man or
woman to be compelled to aspire to the
highest standard of excellence in what
is undertaken, and it is just and right
that men and women who enter trades
and professions should, have their per
formance measured by the one rule, and
that equal merit should receive equal
pay, irrespective of sex. In any com
munity a skillful blacksmith is more
respected than a poor physician, a
thorough carpenter than a pettifogging
lawyer. The time is at hand when
women who do well the work of their
choice will have their respectability
measured by the quality of what they
perform ; when the skillful milliner or
the perfect dressmaker will stand higher
in the social scale than the incompetent
teacher or the half-taught uninspired
artist, or the musical smatterer. "Igno
rance does not simply deprive ns of ad
vantages ; it leads us to work our own
misery ; it is not merely a vacuum, void
of knowledge, but a plenum of positive
errors, continually productive of nnhap
piness. " This remark, made by Samuel
Bailey with reference to political eco
nomy, applies with equal force to the
ignorance of women with regard to in
dustrial pursuits. Weekly Tribune.
Ammonia for Stains. It is said that
in any case where an acid has taken
the color from a fabric, ammonia will
restore it. Also that washing a carpet
in ammonia water, say a tablespoonful
of concentrated ammonia to a quart of
warm suds, will take almost any stain
out of it. A correspondent says ; "I
don't know but I could keep house with
out a bottle of ammonia, but I shouldn't
like to try. In cleaning paint, glass,
silver or gold, it is invaluable, as well
as for keeping the hands soft and white
after cleaning all these other things.
For cleaning windows, I put a teaspoon
fnl of strong ammonia in a half pint of
clear warm water, wring a cloth out,
and rub sashes and glass, then rub with
a dry cloth.
Stains, pencil marks, fly specks, and
all manner of dirt, disappear nnder the
ammonia treatment, with no injury to
paint or varnish if not used too strong.
Moths. The only preventive of the
ravages of moths in garments of clean
liness with exposure to air and sun
This will check the ravages of the de
structive insect. Brush thoroughly the
garment attacked, hang it out of doors
in the sun and put it away with cam
phor, red pepper, or tobacco in its folds.
The most perfect mode of preventing
this pest from beginning mischief is
the following : Procure an alcohol or
whisky-barrel, one just emptied, put in
the woolens and furs, and head it np
tightly, bhonld a wicked egg hatch,
the fumes of the liquor will extinguish
life at once before ever a fiber has suf
fered. In the Fall sell the barrel and
in Spring buy a fresh one. This receipt
was given ns by a manufacturer of cam
phor, who had no faith in the efficacy
of that gum as a preventive of moths
X. B Don t for the sake of having such
a barrel attempt to empty it yourself.
Jellv Case. One cup of sngar. four
eggs, one and one-half tablespoonf uls
eich of butter and sweet milk, one cup
of flour, one teaspoonfal of sods dis
solved in the milk, two teaspoon f uls of
cream of tartar mixed in the flour, the
whites and yolks of the eggs to be beaten
separately. This will make five layers
in round jelly pans, and is very nice.
HicxoBT-jrcT Cake. One and a half
cups of sugar, half enp of batter, two
cups of flour, whites of four eggs, three-
fourths of a cup oi sweet milk, one tea-
spoonful or cream of tartar, half tea
spoonfal of soda, one cap of the meats
of the hickory-nut. Bake in square
tins. i
Humorous.
Whes a woman puts three mackerel
to soak over night in a dish pan whose
sides are eight inches high, and leaves
the pan on a stairway, she has accom
plished her mission and should go
hence. This was what a Division street
woman did the other night Filled the
pan at the pomp, and then left it stand
ing on the steps to the stoop, while she
went into the next house to see how
many buttons would be required to go
down the front of a redingote. And a
mighty important affair that was to be
sure. And there was her husband tear
ing through the house in search of a
handkerchief, and not finding it, of
course. And then he rushed out into
the yard, wondering where on earth
that woman could be, and started down
the steps without seeing the pan, or
ever dreaming that any one could be so
idiotic as to leave it there. Of course
he steDDed on it : or. at least, that is
the supposition, as the neighbors who
were brought out by the crash that ioi
lowed. saw a horrified man. and a high
dish-pan, and three very demoralized
mackerel shooting across ine garden,
and smashing down the shrubbery.
And he was a nice sight, was that un
happy man, when they got him on his
feet. There wasn t a dry thread on mm,
and his hair was full of bits of mackerel,
and one of his shoulders was out of
joint, and his coat was split the whole
length of his back, and he appeared
out of his head. He was carried in the
house bv some of the men, and laid on
a bed, while others went after a doctor
and sixteen women assembled in the
front room, and talked in whispers
about the inscrutable ways of Provi
dence, and what a warning this was to
people who never looked where they
were going.
A TRnxa Sittatios. Says the Dan
bury yews: "The village young man's
greatest trial is not when be mates nis
advent at the barber's shop, and re
ceives the stares of the customers and
the grins of the operators, bat when he
first makes his appearance with a yonng
lady at an entertainment. It is not
enough that the nsher shonld get the
wrong aisle, and thus make him and
her go around at the front and come
back up the middle aisle, to the enjoy
ment of several hundred people, but he
has got to escort her through a file of
his acquaintances at the door, after the
performance is over, and is obliged to
bear with stolid indifference the grins
of delight showered upon him, and to
hear with Christian composure, the
young man at the head of the row ad
jure somebody not in sight to 'Hold
my clothes,' and some exquisitely face
tious inquiries from one to another as
to Who will care for mother now ? and
'Won't you look at our Johnny ?"
Black Wit. "I say, Josh, I war
gwine down de street, de odder day, un'
I seed a tree bark."
"Why, dad am nothing, Sam, I seed
one holler once."
"Wal, I seed de same tree leave."
"Ya ! ya ! ya ! did he take his trunk
wid him ?"
"Xo, he left dt for board."
Another. "Mr. Johnson, did you
hear 'bout dat queer case I had de
oder day V"
"Xo, Pomp ; what war it like ?"
"Well, I will tell you. Mr. Grub
came to me de odder day an' says he,
'Here, Pomp, I'll gib you my house an'
lot an' my fine horses for a ceut."
"Good golly. What did vou say.
Pomp ?"
"Why, I I said he couldn't cheat
dis nigger."
On a Sunday evening, recently, a
well known clergyman was eloquently
enlarging npon the duty of forgiving
one s enemies ; and, among the qnes
: tions which he put to the congregation
without, of course, expecting an an
. swer was, "Do you love your enemies?'
j To his surprise, some one promptly re
i plied, "Xo, sir !" The speaker who thns
unexpectedly made answer was a little
boy sitting in one of the front pews ;
and the result, as may be imagined, was
the upsetting of the gravity of both
preacuer ana congregation.
An Irish domestic, newly engaged,
i presented to his master one morning a
i pair of boots, the leg of one of which
i was much longer than the other. "How
comes it, you rascal, that these boots
are not of the same length ?" "I really
don't know, sir ; bnt what bothers me
most is that the pair down stairs are in
the same fix."
"What do you sell those fowls for?"
j inquired a person of a man attempting
to dispose of some chickens of ques
tionable appearance. "I sell them for
profits," was the answer. "Thank yon
for the information that they are pro
phets, responded the querist ; "1 took
them to be patriarchs."
It is proposed to appeal to Congress
to dam the Ohio river. One wonld
imagine that the ejaculations of pas
sengers on board steamers that have
been "stuck in the sand," at a low stage
of water were sufficient to answer all
purposes in that direction.
When old King Lear complained of
the shabby treatment he received from
his daughters after he bad divided up
between them and took his place as a
boarder in their respective houses, they
consoled him by saying: "You may go,
father, and fare worse."
Lavish ! Absent Man o' Business
"O, Mr. (forgets his name), will yon
excuse me one minute ? Take a seat
Pray take a chair Take a " Meek
Client "Thank yon, I have one "
Man o' Business "That's all right
take another 1"
Clear as Crystal. Little Cracked
Voice "Joe ! come on I Joe ! Joe !
are ya as blind ya canna hear?"
Slightly Husky Voice "Xaa! bnt
oo's shootin' sa lood mak's me sa
stone deaf a' canna see clear what oo
says?"
As a sboddyite was looking at some
paintings, the dealer pointed to a fine
one, and said, "There is a dog after
Landseer." "Is it really ?" exclaimed
the new-found nabob ; "What is the
dog after him for ?"
Canst. Tom "Mac. let's have a
glass bat, no, it'll spoil our appetites
for dinner, may-be."
Moo. "And why for no spoil them ?
Twull be a saving in the reckoning, ye
ken !"
There is a man in Troy who did busi
ness about a year ago without expend
ing a dollar in advertising. He has at
last consented to advertise. His first
advertisement was headed "Sheriffs
Sale,"
A tocng man, "illiterate but polite,"
on being invited to attend a wedding,
sent a note in response, saying, "I re
gret that circumstances repugnant to
the acquiesce will prevent my accept
ance to the invite."
Eaelt Grammar. "O mamma! do
make Miss Linnet don't leave off. She
sings so very nicely I nicerly than you
do, even!! nicestly of any one I
knoT!!!"
T7hat it Will Come To I "Oh, sir,
please protect me round the corner ! I
think I see a policeman 1"
When a pickpocket polls at your
watch tell him plainly that yon have no
time to spare.
'
A boarding establishment A carpen
ter's shop.
" Housekeeper or Health.
The liver being gre theat depurating
or blood cleansing organ of the system
set this great "housekeeper of our
health" at work, and the foul corrup
tions which gender in the blood, and
rot out, as it were, the machinery of
life, are gradually expelled from the
system. For this purpose Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery with very
small daily doses of Dr. Pierce's Pleas
ant Purgative Pellets are pre-eminently
the articles needed. They cure every
kind of humor from the worst scrofula
to the common pimple, blotch or erup
tion. Great eating ulcers kindly heal
nnder their mighry curative influence.
Vira'.cnt blood poisons that lurk in the
system are by them robbed of their ter
rors, and by their persevering and
somewhat protracted use the most
tainted systems may be completely re
novated and built np anew. Enlarged
glands, tumors and swellings dwindle
away and disappear under the influence
of these great resolvents.
DOCTORS COULDN'T HELP HI"M.
Miiostilli, Morgan Co., 0 , Much 21ta, 1S71
Dear Dr. Piebce :
When I was 12 or 15 years of age I
took what is called King's Evil, and by
constant doctoring it would heal in one
place and break out in another. It also
broke out in-my left ear. I first found
your name in the Christian Advocate,
and sent 10 miles for the first bottle,
which did me more good than all other
medicines I ever used. I am 28 years
old and doctored with five doctors, and
not one of them helped me so much as
your bottle of Discovery. I hive got
well and able to do a good day's work.
. 10 John A. Wilson.
Nil DESFEBANcm. A real healthy
man or woman, is a rarity ; and what
wonder? when we realize that it is the
custom to overload the stomach, and
then produce chronic disease by the use
of spirituous liquors, "Tonic" "Appe
tizers," "Restoratives," etc. Having
first produced disease by indiscretion,
the victim wonders why "nothing does
him good." Just so; and the reason is
that they all, or nearly all, find a basis
in alcohol or poison. To all thus dis
couraged, we can conscientiously say,
"make one more triaL" Discard spiri
tuous medicines, and give nature a
chance, aiding her in the straggle by
nsing one of her own pure and unadul
terated herb remedies in the shape of
Vixeoab Bitters. The discoverer. Dr.
J. Walker, of California, is no preten
der, but an honorable practicing physi
cian, and his discovery is the result of
years of labor and study. The wonder
ful enres effected by them of Dyspep
sia, Fevers, Rheumatism, and many
other terrible diseases, are almost in
credible. 23
There are probably a hundred or
more persons in this and neighboring
towns, who daily suffer from the dis
tressing effects of kidney troubles, who
do not know that Johnson's Anodyne
Liniment is almost a certain cure. In
severe cases, great relief may be ob
tained, if not a perfect cure.
We notice that the Agricultural papers
all over the country recommend the use
of Sheridan's Cava'ry Condition Pow
ders. Exchange.
Farmers and others in this section
have lonir known and annreciated the
advantage of these powders over all
others. 1
The Happiest Discovert of tub Aon.
Anakesis, an infallible cure for Piles,
a scientific combination of poultice, in
strument and medicine, endorsed by
Shysicians of all schools, discovered by
r. Silsbee, a regular physician, and
used successfully in thousands of cases.
Sufferers who have tried everything else
in vain will find instant relief and per
manent cure. It is regarded by medical
men as the greatest of modern discov
eries, and pronounced infallible. Price
$1.00. Sold by Druggists everywhere.
Depot, 4ii Walker St., Xew Y j rk. 5
TnB noblest aim of science is to re
lieve human suffering. Its highest tri
umph is found in Dr. Hickman's Rheu
matic Elixir, a remedy of the highest
character and standing. Acute of
chronic Rheumatism, O'out, and all
aches and pains which are caused by
the above diseases, give way before its
beneficent power. For sale by all re
spectable Druggists. Trice $1. " If your
Druggist has not got it, take no other,
but send $1 direct to the Sole Proprietor
and Manufacturer, Dr. Wm. H. Hick
man, 336 South Second St., Philadel
phia, Pa. Also Manufacturer of Dr.
Hickman's Electric Fluid for Xcural
gia. Headache and Toothache.
Tape D or in I Tape Yl'ortn !
Tip Worm removed in from 1 to 1 hT.r. with
harrole Tecrtal.l. medii:ie. The W'.ren paaiiiit
fr-.m th py-tm alive. o fN skd until t!.? entire
worm, wit U bead patters. Medim h.rmlea.. v'.u
refer th' attiicted to the rvaidrnt of tbia ci'y
whom I have cured. At bit ofli -e can be en huu
dreda of specimen, measuring from an to 1 0 feet in
lenifttL Fifty per cent, oi raf-e. of I'y.iH-j.-le and
disorganizations of Liver are cau.,-4 t at niacti
and other vnrrn eil.'i'iR in the alimenta-y tanal.
Worraa, a diaeaae of the most flalir-roii. cuara l.-r,
areao littie understood by the medical men uf the
present dy. Call and aee the onciual and oniy
worm destroyer, or aeitd for a circular which will
giTe a full d-af riptlon and treatment .-f all kind of
worms; enclose 3 cent stvmp f'r return of t ieaame.
Dr. E. F. kunkel can tell by aeemff the patient
whether or not, they are trounted with w.irn.a, and
by writing and telling the vmptom, tc, the lKx-tor
will amwer by maiC DR. K. F. Kl NKF.L. So . .
Ji. Ninth St.. PmuiDELPHia, Pa. t vlvice at olhve
or by mail, free.) Scat, I'm and Stjxuacu worma
al.o removed
Advertisements.
SIO Brcslau Lots.
G.OOO LOTS
0 23x!00 feet, or Sal in Ms
CITY OF BRESLAU,
at flO ptr Lot,
2,000 Garden Plots
0 fO Lots sach, at f00 psr Ttot.
TIio City of Breslau
I Iecated oa the Booth Bid IUflroad
of Long Island, aid is known to be th
most enterprising place ia tha Elate,
having threa ehnrchaa, schools, several
larg4 manafuctories, hotels, stores, eto.t
8 to., and a population af several thau
and inhabitants.
Every ens KnoTrs Breslau,
And theoa who don't, please call for
particulars on TH03. WELWOOD, 15
Willonghby Street, Brooklyn.
REMEMBER, $10 PER LOT.
Title perfect and warrantee deeds
given frea cf inenmbranoa, street!
opened and surveyed frea of extra
charga. Apply to
THOMAS WUV00Or
15 WiJ'.oughby St., Brooklyn, L. I.,
k P.O. 7 Beekman St, Rooms 5 4 8,
Btw Tork Gty.
Or u
EDWARD 8AL0M05,
eia k 04 Chattnot St,
f-ll-ly Rdladalphia, Pa,
JOB PRINTING
KIAXLT rXWUIKD AT THIS OfTICl
Advertisements.
DYSPEPTIC
CONSUMPTION.
Con Thtpeptic Consumption b Cured f
T anstoer, TES!
Firat. Remove aU tka nhealtby muooos
chat gathers about tha wails of ta slouch
from indlgestioa.
Second. Product aa aetiv ooditioa t
LWer and Kidneys witaout deputing ta
Third. Supply or aid aatars in furnishing
tJis drain of aom of tW aomponnt part
that oompoM healthy luida.
We, from thonsandi whe have bee eared,
tasert tht a our taa be performed oa ihia
RE3EEIES USED,
Apirt from cur Office Practice.
FIRST.
THE GREAT AMERICAN
DYSPEPSIA PILLS,
BeaoTe tbe fungui matter from the (touch,
aad restore it te a health condition.
BTCOND.
THE PINE TREE
TAH. CORDIAL!
acta ea the Liver, heale'fhe Stomach, aa
net the Kidneje and Nervous Csttja.
Per further advice, call er write
OS U Q C. WieHABTf
332 JS'orth Second Slrttt.
ADMONITION.
h is known to all readers that since Da.
L. Q. C WIS HART has followed the cause
aad cure of diseases, and the great value W
TAR aa a curative rented, ae directed b
Bishop Eerklcy and Rev. John Wesle, that
man have attempted te make a TAR pre
psntioa for THROAT AND 1USO MS
EASES. Be U known thai Da. t. Q C.
WISHARTS
PISE THE TAB CQRDUL
li the enly remedy, from long experience,
used by esr Eioft skillful physicians fee
Dipiheria, Ulcerated Throat, Lung, KiJuej;
Stomach, Athma, and Genersl Debility, ts
well J for Cou(hs, CcMs aad Lung Affav
tieas.
DR. L. Q.C. 7IS!.ArrS
uvtiMtfuiuid iawvw Aa liattM,
No. 232 N. SECOND ST ,
rilaLaOEl'.HHIt.
Fh.a Cut Illustrates tto manner of Using
Fountain .asal Injector.
Thi 1ntmTnrrt I- espfXiaUy designed lor t!i
DR CACC'3 CATARJ?K TEMEOY.
It i His on'v form of intnimritTot ii.vcnted
villi v'tit li U'-iitl ni";icire cm Krcnrritti hinh vp
a id prrftrtiy appl'wt twsi! partol ll.t afir-cttd ra
tal ju. and tit chai.il'or er rawlit-d cwn
i uinicatiti thcix-wiili. in bich fore ar;l rVcrs
Veqiie.it ly cit, and from mliirli tiic catarrhal ci)
cliare irfnemlly procwi. The mart oi nn:e?a
in trvatiii- tw.arrli heretofore hn ariM-n .arrely
fron the i:ii;x"-ili!:Tr o apply.!: rrnWits to
liiese cavitic wl cham!. bv'ar.r of the crdi
r.iry method. Tnis obTac!e in the way of i-f-f
-ciin- fan- i entirely overt orn- hrihe ii:verti n
of the I'uch. In usirT'hi ii:f tniTrieiit. the Fluid
is earned h its cwn weight. o smilrmj. forcing ct
purojna biinrj rcqurtd.i up one Doiiil in a full
l'oiiiIv iltiwi.!.; friivaui to tlx V ": hot j ortion cf t! c
iual pi'i .. -a ,t:Toit taifirt HUyc'eaT .
ci I X - mth nndchamler ronncrT.d therewith,
m l&msoutof the oppfrsile ncsril. JueJf p!ea-a-it,
v d m that a h.ld ran rf'rrvitar.d
it. lull nuil explicit directions ac
company eac'i i:itruurt. Tlfn ncd with this
intaimrt. lr. Sf-v'r Catarrh Pennvly cnr- re
cent aitac': of C'oll 111 the f lead " by
a fy a::! i cation.
Synitomcf Catarrh. FretvKEt kl-B-te,dicbarr:erilun'
into thn.at, onu t.n.o nv
fe, watery, thick m::ca. purukfit,i.t.cr:i Ac.
In others ailrrnes-, dry, w:l., w vuis or ii.dan. d
ve. ftoppinnp oro'jslrcotiunnf taal pai--.ars
rinjin in car, deafnefs. hawLir? oj-d cootii j
t cLMr i r ut, nlcorat: m, fals frm t.Ict-r-,
rotes alter? 1. nis-U Vran?, cflenshe brrth. ir:
iircJortital deprivtlm ot cre rf ttvll ai.d
I .-te, i,l:rzirv,, mental !preMon. lc? c f a; p--lit'J,
I'vli ttion, enhnvd t"nsil?, liei.lir rmi-h,
Ac. :i!va fowof them fyrarton.s uc l.Lciy to
b; rircaHvit in a-iy cie at ore ii-o.
Ir Sasr' Catarrh II mry. tVn
tt"l wit ii Jr Pirce' Nu;d Louc lir,
and accompanied with ti e eon'titrtiorr.i tn-at-meat
w'.mii i rcoTntnpn'!cd in ti e jamMct
that wrap each bottle of the Il'tnedr. i a p( r
fct niHc f t fail kr.th"me di-rat-, and tl.e
FrrvprioMr 2tj. in rood fai'h. $.".00 reward
rara-e he can not crtre. Tie II rcet.y i nv.
a:iup:ea-ant to nse.'',r;tai!)!nr.' rTrrrfTCarrTir
f'n: T r.;or.. Tht-Catanli IVc:Vt i acid at
rvit, Pnnrhe at 7) cert, r-y nil Trtir
t -r either will Lc macri hr rr pn-tur -n
r ei-t oflC Ti IJ. V. I I llvl.,.
bole iHor. CL1"i Y.
ptlTpl TEE A - NECTAR
arkU "LACK TKA,
with the Green Tea flaTnr. Wr-
ratitrd to nuit ail tat. r
Aie everywhere. And fr uul
wholesale un'y by the Great At
lantic & iacitic O., lstt VuL
t n St., and i A 4 CburrQ Mt. N.
Y. P. O. b x a, beud for 1 he
tJCtAT ClTClUr. h-UX
r-
lfT" ANTED, AGENTS MALE OR KEX.VI-E, FOR
f f the moNt money miking Xoyeltiea in tae mar
ket. F'T l'urt.cnlarn, d.re,
FUILAI'KLPHIA NOVELTY MFfl. CO.,
ll-28tf fr4 ft ka&kux St.. FniaAdapiiia, Pa.
SHOW CASES I SHOW CASES!
AH ty!e, S.Itt MonntM and Walnnt, new nd
eeon'l-fiand. twrirely locked f r nlnpi-inff.
CUlMUW, BAitS HHfcXViait, DlOUfi FIX
Trnts, ac.
HOCSR AND OrFlCB FUKXlTTTtr? aO kind
The Urgftft and bet avsK.rte4 a Uk, new aad
aecobd-liAad m tiie City.
liKWIs c lino.,
1021, 10, lOii and 10J Kimfc AVtL. Thila.
Sa&M. U.a
SEWING MACHINE,
CTtlliie the te pif Hon at work, strength
and bautT of atitcb. duxauUiij of onatntctMB. a&4
Tall and
tamine. sod fee scaneles an4 etnoiua,
tddraaa
XLZU iTWTWd If ACHTO oa
S kradmj. lav lark.
M-IMst
-a isLi
" 'a' I
on
BOUCHLIptv
'
..vki...:, -
TP c
r- - a t
Ll'.l-lLja, Laorl aTaiatti
Advertisements.
' 811 EDISfl 13 1 T X Li R S 5
Dr. 4. talker s taUlornn tin
orrar Hitters are a pr.ro'y Yri-iaMc
pri'j'aratioll, m:n!i." i'lt:t.-r1v trim: t!:: ac
tive herbs foisntl tiio lowvr rvi.ci of
tie Sierra Nevada mountains f Ca:.:;r
uia. the medic inal prnjiertios of wliich
arc extracted therefrom without til'- tno
of Alcohol. Tlio !:et:on ia almost
d.'.;I.V asl;e!. "What is ta.; cause of Uio
anp'arai'.eied success of Vinegar IJit
TEns!"' Oar ans wer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and the patient re
covers his health They are the great
blood puritier aud a lii'e-'ivin principle,
a perfect Innovator and luvigorator
of the svstem. Never before iu the
history of the woriJ ha.i a medicine ueeu
compounded possessing the reuiarkalre
qualuies of Vi.nkgab Bitteb.i iu Ueaui the
sick of every disease man is heir to. T!iey
aro a gentle Purpatit e as well as a Tome,
relieving Coujfestion or Inflammation ot
the Liver and Vis ral Organs, ia iiUiou
Diseases.
The properties of Walker's
VlSEffAS Bittess are Aperient. Diaphoretic.
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative. DiuTtic,
Sedative, Counter-irritant,, Sudoritic, Alters
'ive. and Anti-iiilious.
tiraf eful Thousands proclaim vin
egar Bittehs the most wonderful
W'jrant that ever u.-tai;ied tie sinUrg
?j.-eui.
o rorson can taU these VAi te-s
according to directions, and remain lo::
untvel!, provided their bones are not de
stroyed by mineral poison or other
means, aad vital organs washed beyond
repair.
li'lions Remittent and Inter
mittent Fevers, which are so preva
lent ia the valleys of our great livers
throughout the United States, esiet'ia!;y
those of the Mississippi. Ohio. Misuari,
Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland Arkan
sas. Hod, Colorado. Prazos, liio Grande,
Pe;ui, Alabama, ilobiie, Savannah, llo
anoke, James, and many others, wall
their a.-t tributaries, throughout our
entire country during the Summer atiJ
Autumn, ami remarkably so during sea
sons of unusual heat and dryness, aro
invariably accompanied by extensive de
rangements of tlio stomach and liver,
ami other abdominal viscera. Ia their
treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow
erful influence npa theo various or
gans, is essentially necessary. There
is no cathartic f.r "t"ae purpose cru.d to
Dn. J. YValkeu's Vixluar Uitieks
as they will speed. Iy remove the !,ir
colored viscid matter with which tao
bowels are loaded, at the same tiiae
Stimulating the secretions .f the l!v-r.
and cenerally restoring the he.t'.t
functions of the digestive organs.
Fortify the IhmIv atraiiist dNens
by purifying all its ifuidswith Vixlhah
UlTTEI'.s. No epidemic can take ho! i
of a system thus fore-armed.
DysjK'psia cr Indigestion, Head
ache, l'aiu in the Shoulders, fnuuhs.
Tightness of the Cliot, lfciness. S.ur
Eructations of the Stomach. l!ad Taste
in the Mouth, llilious Attacks, J'alpita
tatiou of the Heart, Iut'ammati.m of tin
Lungs, l'ain ia the region of the Kid
neys, and a hundred other painful symp
toms, are the offsprings of Iyspep-:a.
One bottle will prove a better guar.fee
of its merits than a lengthy advertise
ment. Scrofula, or Kitis's Evil, WLit-j
SweiiiEis I' leers, Eryipda. Swelled Neck.
Goitre, Scrofulous Iiitl.immati.nis. Iiidolet t
Inllaumiftlions, Mercurial Atf'cctious. U! I
Sores, Kruntious of the Sl.iu. Sore l!ve-. etc.
Ia thc-e. as iii all other constitutional ln-ea-es.
Walker's Yi.r.o.n 1:itteb h;:r
shown their preat curative powers iu t'.;
mo-it obstinate and intraetalile e;ise-i.
For Inflammatory and ( h?onic
Rheumatism, Gout, r.ilious. .remit
tent and Intermittent Fevers. Iiisi-asesc.f
the Blood, Liver, Kiilners and I'.l.uider.
these ltitten hire no eipial. Such l'iea.-es
ire caused by Vitir.tvd liiood.
Jlerhanirsl Diseases. rcrsons en
gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as
l luinbers. Type-setter. iiiI-heaters and
Miners, as they advance in life, are subject
to paralysis of the BweN. To pu.trd
a?aiut this, tako a doe "f Walker's Vis
Egab IIiTTEits occasionally.
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions. Tet
ter, Salt-lthe.im, lUotche. Spo?. I'mipie
Pustules, ItoiN, Carbuncle. Kins-worm.
Scald-head, Sore tyes. Eryiwla-. Itch,
Scurf ", Discoloration of the" Skin, Uumors
aud Diseases of the Skin of whatever name
or nature, are literally du.j up and carried
out of the system iu a short time, by the u.-e
of these Ditters.
Tin, Tape, and other Worms,
Inrkine in the system of so many thou-iar.d,
aro etleetually destroyed ami removed. Xo
iyftem of medicine, no vennifupes, no an
thelminitlcs will free the sy tem from worms
like these Bitter.
For Female Complaints, iayoni?
or old, married or sinc!e, at the dawn of wo
manhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement is soon jwircejiti'ee.
Cleanse the Vitiated Wood when
ever you find its impurities bursting through
the sfin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores;
cleanse it when you find it obstructed and
sl'-ijgUh in the veins: cleanse it when it is
foul : your reclines will ted vou when. Keep
the blood pore, and the health of the systeui
f. ill folio.
K. If. TcDOAI0 & CO.,
t?rt -.rjre ar..l Gen. Arts, Saa Fnieisrn. Calif .T-ye.
: 1 r. of V:sh:-TT.in nrifi Churilrm Sta. X V
S..1U bar alt Urtui.u aaa Otalcr.
GET
r.1 rrrrr-n
Oil
kir.Lii,,i u.v Ii.Juv.lJ li.. ;1'J...i,. (.
10,000 W..ritm4 3l..,ni.j,wi ; ,4r ..'.Wm'a
S000 Engravings. jSiO pages Oaaria.
Gta.1 to add my tratin 'tit in i f,r ,r.
-.t V. .ila.-r uf Ui-Tird.'
P.ry ch.-Iax ko,w. if. n J
TE , H r" fl, !ti t
li Ia..t vom!: D::,,ru y ol ti: I. .:!.-,. ..-.
J. vv-k, t sv..-!a,,4J
fJP ga.de uf t uli t. ..f . nrtnr.iT-..
Iwil tracmt It ihimr ty laf.-r jKrri:?.
Q. , . , '' Sut.l
r-tym.!, -tlnl parlj .a.-,.!.., a..i'i.,i.e I v
L. iaourcra. j.e K.u-rufuj
-mrirr r"t;nn t Lunae Tnr.r'; tn, to
C XCtl. allull..-. In dtilnliix i3-is.c tr-m.
. . . .'Pr,.,t ll.tcuoick.1
C far w 1 tiy.w, tst f. , T '
TJ v , v ll.ri.aX.rn.
ake ft alt'gMW, tl. rr..irr w-, k.
i,Sl..-l, ti.e Lumi ..r!Urp;.t
A BK:mtt.T Sir T-ry lnt.;'i.-.r.t fnmilT. ttr l-nt,
tmrhr ant) r I inn. ht I..'.,-.- l- codv
pleU witnuot tn bni fci.-n ti. i,.,u: j ?
r.-: ::;-a;i.
100 Pjw Octao, 03 Engraiip.T!. Price is.
lar-ollj a ym ..f a f- tl .i.arr. lu.t ti.a
Oung fur li. a.llh.n. A ixrju HUuuM M.Mf
Pullubd bj O. C. XKKKUH. rinS,M. l!ja
&.ld bj all Bovkll!ra.
J W. SHERWOOD,
FLORIST.
BOUQUET AND Y Low Kit BASKETS
MAI'K TO OKKP It.
Abj WRKATHS AN I. CKdcES FOB
WtbWMil A.DFf.NKR.s.
Bhbcim aiD Plants CorAi:i. oa
11 A.I iv
KO. 109 SOTJTH BEVFXTB STREET.
hJow CbCMtnnt.
Fhiladklthlv.
Advertisements.
fffliE SCHOEHIHO'S
CELEBRATED
CF PERUVIAN BARK.
Tb Bccfp for th! Bitten wm tonni iaon th
ptpr f 0aitifc pbyiclmn, tnjc'i man. who
kat bis Uf wtMO 104 ymn old. by of hi harm.
aid netp than had bmn kpt prof on bJ aerret hj
ht family for mor thaa thre entnr.m. Curing ill
ttis tlnM tfaoy mad ftwqtwot ma of l hm Bttt r. wuct,
tendarad t&aa a strong mod Urn ..Tin ae r P'i '.,
aujcrjiiif axcaUanl baaJUi. OrLginUy tha arvrut of
prapartnn this Bitter and tta woo Jarful aflVta, w-ia
attained by asaof thalr kin. whila participating ta
taa aarllaat sxpedltlona of tUa Spaularls in amenr.
after a Mn promiaa. catsx to di n u fci ut to tLa
vraaamad principal Hair.
THIS GESUIXE SWEDISH BIT-
ricns
aa tt ta now railad, baa tinea ttaeomlca; into pnM'.a
aaa, affettad thousands ot satoalshirta: extras nt ;
Hants alraady ftrm op by macy physrclan. and Ixxm
pTored Itaalf such s powarful raatoratiTa aad prwr
aatlvs Kamady, that todaed it naads m forttar luJV
vttul raconaie&dattoua or praiaa,
HOW IT OPERATES.
Tha affct ef tha iwdltt B!ttsr Afreets Itself, ta
tha arat placs, to tha aarras f taa digestive orr.
throughout tirir entlra axt ant, but mainly to tha
stomach and tna visceral tract It aormalUea their
functions, and tharef ore, according to tha nature of
existing trregulaxUtea or remove) obstructions an 1
retentions of aJ kind, or stops piarrhosa, Dyspntrrr.
sr other ssamotoos discharges and aflurla. By rtv
latlng tha abdoiclBal organs, of which denend t .
BKurlhniant, tha ronserratloo aad the devel'.rnnr.t
of the toman body tha Swedish Ptttera lnrlgorat-a
tha nerves aad tha vital powers, harp a tbe eer.v
and tha Intellect, removee tha trembling of tbe
tha acidly, the borning. tunaes, aid pains of t rtto
macb. tmprorea its digretlT facn:tl, er 1 is in .
eellent lrr by lactic and remedy eint a-rvou irrt
tabUlty,FUtuUncy.ChoUc. Worms, Dnwy, Ac I!
taken la double dosea, tt operates a sure r;aul,
bat la a mUd and painless way.
Ib eonsMnanca of theoa qoaUtlas of the ! a
B liter has become one cf the most ce'ebratdmne
dies against disease of the organs contained ic tN
abdomen, and of ejections that befill ciinfciti'l in
eoaseyioence of Jd disease. Thus tbe hwedi-h let
ters has ad ansorpassed renown f-r cunug Livi
Complaints of long standtug, Tanndice, V y!:,
Disorders of ths Sp.een, of ths Fancreas, of the M.
rale G lamia, and also disorders of tha Kidneys, of t!;a
Urinary and Sexnal-Organa. Beside thee the
dlsh Bitters cures thoss innumerable nervous, r cun
gestr affections and diease. which or.gtu&Sefrta
said abdoalna diatarbancee, aa: Cosgetioa of th
Langs, the H-art, and the Brain. Cough. Asthma,
Ueadacha, Kearalgla, la different parts of the txkjr,
CLioroals, Internal Hemorrhoids and rilea, tiout.
Dropsy. General Debility. UypocbondriMta, Mun
choiy, r..,a. Of great benefit tha Swedi"h Bitter
fcaa also been found in ths belnniug of Oa-tnc at.d
iutrmltteut JTvera.
But this is only on tide of Its Inestimable power of
protecting thneewho use tt regularly atiaiiud all mi
asmatic and epidemic disease. The Swedish Bitters
baa by long sn-eriencvln many thousand caaea maio
laisvd tti Kfvat rtn.iwn of beicg tbe most teiiaL.e
raxsKsvATrvs iXD ritopimacTic eesisdi
Typhus, OrisstalPcst, Ship
Fever, Tellc77-Fe7r,
ASIATIC CHOLERA.
The strrnrtor protsrtlT and saaatrra Tlrtna of :it
fwedlsh Bttten against Malartona FeTers, Dysentery
and Cholera, war moat spparently tested lu the Uta
wars by French and Ecghsh phyaicians, who by pr
; srrlbfDg the sama to their mpectiTa trtx-e, sns
seeded la reducing tha mortal, ty Ut uf evi.Uiiiic Jja
sases frm St to a pr cect,
DISECTI0HS
far A3 persona who hT to perform long and fiard
labor, and whila doing It, are often ei nosed to suda
ehangss of temperature, or the draft or air, or obnox
ious dusts, smells, or Tapers, shoal 1 not fall to us
tha Bwediih B.:ters, as a few dm pa of it. addM to
tl.vlr drink, ara snrlent to preserT them In lnratl
DiiUi fceaith and Tlgar. Those who are acenstoiurd
to drink ice water durrg the summer, ahoold catt
otult to sdd some Swedish b:tter to it.
t rVrns gtren to stnitary life honTd use th
P TftdiHh Bi.ters, It will ueutra tse the fP-U ot
t'je.r wuit of etr.-ie in cra air, and ke thsca in
good health and g-od ptrlta.
tTTo tha Ladles the Swedtnh B'tter- mnV e-e-:t-
: ally be recommended. Because ita o.cutr:b itrm -4
aaseutlaily to preaerra the ramUr:ty vf tlie i.hyv.D:.
gcal functions, peculiar to the d?:it-:e ftaaiec o-
: stitutlna and Uiua proves an sifertuai barrier .'
. those Innumerable Nerronsand BL-1 Lihi A.-wr.i.b
; aow-a-c!ays bars grown so frequrr.t aa to be taken lj
i aiaiij for Era's natural lnbarliaara
tW Bat the Swedish Bittrrs des not only --ur
good bea;th: italao(Tectathe V development of t -
. femala body, and of its beauty by erfM.t forms aud
: Una oomplectlon aud color.
Thus ths SwedNh B:rttr has heorn. oue if ti.
safest and moat !2:ieiat
I
! C0SHETIC AXD TOILET ARTICLES
9 farmers and thefr famUlen. who have t il
SwedUh Bitters, prefer it to all mmil&r rt I -r
them tt prove bonaaclai ta various wajk
In Bummer, whea their calling re-iufrns them to
often en dur the intense heat of the sun wh.: r
formlrg hard work, they are induced to be - t -'f
idenlly cautious ta satinfylng their burt..&?h.'t ;-y
water, or ba eating fruit not yet ripe, &x than f-ru-tng
paopla are vary liable to tutter frura aun tr k-.
Fever, Dysentery, Cholera, o. Th- rgiiUr u
of tha Swedish Bitters make these dACk-iro',
snees all haxrzisa.
Ia W'.ntsT, during thettrre nf reet, many country
people trylcg to Indemnify themselves for pwt prt
ationa ara very apt to oftea overload their : oron.ru
and thns impair their digestive organs the ro-rta of
thetre. Th as of th Swedish Bittors p rents'-
&' ftom that eaosa.
As a msrer of ootxrwa, ta ess of iJras, the re
cent should avoid food ant agreeing with bira or
nch, as fs known, to bo difflcuU to digest or nmnii
able to th disease In question.
Tha rate: "Pe nnderat la ail yoa eat, drink or a-,
la sirWt.j to ta obaerved.
j HOW TO TAKE SWEDISH PITTEES
i To, SwMl'.h Bttten ahall oaty b. uvkaK ta taa ,!
' aar.ca of luSammatory trnptama,
Grown Mroca uka on Ublsapoonfnl tbrw ilm
I por day, bafor ot arter maalj, par. or dllatot wlt!l
1 water.
Paraona s4ar jaan, two-th!rta at tkU naoBtr
' IS ' .c-hatf "
I " ana-qoarta, "
Ch!t4ra frm I jrt qpwara. uaaKUtt f t&a.
tnantit.
ru aecaa?are4 to ehow tcbaceo, ,!nald a
tain from U aa moch aa poan-.bla, vhil, wtiag 8wa
' dl-ih Etttara; thar may anbatttut. arm. a t'.wara of
. fthammomita or root of bat than awailow tha
aalTla. Inataad of i !ttin it away. Ia to aam, way
rmokuig of tobacco aboulU only Bodarately ba rv
. Ileal
Panral aflfctM wHa tfrapwpalft Beat not aai hot
bna4oreakaorfatoraalt meata, bot aboald tajc,
moderat, axorcla, la tn air ToidmK ail anadea ebo
C of tompflrataraw all iEltnpranc In calnjf asd
drtnkisir, and all aidn, meutal ncltcment, by which
tary will eontr.bal largaly lc tha aft actirraeaa of tha
ftwadlaa BlUara.
F. BBhonld tti, Swnllah BttUra not rait all taaw.
B may ba taken with aon:a anirar, or aaa b. diluted
with atas, ancar-watar or ayrnp.
I HaTtpw acquire by purefeaa. tharactpo and tbaea
' doalT, r.ght of prwnng tha Only Gtnoln, Swediah
.ttn, heratofor. prepared by agen, Schoaning.
' lata D. ft. Amy Sorgeon, wa haTa, ia order to frua
i trata fraud and dacepuon, the nam. of . Schoralng
: burst Into th, slam of aarh bottl. and th. envelop,
aroond It marked by E. Bcoowslnir and by our owa
Bottle, without theae nark. are apurioua.
DENIEL L CO.,
j He. m 5orth Third Street. FhlhuSelpaln,
Frtoe per 81ng!a Bottle, laoenta. Half a doaen. at.
: Bold TTTinlaaala by Johaatoa. Bollowsy M Gowdea.
M Area Scree. raUadelpala. Ins ale by all drag.