Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, April 14, 1875, Image 4

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    POETET.
She Hbt Racks the 4 radle
Kales the World."
Dew ocuui m the dream of life
Adorned with erery innlng ait ;
An mother, daughter, aiater, wife.
She melto Uie tool, she cbarme the heart.
Without bar what were lord); men ?
A rainleee cload a fruitlem tree
A world without a ami a plan
That eTer incomplete must be.
Ilex foat'riug care, devotion, love,
Seem inspiration from above.
In childhood'! hour, beside the chair.
She calls each fragile form ;
She claapa oar tiny hands in prayer,
Safe-eheltered from the storm.
Vet man, nngratefol man. the dart
Of falsehood Moris with skill ;
And when he woe a woman" heart
He seek ite love to kilL
Her lot is to be tried ; though pore,
To sigh, to sudor and enduo.
i li. mothers of a race nnborn.
Tim toots to siali those grand decrees
That herald in the Promised Horn.
The waiting world's Hesperidea.
Ye are the mold of heroes strong
Who guard and glonfy oar biles :
The sea in song shall roll along
Ileneath the apienlor of your amilea
The beautiful and good shaft rain.
And sinless Eden blom again.
1S4ELI.15T.
Old Amslfrdam.
We take the following description of
Amsterdam from CoL Waring's first
article of his apnea, "A Farmer's Vaca
tion." whicb begins in S'-ritner for
April :
It is one of the peculiarities of Hoi
land that we go down into it from the
no, and the farther in we go the deeper
down we get. 1 he metropolis lies on
river or est nary called (for short) the
IJ. Into this we entered through
ponderous granite-built lock one of
an assorted series, ol vanoua sizes.
adjusted to vessels of larger or smaller
dimensions. After we had been shnt
into our compartment the Yalves were
opened, and we followed the declining
water until it reached the level of the
IJ. when the gates were swung back
and we steamed on to the city.
And here we were is Amsterdam the
mother of the "Xieuw Amsterdam'' of
I'eter Stnwesant and Wouter Van
Twiller. The guide-books (to which
the reader is respectfully referred) are
fond of calling this town "the Venice
of the North," which misleads the ima
gi nation. Like v emce, it is built on
piles. Kraxmns speaks of its people
living like birds perched on the tops of
trees and some ol its obscurer narrow
alleys are only canals. Beyond this,
the resemblances are only differences.
The canals twnetrate many of the pnn
cipal streets, it is true, bnt these are
wide thoroughfares, with broad, well
paved roadway and sidewalk, and often
with four rows of trees the waterway
being between the center rows. Car
riages and heavy drays are moving in
every direction, and the canals are but
little used for internal trarhc. uanal-
boats, lighters, and in some parts even
square-rigged ships are floated oppo
site to the warehouses which are to
receive or to deliver their cargoes ; bnt
the city has a roar and hum that would
at once destroy the dreamy charm of
tenice.
Ihere is much in Amsterdam that is
magnificent, and in which we were
greatly interested, bnt my present pur
pose is mainly connected with those of
its features which seldom engage the
attention of travelers, l.ismg at day
break, I strolled out to Bee the street
life of the early morning. JIarket men
and market women from the country.
near and far, dressed in their widely
varying local costumes, were plying
their traffic in the streets and on the
canals ; and housemaids were scrubbing
steps and sidewvlks, and sweeping to
the middle of the carriage way, or cur
rying home with prayer-book or market
basket. The town was alive with
population .which a few hours later
would make way for those who are only
knows to the broader day.
Canal-boats were arriving and de
parting ; moving out from their berths
through a crowd of other craft, with
that mysterions kind of silent help that
moving canal-boat always gets from
the crews of its neighbors at rest, its
sides are prodded with boat-hooks from
here and from there, and it slowly floats
out from the crowd and starts on its
way "sans mot dire turf boats were
floating into the Dam Rak, furling their
sails and lowering their masts ; cargoes
of cabbages were being tossed, one by
one, from men in boats to men on
Bliore ; here the clatter of knives and
forks was heard through low back win
dow and cabin-hatch, and here the
vrouw was washing np the breakfast
things in a slat-floored kitchen sink
hanging from the taffr&il ; strange-
looking people were doing strange-
looking things throughout all the
strange-looking fleet, and all with the
air of its being in no wise unusual or
peculiar. On shore, a street vender
was attracting custom with a watch'
man's rattle ; men were hoisting baskets
of turf to the cellar, at the top of
high house gable ; women and children
were going from a basement with the
sign "water en vnnr te koop." with
neatly painted iron buckets each having
a kettle of boiling water at the top, and
a lump of burning turf at the bottom.
going home to make the morning tea ;
at every quarter-hour, the carillon
jingled from all the steeples. The gin-
shops were already well patronized, for
it seems a universal habit, in this moiit
northern climate, to take "een sneenw
ballet je" of gin and sugar as a frequent
prophylactic At this early hour, and
almnt the canals, the gilded heads and
odd bonnets of the peasant women are
more frequent than elsewhere, or later
in the day.
True Kerrration.
It has Wen said that half the wisdom
of a nation into w found in its pro
veil s: and most of ns have thought in
ur mIdniIImiv daysthat the seven sage
ol iiivore iiniM'tl as mentis in council
could iH-vcr have written a more 'ii
Kilile line tlinn the I ami liar nursery
axiom that "all work and no play make's
Ja-k a dull 1mv." Not loss true is this
of the man than of the boy. The bow
of Aeliilleg was not aluas Ix-nt, and
relaxation from labor is a human
necessity. The ilitliciilty is how to
tiud the requisite relaxation; for if the
pleasure chosen lie too like the daily
lalxir, verv little lienetit will result
therefrom. How few of us really study
the philosophy of amusement- There
is a well-known storvofa waiter w ho
took a holiday for the first time for
twenty years, and spent the day in
assisting a brother of the napkin to
lav the tables for a great dinner to
Like place the following evening. We
have heard of London and country
siinreons wishing a holiday to arrange
to look aftT each other's practices for
a fortnight or three wivkn. Many
literarv men, after a hard day's work,
wiil sit down for the evening overs
ehess-lioard. An actor "out ol the bill"
for a niht is almost sure to visit a
rival theatre; au artist will visit a
friend's studio ; and a clergyman away
from home is certain to olliciate in
every pulnit within a reasonable dis
tance of the place lie has selected for
his holiday sojourn. Now, all these
men are guilty of the grossest folly.
It is very well, as a change of labor,
and to pit-vent the mind running too
much in one groove, to vary the scene
of the work, but tliis is.distinctly not
amusement ; and even though the zest
of novelty may cause it to be a genuine
enjoyment, it is by no means relaxa
tion: for it docs not. give rest, which
sltould lie the one object of all
relaxation.
Tate Trcavtaaeat of Faeaaawaria.
The recent deaths from pneumonia
hare created a feeling of - apprehension
on the part of the public that the dis
ease has assumed the form ot an epi
demic, or that it has assumed propor
tions beyond the reach of skillful phy
sicians. This is regarded as a false im
pression by physicians, who aver tha ,
simple pneumonia will pursue steady
and brief course for a week or ten days,
when it will terminate favorably with
out any further treatment than good
nursing ; and in the more severe forms
whicb it assumes it only requires the
addition of supporting treatment, espe
cially the use of quinine and mild stim
ulation. There was a time when vig
orous depletion was considered the
duty of every phvsician at the outset
of pneumonia, often with the view of
completely checking it, and in its
earlier stages, for the purpose of short
ening its duration and limiting the ex
tent of lung involved, and the prolon
gation of the disease. Blood-letting
as method of routine treatment, has
been abandoned, not only in pneumo
nia, but in all inflammatory diseases.
At the same time there is a growing
opinion among many physicians that
the utter abandonment of bleeding is
a natural reaction from its former abuse
and that there may occur in the experi
ence of any physician cases of extreme
congestion or incipient inflammation in
which the withdrawal of blood will be
indicated as a sure and immediate
means of relief. As, however, cases of
inflammatory disease are seldom seen
until the process has been in a measure
established, if there is a withdrawal of
blood it lowers the vitality of the
system, which will be required to pass
through the natural period of the
disease and insure a successful removal
of the inflammatory deposit And all
the blood withdrawn must be restored
by subsequent vigorous supporting
treatment. Following the method of
depletion, various remedies supposed
to lit ve a sedative influence upon the
nervous system, and to lessen the plas
ticity of the blood, were extensively
used. Such treatment is still in a
measure employed, with view of di
minishing the extent of inflammatory
action, but. as a rule, combined with
tonics and liberal diet.
It would be impossible to enumerate
the various articles which are employed
or the numerous class of remedies used
but the diversity of remedies does not
argue any essential difference in the
mode of treatment, the particular arti
cles employed individually by different
physicians having substantially the
same effect. With a view of diminish
ing the action of the heat and lessen
ing the local congestion, elevated tern
peratnre,and rapid pulse.one physician
wonld use aconite, while another wonld
prescribe veratrum viride, or digitalis,
all of which would subserve the same
purpose. There is, however a general
recognition of a few simple principles
in the treatment of pneumonia : to re
lieve the extreme exhaustive pain in
the side ; to reduce the temperature of
the body, or at least control the de
structive febrile action of which the
elevated temperature is the exponent and
by regulating the action of the heart
and the violence and rapidity of the cir
culation, to restrict the inflammatory
process to as limited an amount of
lung tissues as possible. From this
stage of the disease one general method
of treatment is pursued ; that is to so
thoroughly restrain the patient by rich
concentrated food and tonics, espe
cially cslisaya bark or quinine, and
when necessary the administration 01
alcoholic stimulants, thns enabling the
patient to convalesce rapidly with a
complete restoration of the lungs to a
healthy state.
A well known New York physician
says the disease is to a certain extent
subject to atmospheric influences, and
has a verv close connection with those
affecting diphtheria and cerebrospinal
meningitis. It was more fatal among
people between the ages of twenty and
forty, and those who had passed the
age of sixty years. Persons between
the ages of forty and sixty were seldom
attacked by it The nature of the
disease, he said, was inflammation of
the lungs, and the exciting causes were
exposure of the body to extreme cold
or prolonged chills. The predisposing
causes, he said, were malaria, the un
due use of alcoholic stimulants, and un
known atmospheric changes such as are
present when certain malarial diseases
are prevalent The disease might also
be developed by the inhalation of sewer
gases. The symptoms manifested
themselves in the patient by a distinct
chill, lasting from half an hour to two
or three hours, followed by a pain in
the side of several hours' duration, ac
companied by a high fever, hacking
cough, and rapid respiration, and hem
orrhage. The possible danger of death
was to be apprehended between the
hfth and ninth days.
Celebrated Kabberiew.
Jehan Valter. a French journalist.
relates, ro; of the robliery of the
Dudley diamonds, several anecdotes
atwmt jewel robberies. lie tells how a
pecnlator presented a report to the
Directory, making out that the cele
brated Church of Loretto contained
JL10,(mo.fN worth in diamonds, etc
liarrns and Camot informed llonaparte
of the fact; but the young general re
fused to march on the place, because he
would have to expose a corns of MMKiO.
and would probably find nothing when
he got there. In time he did manage to
seize on the church, and found that all
he diamonds had been replaced by
glass. M. alter also tells how the
mother of the late French Emperor, the
(ueen Hortense, when she was leaving
r i a nee alter uie invasion oy uie allies,
was stopped on the highroad by the
Man i ins tie Mauhreml, who searched
it carriage and took away i.20.HX
worth of diamonds which have never
since tieen heard ol. j his story is all
the more remarkable as there was a
great fuss made about this Marquis de
Manbrenil toward the close of the sec
ond empire. He had a lawsuit witji his
wite, and an outcry was raised against
the M am u is continuing a memlier of
the legion of Honor. It then came out
hat he was oueot Uie rovalists who had
aided the I'riissians to pull down the
statue of Napoleon from the ton of the
column of Vendomc, and that while en
gaged in this act lie had tied an order
of the Legion of Honor to the tail of
is horse and dragged it in the mud.
fet toward the end of the reign of the
third Napoleon he wore the red riblton
and was in receipt of a government
pension.
Tae Traaalt sr Yeans
The bits of news that come to us
front Kerguelen's Island are tantaliz-
njr. x ul there was the l.erman tele
gram, stating that the party of that na
tionality had met good success. Then
came the Astronomer Royal's telegram.
stating that the weather was cloudy,
but three English observers had seen
the ingress, anil one hail "a good ob
servation of the egress." Last I v, a tel-
grani received here savs that the
Americans were eminently successful.
and that the Kuglisli and French were
also, but gives no particulars. 1 he
al (mints at issue are left almost as
indefinite as ever. If the Eugiish got
good observations of. the ingress, they
nave wnat tuey most want from Ker
guelen's Island, to compare with their
Hawaiian observations. ltiiout that
hey have no long base line obtainable
by the comparison of any pair of their
stations. If the Americans did well at
Kcrgnclcn, we have the most southerly
oliservatious attainable to compare
ith those taken at l'eking. and have
reason to lie supremely satistii-d; while
our Kcrgnclcn observations, if coupled
iiinuiose ol uie nussiaus ai ,en
hinsk, will be one-seventh Im-IUT than
e best that is possible in InnJ.
Art is about the only occupation in
taicta people do what they please
without consulting their neighbors.
ICEKTLTTKIL.
CCLTJYATKW OF EOOTS, GsaTS AXD
Grass. When farming, years ago, on
the banks of the upper part, of the
Niagara river, I found the cool, moist
onucers and heavy, loamy, clay soil
better fitted for growing roots than
Indian corn, and as we were then breed
ing trotting horses,8hort-horn cattle
and other improved 8 took, in consid
erable numbers, which required some
thing in winter in addition to bay to
keep them np to the proper mark, I
devoted a good deal of attention to
growing field root crops, which at that
early period were rather a novelty in
American husbandry.
Our farmers too often think that the
larger the size of their roots the
greater the amount of nutriment they
obtain for their stock per acre, while
the contrary may be the fact X have
raised sugar beets, mangel wurzels and
rutabagas weighing as high as 17 to
32 lbs. each, which did not contain
more, if as much nutriment as thcie
not over one-fourth to one-third their
size. The small were juicy, sweet and
solid throughout and were eaten,
either cooked or raw, with avidity.
whereas the larger were more or less
hollow, pithy and dry. and would be
rejected by our animals, unless very
hungry.
In the cool, moist summers of ureat
Britain and some other portions of
Europe, roots of a larger size may be
grown of a superior quality to those
nere ; but even then the chemical anal'
ysis published in the RuraV article re
ferred to above, shows that the smaller
roots contain an average of about 50
per cent more of nutriment (feeding
value) than the larger roots. Thus,
we get 100 bushels of the former from
the same area of land as 130 of the lat
ter, we have as much solid nutriment
from the one as from the other, and we
save the additional cost of handling.
storing and feeding the larger quantity,
flow, as to growing root crops in
larger quantities for stock feeding.
would reooimend it in any part of our
country where soil and climate were
suitable for Indian corn, except so far
South that the seed can be planted in
late summer or early autumn and be
insured a fair growth during the mild
winters there. The roots can be fed
on in the held to sheep and pigs
during winter, the same as is done in
the south of England, and thus save
the trouble and expense of harvesting
ana storing.
On the few acres that I now cultivate
near the Jersey sea-shore, the soil is so
much lighter and the growing season
so much longer and warmer than on
the banks of the Niagara River, I find
that rye, wheat, oats and corn are more
reliable and profitable to grow for for
age than roots. My rye is fit to cut
green for soiling early in May, and as
this is fed out, the winter wheat, then
spriBg wheat, oats and corn follow in
succession. In the meanwhile as much
of these different sorts of grain as is
wanted to ripen for threshing or shel
ling is left to do so. I also cut more
or less of the above when in blossoms.
and cure it as we do grass for winter
forage. When one is short in hay
there are excellent substitutes, thus
cut and cured, and may be as easily
and as cheaply grown as grass by the
system which I follow in their cnltiva
tiou in our light soil and mild climate.
In other parts of New Jersey, where
the soil is a good clay loam, it is easier
and cheaper generally to crow grass in
stead of the above green grain crops
for winter stock forage : but even in
this case I would recommend, always
a certain portion of these to be grown
for summer soiling, in case of a drouth
greatly lessening the grass crop,
1 plant field roots in rows three feet
apart This gives sufficient space be
tween to work them with the cultiva
tor. 1 thin out from 7 to 9 inches in
the row. I do not want my beets to
grow in this climate heavier than 4 to
7 lbs. each as a general rule, for if they
ge beyond this the quality is not so
good, and I don't think anything is
gained by it L'ural Xew Yorker.
Sice AxntALS. Nearly all sick ani
mals become so by improper feeding
in the first place. Nine cases out of
ten the digestion is wrong. Charcoal
is the most enective and rapid correc
tive. It will cure in a majority of
cases, li properly administered. An
example of its use the hired man
came in with the intelligence that
one of the finest cows was very sick.
and a kind neighbor proposed the
usual drugs and poisons. The owner
being ill and unable to examine the
cow, concluded that the trouble came
from over eating, and ordered a tea
cupful of pulverized charcoal given in
water. It was mixed, and placed in a
junk bottle, the head held upward, and
the water and the "harooal poured
downward. In five minutes improve
ment was visible, and in a few hours
the animal was in the pasture quietly
eating grass. Another instance of
equal success occurred with a young
heifer which had become badly bloated
by eating green apples after a hard
wind. The bloat was so severe that
the sides were almost as hard as a bar
rel. The old remedy salaratus was
tried for correcting the acidity, but
the attempt to put it down always
caused coughing, and did utile good.
Half a teacupful of fresh powdered
charcoal was given. In six hours all
appearance of the bloat had gone, and
the heifer was well.
The eollek is a more valuable farm
implement than formerly. Our im
proved farm machinery demands
smooth surfaces on the fields. Then
farmers have learned that better plow
ing can be done with a smooth surface
than an uneven one, and good plowing
means easy after-tillage and clean
crops. The rollers are needed on the new
meadow in the spring on the fields of
spring grain after sowing, and quite
likely on the planting ground. Rolling
is so simple an operation that the com
mon log roller is abont as good as the
more costly tool made of iron and
plank. On the fields that are pretty
free of stone, a clod crusher made of
plank fastened to scantling and over
lapping each other like clap-boards on
a house answers an excellent purpose.
It should be about three feet wide and
nine long.
Fbctt Trees. Fruit trees
affected
by fungi, either on the limbs or roots,
may be effectually cured by close pru
ning the roots and by adding small
quantities of well rotted manure
around the roots. This treatment for
the roots when all the diseased parts of
roots are cut off and the bead of the
tree pruned pretty severe always to
be careful when cutting off a branch
not to leave a snag of three or four
inches. In cutting off branches they
should be cut close to the main stem
or branch. These cuts should be neatly
smoothed with a sharp knife. Clean
culture is one of the great secrets in
fruit culture : and from several years'
observation in various localities in the
South, fungus has only affected dis
eased and uncultivated trees.
As a feed for titty lowls, the follow
ing is recommended. "Four quarts of
shorts, mixed with warm water, fed in
the morning ; in the a f ternoon, four or
five quarts of cracked or whole corn,
keep warm water by them through the
day, and give one peck of oats once a
week ; also give some hay, straw or
chaff once a week, or keep ashes, sand
or gravel by them."
Is BOTLrso potatoes for pigs, they
should be strained, as the water from
them is injurious to a less or greater
degree, as it contains the poittonous
alkaloid called solanine : which, it
should be noted, is more abundant
when the tubers begin to chimp or bud
out
StlESTiriC
I hi Causa- or Jasthuitakes aid
VoliCAXoes. The various relations and
points of connection between volcanie
phenomena, earthquakes, and lines of
mountain elevation imply that they are
the results of the play of one set of
oosmical forces which have been brought
into operation by the gradual cooling
of the earth from an incandescent sun
like state to its present condition. The
argumeat is as follows : As the cooling
of the earth proceeded, the crust gradu
ally thickened and contracted less and
less as the temperature became lowered.
The hotter nucleus, on the other hand,
contracted more, being at a higher
temperature than the crust and having
a higher co-efficient of contraction for
equal loss of heat By this process,
which is still going on. the crust of the
earth would shrink at one rate, and the
vastly hotter central portion at another
and greater rate ; and cavities wonld be
formed between the crust and the
nucleus, cavities which would be ine
vitably filled by the crushing down of
the Bolid crust on the more swiftly con
tracting nucleus, by the force of gravi
tation, which is sufficient to crush the
hardest rocks ; and as the solid crust
follows the shrinking nucleus, 'the
force expended in mutual crushing and
dislocation of its parts is transformed
into heat" by which, at the points of
crushing, the rocks are heated even to
fusion. The access of water to such
points determines volcanie eruption.
These points of crushing may occur at
various depths in the solid crust He
then proceeds to measure the amount
of actual contraction by the annual
amount of heat lost by radiation into
space, which is sufficient to liquefy 777
cubic miles of ice into water at 32, and
comes to the conclusion that less than
one fourth of total annual loss of beat
would suffice to prodnoe the contrac
tion necessary for his hypothesis. The
actual amount of annual contraction is
estimated at a reduction of three fifths
of an inch, an amount too small to be
measured by any astronomical method,
and yet more than enough to produce
all the volcanic phenomena now to be
observed on the surface of the earth.
A Cuke fob Lock-jaw. In the course
of the Cantor lectures, recently deliv
ered before the British Society of Arts
by Dr. Benjamin Richardson, the fol
lowing deeply important remarks were
made upon nitrite of amyl : One of
these specimens, I mean the nitrite of
amyl, has within the last few years ob
tained a remarkable importance, owing
to its extraordinary action upon the
body. A distinguished chemist. Prof.
Guthrie, while distilling over nitrite of
amyl from smylio alcohol, observed
that the vapor, when inhaled, quick
ened his circulation, and made him feel
as if he bad been running. There was
flushing of his face, rapid action of his
heart, and breathlessness. In IKGl-fii,
I made a careful and prolonged study
of the action of this singular body, and
discovered that it produced its effect
by causing an extreme relaxation, first
of the blood vessels, and afterward of
the muscular fibers of the body. To
such an extent did this agent thns re
lax, I found it would even overcome
the tetanio spasm produced by strych
nia ; and having thus discovered its
action, I ventured to propose its use
for removing the spasm in some of the
extremest spasmodic diseases. The
results have more than realized my ex
pectations. Under the influence of this
agent, one of the most agonizing of
known hnman maladies, called angina
pectoris, has been brought under such
control that the paroxysms have been
regularly prevented, and in one in
stance, at least, altogether removed.
Even tetanus, or lock-jaw, has been
subdued by it, and in two instances, of
an extreme kind, so effectively as to
warrant the credit of what may be
truly called a cure.
r I
bnTBESSIXO LXCRBTION-S OF TUB
Sew. Experiments have been tried by
Soooleff as to the effect of suppressing
the excretions of the skin, by shaving
rabbits and painting the skin over with
some material impervious to the pas
sage of vapor. It was found that this
always, sooner or later, produced fatal
results, the animals a few hours before
death exhibiting intermittent cramps
and convulsions, while the temperature
in the rectum fell to a considerable ex
tent Even wrapping the animals in
cotton failed to produce any material
increase of the temperature of the in
testines or. to delay death. The inhala
tion of oxygen was equally powerless in
preserving life. Ulcers, arising from
deep-seated eitravatious, were found
in the stomach. Albumen made its
appearance in the urine shortly after
the animal had been varnished. What
ever the substance used for coating the
animal, whether simply a gelatin, gum.
or regular varnish, inflammation of the
kidneys was the result sometimes ac
companied by enlargement of the cell
elements, and sometimes by their fatty
degeneration.
Animal Electricity. George M.
Mobray, the manufacturer who fur
nishes all the nitro-glycerine at Hoosae
tunnel, has recently published a pam
phlet on "Tri-nitro-glycerine at the
Hoosae Tunnel, in which appears the
following statement which will be
found of eqnal interest to both engin
eers and physiologists. After defend
ing his pet explosive from unjust
charges, as to its dangerous qualities.
be cautions the workman as follows :
"The blaster, not aware that he is a
walking charge of electricity, proceeds
to his work, inserting cartridge after
cartridge of nitro-glycerine, until he
comes to the last, which is armed with
the electric fuse. The moment his hand
touches one of the electric wires, the
current passes through the priming and
follows. Let a blaster, before he han
dles these wires, invariably grasp. some
metal in moistened contact with the
earth, or place both his hands against
the moist walls of the tunnel."
A Bostok man is said to have in
vented a plan by which horse-cars may
be started with much less power than
now employed. Over each wheel is a
box containing three rollers, upon
which a projection from the body of
the car touches and rolls either way
about six inches. Thus the body of
the car obtains a momentum which
starts the trucks of itself. When the
car is on level ground, with the brakes
up, it is in position to start ; when go
ing down hill the nso of the rollers is
not needed, and when going up the hill
the rollers run back to a proper posi
tion. The South PoBton street railway
has made arrangements to have the
contrivance placed on the cars of its
road.
For Drawing os Glass. Melt to
gether equal quantities of asphaltura
and yellow wax ; add lamp black, and
pour the the mixture into moulds for
crayons. The glass should be well
wiped with leather, and in drawing be
careful not to soil the glass with the
fingers. In trimming these crayons, if
the edge be bevelled, like scissors, the
point may easily be rendered very fine.
Bbombtdric Acid. It is stated that
much simpler way of making this
acid than that now employed, and
which besides ensures a more copious
supply, consists in passing a current of
sulphydric acid into a small flask con
taining bromine. Bromide of snlphnr
is formed and bromhydric acid disen
gaged.
Oe all metals known, silver is the
best electrical conductor.
Lifo is a malady in whicb sleep
soothes us every sixteen hours ; it is a
palliation ; death is the remedy.
- MITOTIC
Savdto tsx Coftkb Gbooxds. As
commonly made, the infusion of coffee
which we drink contains not more than
twenty per cent, of the substance which
compose the berry. Of the remaining
eighty parts which we throw away as
"grounds," about thirty-four are woody
matter without nutritive value. Th ?
rest or forty-six parts ont of the
hundred, contain in large proportions
nitrogenous matters, fats and mineral
salts, demonstrably useful for the
nourishment of nerves, muscles, and
bones. In other words, by onr mode
of making coffee, we lose more than
half its available and valuable con
stituents. Considering the tons of
coffee imported every year, this whole
sale wastefulness becomes a matter of
considerable magnitude, this, of course.
only on condition that the rejected
matter can be used with pleasure and
profit Thst it can be so nsed is shown
by the practice of the Turks, who make
eonee as we do chocolate. The ootfee.
finely powdered, is drunk with the in
fusion. In this way all the stimulating
qualities of the infusion are secured.
with the full aroma and all the nutri
tious elements of the berry. It is, per
haps, needless to add that, for use in
this way, the coffee must be reduced to
an impalpable powder, lo those unac
customed to use Oriental cofloe, the
limpid infusion may seem to be pre
ferred. As a stimulating drink, it is
undoubtedly preferable, but the good
qualities of coffee are not exhausted
with the infusion ; and, as a matter of
economy, it may be worth while to
sacrifice limpidity for nutrition. Be
sides, as one becomes accustomed to
thick chocolate, and learns to like it
more than the clear infusion of the
cocoa bean, so, it is claimed, the taste
for cafe a C Orientate may be acquired,
with a corresponding improvement in
the beverage.
Fish Chowdkr. Place a large iron
pot on top of the stove. Then cut Ave
or six shoes of fat salt pork and put
them into the kettle, allowing the fat
gently to fry out Then cut your fish
in thick slices across it Have your
onins (abont six large ones) peeled and
cut into slices ready ; also about the
same number of potatoes. Then place
a layer of potatoes, next one ef fish,
next of onions in tha kettle, adding a
little pepper and salt to each layer, lie
very sparing of the salt as the pork
usually makes it nearly salt enough for
most tastes. Lastly, 'add just water
enongh to half fill the kettle. Let the
wbolo boil half an hour then add a
little milk and butter, slightly thickened
with flour. While the chowder is cook
ing, skim it at first About three min
utes before you remove the chowder
from the fire, split a dozen genuine
hard crackers in halves and place them
in the chowder. Serve in a tureen.
ToornAcirB. For the benefit of those
who may need a little consolation, we
publish the following :
"If any reader suffers from tooth
ache, or neuralgia affections, arising
from teeth in any state of decay, they
may experience relief, instantaneous
and permanent by saturating a small
bit of clean cotton or wool with a strong
solution of ammonia, and applying it
immediately to the affected tooth. The
pleasing contrast instantaneously pro
duces, in some cases, a fat of langhter.
although a moment before extreme
suffering and anguish prevailed. I have
nsed the remedy for over ono year, and
have obtained sufficient proof to
warrant publication."
THE I'RlMERVATIOX OF SMOKED MEAT.
Professor Nessler says that the keep
ing qualities of smoked meat do not
depend upon the amonnt of smoking,
but upon the uniform and proper dry
ing of the meat It is of considerab'e
advantage also to roll the meat on its
removal from the salt before smoking,
in sawdust or bran. By this taeans
the crust formed in smoking will not
be so thick ; and if moisture condenses
npon the meat it remains in the bran.
the brown coloring matter of the smoke
not penetrating. The best place to keep
the meat is in a smoke house in which
it remains dry, without drying ont en
tirely as it does when hnngin a chimney.
Apple rrs Pare and quarter enongh
tart apples to lay loosely in the pre
pared paste : the quarters should not
touch one another. Fill the paste two
thirds full of thin, sweet cream, then
sprinkle over one spoonful of flonr ;
butter as large as a walnut cut in bits.
Sugar (if a common pie-tin is used)
two-thirds teacnpfuL Grate a nutmeg
over the whole, as no flavoring gives
the peculiarly excellent taste. Bake
slow ; if a brown crust forms over the
top before the apples cook, stir it under
with a knife. If it is not pronounced
splendid the fault will be with the ap
ples or not following the directions.
Since golden hair is so much in favor,
it is well for mothers to know that tuey
can preserve the golden color of their
children's locks by a persistent and
careful washing with castile soap and
water. The hair should be braided and
dipped repeatedly into the suds, and
then wiped with a towel, and this opera
tion should be performed once in four
or five days. If persevered in, the
roots of the hair may darken, as the
child grows older, but the mass will
keep its sunny tints as long as the
owner wishes.
How to Cook Cobsed Beef. The
IimUm Journal of Chemittry says :
Don't 'boil it for corned beef should
never be boiled. It should only simmer,
being placed on a part of the range or
stove where this process may go on
uninterruptedly from four to six honrs.
according to the size of the piece. If
it is to be served, let the meat remain
in the liquor nntil cold. Tough meat
can be made tender by letting it remain
in the liquor nntil the next day, and
then bring it to the boiling point just
before serving.
A Good asp Inexpensive Sorr.
The following is a good soup for the
family dinner-table, aud one which
does not cost much : Three pounds of
the neck of beef, one cowbeel, a penny
wortn oi carrots and turnips, hall a
head of celery, one bunch of tied np
sweet herbs, four onions browned, one
pint of peas, all together in three
quarts of water, and after boiling some
hours, well strained. The best part of
the cowbeel may be cut in sqnare
pieces and served np in the soup.
Wild Drcsa. After they are cleaned
and ready for c.ioking. wrap them in a
clean cloth and bury twelve hours in
the earth to remove the strong flavor of
this bird. They are usually cooked
without s tn fling. Throe-quarters of au
hour will be sufficient to cook them.
When you dish them draw a sharp
knife three times through the breast,
and ponr over a gravy of a little hot
bntter, the juice of a lemon, a sprink
ling of Cayenne pepper. This is poured
over as they go on to the table.
To make glue for resisting fire pro
ceed as follows : Mix a handful of
quicklime in four ounces of linseed oil.
boil to a good thickness, then spread
on plates in the shade, and it will be
come exceedingly hard, but may be
easily dissolved over the fire, and nsed
as ordinary glue. It resists lire after
having been used for glueing substances
together.
Feeding canaries on Cayenne pepper
and hard-boiled eggs, in the proportion
of a teaspoonfu! of pepper to one egg
a diet which the birds seem thoroughly
to enjoy is said to increase grettly
the brilliancy of their plumage.
Bitter will remove tar spots. Soap
and water will afterward take ont the
grease stain.
motors.
A IMraaant tliaage.
A preftr little ftri I know. . .
a " rftT m call be :
I Imv the nttlr darting so.
And sne u fond of tue.
Ifnl nae thing ir.il-- me dly
Her name', unpleasant
Jjne" d--u t m-aiid o hadij
But I cant lanr "June.'
I tn'd her my dinliTcin atnuure
hue laiwlM-d a Ut?le laoftrh.
And said AtleM often Wlnued to eitaoffe
Tbe both onVudlu naif.
Beeolt : ' -ue nniter i-auiy
A a-oirten rtrrlet owns
"Jane" d, leant a, nud ao bvllr
uw we'Te fot nd of Jinea."
A Serenade Spoiled. Max Adder
Over at New Hope, a Mr. DunkeL who
had just returned from Europe, brought
with him a "narmonicon. it is an
instrument constructed a good deal
like a hand organ, but it is larger and
abont ten times more powerful. When
it is turned on suddenly in a quiet place
it affects the nerves of unsuspecting
people very mnch as if a cannon were
tired close to their ears. A lot of young
fellows who had never heard it played
got Dnnkel to lend it to tbem one night
for the purpose of serenading Miss
Brown. They put tbe concern in
wagon, and, with the help, an urbane
mule, they hauled it around in front of
Brown's house about eleven o'clock at
night Tbere they halted, and the
suave mule went calmly to sleep, while
they made the machine ready for ac
tion. The first tune for which tbe
barrel was set was "Thou 'It never cease
to love." Young Mclutosh took bold
of the handle and gave it a few pre
liminary grinds, in order to fill the
bellows ; and still that mild-mannered
mule slumbered. No one ever knew
what be was dreaming of ; bnt the next
minute Mcintosh gave the crank an
other turn, and a fearful B-flat came
screeching out on the night wind with
the vehemence of a locomotive whistle.
A second later that mule was proceeding
down the street at the rate of forty
knots an hour, with the harmonieon at
his heels ; and, before he could be
checked, he went over the wharf into
the river. Old Brown, meanwhile, bad
his head out of the window calling for
the police, under the impression that
he had heard a blood-curdling cry of
"Murder I and in a few moments the
whoJo population of the village was in
the btreet They fished out the sere
naders, and then they angled for the
mule and the harmonieon, and the
serenade was postpone 1 for that even
ing. Ihe next strains that break upon
the ear of Miss Brown while she is
slnuliering will probably come from an
accordeon. Mules have not enongh
sentimeut for nocturnal music.
English T a tout in one Lesson. At
many of the New York restaurants, a
very heavy "French style" is pnt on ;
the waiters are mostly Fn nchmeu, aud
the bill of fare is often printed in
French. A correspondent writes that.
ventnring out early one morning in
New xork, be dropped into the first
restanrant ho came to, which happened
to ne oue ol Uie kind spoKoo of hIhivo.
L-arciessly giving an order, the
waiter, bringing his shoulders up nnder
uin ears, renponaea :
"Jeni: parle pas Anglais. M'sinnr."
And the hungry man had to point out
nis wants on mo nni r-i tare, witu which
alter considerable delay, he was served.
Just here entered another customer,
a tall, powerful man. evidently fresh
from the western prairies, who, sitting
mmseu m a coair, ordered :
"Beefsteak, fried potatoes, hot bread
n cap o eo-lee.
To him the grinning Frenchman re
peated the same formula :
"Jene parle pas Anglais, M'sienr."
Ihe western man looked at him for
a moment, and then, rising from his
seat like the opening of a big jack-knife
wnn a sun spnng, he slowly ejaculated,
as ne cieucned a wicked Dst :
"Beefsteak fned potatoes hot
prea i enp of coffee and ouick too !
The effect on tbe waiter was magical.
mere never was a man served with
more promptitude with just what he
wanted for breakfast than the hungry
it eafcuruer.
He evidently knew the way of pnt-
iiuk uib .cugusu so tnat there was no
mistaking it
So Natural. An American lately in
ixindon, who was badgered by the
bnglisn on almost every tonic at last.
as he said, determined to go in on the
Mississippi steamboat style, and brag
down everything that came in his way.
His first chance occurred at an exhibi
tion of painting, where a picture of a
suow-Biorm attracted general admit
tiou. "Is not that fine ? ' asked a John
Bull ; "could you show anything as
natural as ma. in America 7 I'uoh I'
auswered the free-born American
"that is no comparison to a snow-storm
picture painted by a cousin of mine, a
lew years since : tnat painting was so
natural, sir, that a mother, who iucaa
uuusij ten ner pane Bleeping in a
cradle near it. on returning to the room.
found her child frozm to death .'"
t torn that time onward, the American
was left alone.
Mb, Maoffftn braced himself against
the boarding house table and tried once
more to cut the steak. The edge of the
knife turned, but the meat showed no
mark. I ben be called the waiter.
'Thomas, haa the cook nsed the axe
much lately to chop kindling-wood on
the cellar steps ?"
"I don t know," said Thomas.
Why, sir?"
"Because." said Mr. Masrnffin. "if it
ain't too dull I'd like to trv it on tin.
steak."
'A merciful man " tenderly re
marked a Ninth street man not long
since, "is merciful to bis beast" and
he called the dog in out of the snow,
gave him his breakfast in a soup plate,
and laid a piece of carpet down behind
the kitchen stove for him to snooze on.
Then the man went down town, and the
neighbors watched his wife shovel snow
paths to the wood shed, cistern, stable.
and front gate, and then do an hour's
work cleaning off the sidewalk.
A Tocno fellow in San Francisco
suddenly snatched a kiss from a lady
friend, and excused his conduct bv
saying that it was a sort of temporary
insanity that now and then came upon
him. When he arose to take his leave,
the pitying damsel said to him: "If
you feel any more such fits coming oo,
you ha 1 lietter come right here, where
your infirmity is known, and we will
take care of you. .
"What is vour name?" asked a
census-taker. "John Corcoran "
Your age?" "Twenty-one." "What
nativity T "Well, that's what bothers
me. I'll tell yon, and maybe yon cau
make it ont My father was Irish, but
is now a natnrabzed American citizon ;
my mother English, aud I was liom on
a Dutch frigate in Turkish waters."
Near Rochester there is an eccentric
old follow who lives alongside of a
graveyant He was asked if it was uot
an unpleasatit locatioi. "No," said
ho ; "1 never j'ined places in all my
life with a set of neighbors that minded
their own basincss so stiddy as they
do." J
"Julius, why didn't you oblong vour
stay at the Springs?" "Kase, "Mr.
Snow, dey charge too mn-jh." "How
so, Julius?" "Why, de landlord
charged dis individual wid stealing de
spoons." "
"What ailment can yon find on an
oak ?" asked the chairman. "A corn,"
was Uio triumphant reply.
A ounce of wit that is bong'ut is
worth a pound that is tangtit
jumlM Hp
' In a recent .number of the Hor-
ticie AL Barulet uwiw"
Solofttecommon jasmine 0?
ZinaV, ..Consople for
PnJP lonV straight
branches. For this purpose the plants
are grown timtj-jj . - h ,
. v... K;n. ormwn in a snei-
:-ki in a nen son.
little access at the sides, but only at
the top. FinchiDg is resorted to. and
durinitne second TefB.T
end of a thread is attached to the top
of the jasmine stem. Thty thread
' . llw attached to the
-TvL !,;., thA iasmine is trained.
and from it is suspended a weight, the
effect of which is to keep .ne
. . .artinal direction. hen
the jasmine stem is about to centime
Le. Iut inehi in diameter, a elota
is wrapped around it to prevent access
.in.i .nd of the sun's rays. Twice
. tu, in th wear the stem is washed
VI aua aw r . - . ,
.itmn nitnr laude citron), wnicn
ia said to give the clear (clairr)
mn mnh esteemed. When the
koa annirnd a leUffth of Some 13
feet it is cut down and perforated by
k. kmi and fitted with a terra
rotta bowl and an amber mouth piece.
The length of the tchibouk stems vanes
nn in flva meters t'S feet to 16
feet about) ; in the latter case as much
as $100 is demanded for tneir purcuaae.
Foisva by Artiflciart Mower.
One branch of the industry in which
children are employed is technically
known as grass work. It consists 1
fiuteninir small flrlass beads or de'
drops" to the artificial grass, and so
simple 11 the work , that mere infants
can help t it. The master of ft ragged
a densely populated district
of London found that when a particular
kind of artificial flower was in fashion
tbe young children neglected to attend
school. He told James Greenwood.
who wrote an article which appeared in
the London "Ttfr graph" some time
ago : "Ion may always suow a (trans
hn.l if ha has been at work any time.
from the appearance of bis hair. You
will find the front part of it that
which is mtt exposed, as the head is
bent over the work to he of a diflereut
color from the rest If the child a hair
is light-colored, the patch iu front, just
where the DartinaT commences, will be
changed to a dull yellow ; if the hair is
naturally dark tbe patch will be rusty,
almost of the color called carroty. If
they work long and hard at the grass
the hair will fall out" The threading
of the beads on blades and leaves of
crass, and the subsequent shaking to
see that all is right dislodge particles
of the arsencical green, which poisons
the air and tells its tale upon the poor
children. Ocrtltner MouJhi.
A Btaby landlinxa Snake.
man aud wmau of Lehigh Couuty
California, weut to the hay-field the
other day, and took their baby along
and placed it in the shade. Some time
after the mother noticed tiie child play
ing with a Mack strap, which the little
one would every now and teen let fall
ont of the wagon ami then crawl ont
after it, seemingly being very bnsy
with the object it had in possession to
amuse itse'f. I pon drawing near, it
was discovered that the child was act
nallv fondlia-r a black snake, at least
fourfeet in length, now wrapped around
vhe little one's body, then again entwin-
ng itself abont its neck and going
through all kinds of frightful move
ments, its red tongue darting ont cf its
moutti with lighting-like rapidity, and
the child all the while stroking it, joy-
fnlly laughing until the tears rolled
down its cheeks. The suake was killed
to the grief of the child.
Kopersiilion nl Ihe TjroIee.
A correspondent writes from the
Tyrol that "had Paul lived in these
lays he would certainly have leen able
to address the inhabitants of this
country the remark made by him to the
Athenians, 'I perceive that in all things
yon are too snperstitious.' Tbe roads
are lined with evidences of the super
stition of the Tyrolese. At one miunte
yon piss a little chapel with a fearfnl
representation within, in wood, of the
erucifix'on : the chapel itself of cement
tbe open front crost-ed with an iron
gateway, rreseutly you see a post
who a nat woooeu plate at the top, on
men is a picture or a pious sentence.
Next is a stone cross, then an iron one,
then another rhapeL Every house has
a picture of a sacred subject, generally
of the saint to whose protection it is
dedicated, or a verse from Scripture,
or a rude rhyme."
No rsE or any longer taking the
irire, repulsive, trripinir. drastic ami
nauseous pills, couiHMed of crude and
bulky ingredients, and put up in cheap
wood or paste-board boxes, when we
an, by a careful application of chemi
cal scieuce, extract all the cathartic
and other medicinal properties from
the most valuable roots and herlis. ami
concentrate them into a minute Gran
ule, scarcely larger than a mustard
seed, that can lie readily s-vallowed by
those of the most sensitive stom.-tclis
anil fastidions tates. Each of Dr.
'ierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets re
presents, in a most concentrated form.
as much cathartic power as isenilmdicd
in any oi the large pills found for sale
in the tlrng stores, t roni their won-
lerful cathartic power, in proportion to
their size, peonle who have not tried
them are apt to suppose that they are
harsh or drastic in effect, but such in
not at all the case, the different active
medicinal principles of which tliev are
comixmed being so harmonized, one by
the others, as to produce a most seatch-
tig and thorough, yet gently and kindly
iIM-r.-itinir c.tthartic. The Pellets nri.
sold by dealers in medicines. 0
e. r.
KaoUefa Rltter Win el
Irani
has never heeo known tn fail in the cure of
weakness, attended with symptoms : indis
position to exertion ; loss of memory ; diifi-
ulty of brealhinc; reneral weakness: hor
ror of disenne ; we .k, nervous trembling ;
dreadful horror of death : niffht sweaia
eoldfeet; weaknnn; dimness of vision ;
languor ; universal lassitude of the musea
lar system : enormous appetite, with dys
peptic symptoms; hot hands; flushing of
the body; dryness of tbe akin ; pallid coun
tenance and eruptions on the faee.purifying
the blood ; pain in the back ; heaviness of
the eyelids; frequent black spots flying be
fore the eyes with temporary suffusion and
lowi of sight; want of attention, eta. Thet-e
ejmpioiu, all irise from a we.-iknesa, and to
remedy that, use E. F. Kiixkkl's Bitter
Wine of Iron. It never fail. Thousands
are now enjoySijr health who have nsed it.
Take on'y E. t. KcskiV.
Beware of counterfeits and bass imita
tions. As Kunkel's Hitter Wine of Iron is
so we!l known all over the country, drag
gist themselves make an imitation and try
lo plm it off on their eiKomers, when they
call it Kunkel's Bitter Wine of Iron.
Kunkel'p Bi'terWineof Iroa is pat np
only in $1 houles, and has a yellow wrap
per nicety f,t on tne oul!,;,e wita the pro
prietor'n photograph on the wraper of each
bottle. Always look for the phototrnph on
the outside, and you will alwayn bo sure to
get the genuine article.
Sol 1 by all liruggiots and dealers every
where. TtFEwnajt Radovan Alivc Head and
all complete, in two honrs. No fee till head
passes. Sent, Pin an-1 rltomach Worms re
moved by Dr. Kcskkl. Sf.a Noam Nisth
Stmt. Advice free. Come, see over l.um
snevimens and be eouvinced. He never
fails.
Qt M K M Klur i x es. We never pntr.
but ANAKKS1S, Ihf rjrtl wmtm, I'h.k
rrmnlif. Ii is cured thousand, after lo
tions, ointments and all maimer of nm
triinis have failed. It is the di-. i.veiy j
of Hk. Siiskek, an eminent western
physician, and has been endorsed by
medical men of all schools. It i ,
simple medicated suppository, arts
an instrument, poultice and medicine
affords instant relief from pain, and ui
pronounced au infallible enre. l'ric.
$1. Sent free by mail on receipt f
price, Anakesis IX pot, 4fi Walker St,
New York. x
a. rAso. Jacob r. aiun
PEARSON & MILLER,
Fruit and Produce
connissioz. merchants
No. li Vine Street,
PHILADELPHIA.
ell
$5 $20:
. STiaaos a Co.
, Fottlaad, Me
Jjj
75.CC0 roolittle Erpbcrry Fasts!
$C per l.OOO.
Address, G. HOPKINS,
mu4t Mitren. Humt
TIN WIRE RINCS.
Heaaf a .
Hatrrtware Dewier sWI ihm
fiCktfr.4UJX; Tin bilam
lOO. 60c 4 Copvrv. Riiu--
pOKfpattrt. Orraiskra frv.
mm - w. . ej. MOKurllJ,
C50.000 DO.KM
From $2.3) per Dozen, and I pnards,
la :ill Style, Sue and Qualttiea.
Through etir immenee ami earlT part-h l.t F.ll
we aiaenaUe.1 kell t wk- I'O.NSI liKKA HLX Kit
LOW IhoeeotaMT nflH'R COM PKTITllKS.
Mm mm entire aew 4t k uf HiNltl anl WII.L11W
WAKK. "lib aa Hail". Tnl rU-kit". Maix, lain.
Cv4r. "" twretber ilk a full M AM.I.,
Hraa- W.ael ami t'laT Hi-. f tn f S-. t uikre
timie. Ac. Sr. fn-m Hi t fi'Ji per Mill.
JM. J. KKIStiK S CO.. i a:t Haim-u-a St N T
H. S. We .ell oar no.. at prwre. that n.4 rr.ait
any ,lramminir tie ril. Onari by auui ll re.
crite pnu-t allrnte. lt.-ital.li.le-U iJU,
THE
g n. m t
RUSSIAN SPECIFIC
CUKKS
RHEUMATISM
AND
MEURALGIA.
Thi craAt rrnvlY. nntil rwmtly, wm tifcn.w fa.
th AnMTf-Mn xaf4 Ufi it kit m it a pn.ni
nMil plitrw twfcr Hit pfjialir. t k nt rlsum, m k
nuanv nth etaiU-tl r-nlH-, ttl if will art wv
ilMtaM lit whH ti hnmaiiity w nltrt. w" b Hum,
KltVs. tlr t-WtataMK- lo Wtfft t.lU tl Will INF tUiKU
rVM KmbI M4T1MH Nci'KUlli. betallv rn.M-:if iit'
thm in lh Mj4m. ttoAtl ljr lHmct Kftuiy
prinripttl Dpt 3rt X. ELKVKNTfl ST., PriiUMLpHu
THE GREAT RUSSIAN SPECIFIC CO.
i n ii
SHOW CASES!
SHOW CASES!
All attTsM, HUW MOtUatwHl Od WaYlltttt, IW
rVrnrrt ! I'W abiimiiw
FOI-HK AND Of KICK rilnNrrt'Klf !t alfiw
'lrtf larimit aviul br-t rta4 rt.arh. . i..i
oouud-liauid tn tbe Cut.
Ifril. 103. lOii ?.r. K1IM. K T K . Ffcii.
IIOKSFJIEN !
OWALUS OF STOdi!
Save Your Horses and Catlle!
CUKE Til EM OF DISEASE AND KKKI'
THEM IN A HEALTH V CONDITION
BY UIVl.SU THEM
M. O. ROBERTS'
ci:leukati:d
THADC
MAUC
HORSE POWDERS.
IS USE OVER
FORTY YEARS!
TDK OXLT roWIXKS COXTAISISO
aesT - . . TTTT, , lift" I '.ire
IN 3 mOPEHTIES
cnaniscD, tiii.bibt jiaeisc Tuna Tits
hkst coxprrrox mkhwixf
IX THE WOULD.
They are ma le of Pure Material enly, me
tablepoonfiil coinr at far as one poun-l of
ordinary eattle powler.
liny one package and after using tbem
7011 will never get ilone praising, tlieut.
tr sale by all storekeepers.
USE
M. B. ROBERTS'
Vegetable Embroca ion
FOR ALL EXTERNAL DISEASE
a it a 1 a o a
MAX OR
FREDERICK SPIECKER,
A.
mm
ia3J
WHotmn DCAtra tn
Leaf Tobacco. Ciaars. PiDt'S
Smoking and Chewing
Tobacco,
OK THK BEST URANUS
miLAUELl'iIIA.
Only A rent for C. S. S0I1J Tap Cii-ai
fcloul.t.
CiK-.tr Siorea eaa be lupptied.
BLANK8
MaTXf FRIXTBD AX THIS OFFlOa.
aV M Bafl V. .
iii;'.iW-;)jifej