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THE OLD GRAVEYARD BT CHAHI.ES WELLINGTON STONE. The nr ii' t. graveyard elope ailown the west: The faithful pi:i ‘s'are keeping w itch and ward. Sloping for .y? 1 e’r .. utle requiem. The summer sim goes and :vnx behind the hills: Its ra'S come streaming over through the pines With light that seems to soften to the sound. The timid white-top veils the ground below; Such as the gray that silvers > ! er the brow Of some beloved mother, young with age. There lie the h rts that gave ue life and name;. Each with bis owu; but all each other’s own: God’s acie makes the town the family. Why have they made them all their beds alike? Eeet to th* east, that stoutly trod the west? Turn they with longing towards the olden home? The pine alone, the loving nurse that crooned Above the early cradle of our race, Can tell that immemorial instinct now. In Christian days the folks forgot the pine; And said they laid their loved ones thus to meet The rising sun on Resurrection Morn. SEASONABLE FARM NOTES. The Poultry- Yard recommends coffee grounds for fowls. The willow, cottonwood and Lom bardy poplar can be grown from cut tings. Cows fed on decorticated cotton cake soon acquire an increase of dry matter and fat. An average 2-year-old steer will eat its own weight of different materials in two weeks. Brewery refuse is valuable for mileb cows only when fresh, as it affects the quality of the milk when sour. Analysis have shown that maize cake is equal to linseed cake in feeding value, and it can be sold much cheaper. The average quantity of milk re quired by the creameries, for one pound of butter, is about twenty-two pounds. By the use of lime and ashes, and by growing cow peas for turuiug under, poor soil can be made to yield good crops. Turnips can be sown at any time from now till the middle of August. Rich soil, well pulverized, is needed for this vegetable. Orchard grass and red clover make excellent companions, and as they grow so well together the former is being sub stituted for timothy by many farmers this year. It is not easy to compare corn meal and cotton seed meal as food for stock. The latter contains five times as much albumenoids and six times as much fat as the former, but corn contains four times as mmch starch as cotton seed meal. Carbolic acid is very useful as a pre ventive of insect ravages. Radishes may be protected from maggots, and or chards from borers, by its use A mix ture of one part of alcohol and nine parts of crystallized carbolic acid is stated to afford great relief in cases of bites from insects. The quantity of saliva secreted by animals is surprising. Experiments by Lassainge show that 100 pounds of dry hay fed to a horse required a secretion of 400 pounds of saliva; 100 pounds of oats required a secretion of 115 pounds cf saliva, while 100 pounds of green food required but 49 pounds of saliva to prepare it for swallowing. Mustard is one of the most valuable plants for plowing under. It grows as quick as any other crop, and if sown thickly will alford an excellent green manure in time for wheat. It has the advantage of being able to grow as early as peas and as late as the arrival of frost. To renovate with mustard, not only one but successive crops can be turned un der the same season. W. A. Armstrong, of Elmira, N. Y., thus speaks of using ashes on a heavy soil: “ I have applied ashes to com with a great deal of care, time and a gain. I know how the -work was done, because I did it with my own hands. My soil is largely clay and I never saw any im provement or advantage derived from the use of ashes on com. I have used ashes with material advantage on potatoes.” A Missouri farmer writes: As soon as I find an animal in distress from bloat, from eating wet grass or clover, I wet it along the back with cold well-wa ter, and also place a large cloth or blan ■ ket ot several thicknesses over the paunch, after being saturated with all the cold water that it will absorb, and over that a dry blanket. If the cold wa ter is properly applied, one will not have long to wait for a cure. Ducks may be bred in a small pen, where there is merely a tank of water four feet by two, and two feet deep. Many of the eggs, however, will be un fertile. For success on a large scale, a good-sized pool of water is essential. The birds should have the run of afield. Care should be taken not to overfeed breeding ducks and if early eggs be re quired meat diet must be given and warm quarters at night. Grass cut a week after it is out of blossom, will produce hay that contains about forty pounds m a hundred availa ble for food; the fatty matter will be pale, making light colored butter. It will take a cow six hours to digest a meal of such hay. Early cut hay, on the other hand, will contain about fifty-five pounds of food material in every one hundred, which will be in better pro portion and better color, and will re quire but four hours for digestion. Newly -slaked lime is an excellent thing for composting with muck. The vegetable matter of the muck is decom posed by the caustic action of the lime, and made soluble, and thereby available as plant-food. There has been a good deal said of late in favor of ground lime stone as a fertilizer. On most soils it is of very little use and in its good effects In the compost heap is not to be com pared with the fresh-burned lime. It Diay be said here that it is a good time o get out a supply of muck during the lummer months, when the beds are dry. Moss on shingle roofs may be removed >y the following method: Take a few ails of slacked lime, according to the ize of the roof, and throw' on the roof Ist before a gentle rain or j ust after a fcower, while the roof is wet, and in a w day s the moss will all loosen and the |nd will blow it clean off the roof, leav ig the shingles clean and white. The loss being of a spongy nature, holds the bisture several days, which manses the lingles to decay, and also causes the •of to leak. The lime also acts as a jeservative to the shingle. I have used (several times with perfect success. Linseed oil meal, when fed moderate ly, may be rated as safe, wholesome and beneficial. The question may arise with some, what is moderate feeding? We would suggest a qua it at a teed, with 1 the other usual feed. To young coll it is especially beneficial. Cotton-seed oil meal is quite a different affair, and has not been found safe food for horses (or pigs) in even email quantities It has a costive effect and is not so digestible as linseed meal. It has been fed to mules in the south, or rather the whole seed has, but then a mule is not a horse and will survive what would kilt several horses. • A market gardener had a very fine cow that was milked week aftei week by hired men. He observed that the amount of butter he carried to market weighed about a pound more on each al ternate week. He watched the men and tried the cow after they had finished milking, but always found that there was no milk left in the teats. He finally asked the Scotch girl who took care of the milk if she could account for the dif ference. “ Why, yes," she says. •‘When Jim milks he says to the old cow, ‘So! my pretty muley, so! ” But when Sam milks he hits her on the hip with the edge of the pail and says, ‘Hist, you old brute!’" —Home and Farm. A brood sow should be a good milker. However good in other respects, if de ficient in this she should hardly be re tained as a breeder. An abundance of i milk for the first eight or ten weeks of r their existence is the best preparation ! young pigs can have to fit them for i profitable growth in after life. It is not always possible to decide with cer tainty whether or not a young sow will prove to be a good milker, but as with cows so with pigs, we may learn from observation and trial to know in some degree, judging from their general ap pearance, what to expect. Many will depend upon the dam and grand-dam in this regard. Milking qualities in swine are as surely transmissable to a progeny as in cattle. A correspondent to the Cultivator and Country Gentleman, writing from Mattituck, N. Y., about underdraining, says: “Do not be afraid of deep drain ing is my advice. The capital you sink will be returned to yon in the course of a very few years in the improved fertil ity of your land, in larger crops, and in the greater ease with which you can cul - tivate the soil. If it is pasture you are draining, you will be surprised at tbe abundance of fresh herbage that will spring up all over the land like magic, and if arable land, at the increase yield of your wheat and com crops. In drain ing, cut your main drain first, into which all the smaller drains are to empty, mak ing arms and laying down one or two pipes for the smaller drains at the re quisite distances as you proceed with the mam drain. Be sure and lay pipes or tiles of a sufficiently large caliber in your principal dram to carry off the water freely. Better go to the exiiense of laying a 5-inch pipe, and have it work well, than to put in a 3-inch pipe and find, when there is a heavy downfall ot rain, that it is too small to do the work.” * The Generous Vallejo. fFTom the Petaluma (Cal.) ArguP.] One of tbe pleasantest incidents of the j golden wedding of Gen. M. G. Vallejo, I which took place some weeks ago at the ! general’s heme in Sonoma, has so far es caped public print. We propose to give it as it was related to us by Gou. Mur ray Whalion, of Sonoma, who was in our city on Tuesday last. It appears i that in response to numerous very com plimentary speeches, Gen. Vallejo re plied at some length, giving many in stances of relief that he had furnished the pioneers of the early day prior to the discovery of gold, when the raising of stock was the only business of profit to the people who found themselves away off in the wilds of this western slope. A man with his family had reached here and found himself in almost destitute circumstances, and hearing of Gen. Val lejo and learning that application to the general for succor meant immediate re lief, presented his claim. He was imme diately furnished with fresh horses and some stock, and he then asked the gen eral if out of his great possessions he would not give birr; a small tract of land whereon he could make himself a home, raise his family, and in time enlarge his herd of cattle. The general being pre possessed in the man’s favor, told him he would consider the matter, and asked: ‘•Well, how much land do you want?” The emigrant replied that his desires were modest; that he only wanted a small home, and would be perfectly sat isfied with a league of land. The gen eral immediately replied: “ Why, I will give you five leagues.” “ No,”said the emigrant, “that is more than I want: with one league I can manage to sup port my family.” “Well, then,” said the general, by way of a compromise, “take three leagues.” “No,” persisted the emigrant, “I want but one league; that will be quite sufficient.” The gen eral then raised his straight figure to its full height, and, throwing an air of authority in his voice, made reply: “Sir, you must take two leagues or"I wall put you in the calaboose.” The deed was made and the emigrant en tered upon landed estate, and thus avoided the general’s prison bars. The man to whom the land was given is still Jiving in this state. The general, when telling the story, shook with laughter and good humor, evidently enjoying the recollection of his generosity in the days when lie was the nabob of the land. And we doubt not, that even though he him self is almost landless, he prefers the re collections of his many open-hearted charities anp enjoys them more heartily than were he the possessor of millions and compelled to look back on the wrecks of happiness and the sum of hu man misery “that to their summits lead.” Truly, the general is one among a million—a gentleman of the olden time. A little five-year-old boy was being instructed in morals by his grandmoth er. The old lady told him that all such terms as “by golly,” “by jingo,” “by thunder,” etc., were only oaths, and but little better than other profanities. “ Well, then, grandmother,” said the little hopeful, “is ‘ by telegraph,’ which I see in the papers, swearing ? ” “No,” said the old lady, “ that’s only lying.”— Rome Sentinel, AN OPEN LETTER. Some Outspoken Statements of Great Value From Parties of the Highest Standing. When the people; of America become so thor oughly aroused, and on a subject of such serious importance as the preservation of their lives and health, it is but natural that the ones who have been largely instrumental in the origin of this movement should hi -cal; I rankly and directly to the people most inter, sied. It is for this reason that \v. thus come before the public and make the following revelations: Every careful observer wbo has sought to keep pace with the march of events has noted the alarming increase of certain peculiar physi cal troubles within the past few years. These troubles have come at unexpected moments and in a most treacherous way. They have mani fested themselves in innumerable forms, but they have always had the same cause. They have not afflicted the minor parts of the body, but have gone direct to the strongholds of the system, and their work has usually been as prompt as it is fatal. Their treacherous and deceptive nature has often prevented a careful analysis of what causes them, and, as a result, intense suffering and tinal disaster have ensued. The real cause, however, has been a derange ment of the kidneys and all of these troubles art', iu fact, the first symptoms of the terrible Bright’s disease, which has cast its dark shadow over so many homes in the land and is increas ing wonderfully and contiuually. It is now conceded by the ablest physicians iu every land avid by eminent scientists the world over, that this disease is the result of biood poisoning. This poisoning is brought about by wasted and unhealthy kidueys that permit the poi son to remain in the blood, instead of throwing it from the system. But it is equally evident to all who have studied into the effects and have become con versant with the facts, that a disordered state of the kidneys and liver produces most of the commou complaints and pains which afflict the human race, and they can be traced to this source just as certainly as can Bright’s disease. To purify a stream we must go to its source, and to cure a disease we must remove the cause. It being true, therefore, that niue-teuths of all human ailments are caused by diseased kidneys or liver, the only certain way to cure these troubles is by treating the organs which cause them. How intimately the kidneys are asso ciated with the entire system may be under stood from the fact that over 1,000 ounces of blood pass through them every hour. Being more thau 200 gallons, or nearly one ton in the course of twenty-fom hours. This vast mass of living fluid is sent to every part of the body, and if the kidueys are diseased the impurities that are in the biood are not removed, and hence pass through the veins, carry ing disease in someone of its many terrible forms. The horrors which accompany most of the diseases caused by disordered kidueys and liver cannot be described in print, while the dangers sur rounding them are even greater than the agony. And yet a person may be troubled for mouths without knowing the cause of the diseases that have attacked him. Some of the symptoms of the tirst stages, any one of which indicates dis ordered kidneys or liver are these: Pains in the back and around the loins, severe head aches, dizziness, inflamed eyes, a coated tongue and a dry mouth, loss of appetite, chilly sensa tions, indigestion (the stomach never is in order when the kidneys or liver arc deranged), a diyuess of the skin, nervousness, night sweats, muscular debility, despondency, a tired feeling especially at night, puffing or bloating under the eyes, etc. If any of the following things are noticed about the fluids passed from the system, it shows that the kidueys and liver are out of order: A red deposit, a scum upon the surface, an unusual thickness or thinness, a very dark or a very light color, a burning sen sation in passing, an unusual odor, a retention, or a frequent desire to void and inability to do so. The above are a few of the hundreds of symptoms which indicate the beginning of ag gravated cases of kidney or liver difficulties, and they require instant attention. If these symptoms aie not checked at once, they are almost certain to result in someone of the many terrible diseases of the kidneys. But unpleasant as all the symptoms and even these diseases may be, they are as nothing compared to the last stages of the complaints. Tne kid neys waste away by degrees, accompanied by intense pains; the heart becomes uncontrolla ble; the lungs are oppressed; the eyeballs grow glassy, and the entire system is reduced and debilitated. For weeks before death comes the sufferer looks forward to it as a blessed re lief, and anything that can furnish even tem porary help is gladly hailed. Then it is that bloating begins; the face becomes puffy and pallid; the breath can only be caught m gasps, speech is impossible, and muscular action sus pended. The patient finally sinks into a state of unconsciousness to everything except the pains which are racking him, and death comes by certain but slow degrees. There can be but one conclusion which all readers of care and judgment will draw from these facts, which is the necessity of treating the disease in time and by that means which has been proven the best and most efficient. It has been our privilege to treat more cases and effect more cures of this terrible complaint than has ever been known before in the history of the world. The wonderful sale which our remedies have attained is due wholly to the fact that they have cured the ones who have used them. The power and value of any remedy must rest wholly on a basis of worth, and here is just where our Safe Kidney and Liver Cure has found its wonderful power and success. But in this connection comes one im portant fact: It has always been true that articles of merit are subject to imitations. No one seeks to counterfeit the bills of a worthless bank. The productions of a cracked inventor or witless writer are never copied. It is just so with a healing remedy. If it possess no merit it will not be subjected to imitations. If, how ever, it has power and value, imitations will spring up on every side. While it is a tribute to the value of this medicine that it has imita tions, still, in justice to those who are suffer ing, we feel that all should be warned against them. There is but one known remedy that has ever been able to cure serious kidney troubles or control these great organs when once de ranged, and that remedy is Warner’s Safe Kid ney and Liver Cure. There are numerous nostrums on the market claiming to be just as efficient and some which even claim to be the same. The test of merit, however, is in what has been accomplished, and we therefore say unhesitatingly that for all diseases of the kid neys, liver, and urinary organs Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure stands alone, not only in point of excellence, but in the wonderful re sults it has achieved. In order to successfully avoid the purchase of spurious and injurious medicines, observe these facts: Our remedy is put up in dark amber glass bottles, with the Safe (our trade mark) blown in the back. A private proprietary six cent in ternal revenue stamp is affixed to the neck and covers the top of the cork and is of a light brown color. In the middle thereof is a Safe in outline, and on it the picture of a negro grathering herbs. If this stamp is not found on every bottle of the Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, or if there is any evidence that it has been tampered with, and if a Safe is not blown on the back of the bottle, reject the bottle at once, and insist ou having a genuine one. We are led to publish the foregoing in order that the public may know and realize just where we stand. We have always sought to keep our personality from obtruding upon the public, knowing full well that the value of our remedy was the essential thing, but the unex ampled use which has been made of this medi cine, and the volumes of letters we are con stantly receiving demand a personal statement from us. We are justly gratified at the confi dence which has been shown us, and thankful for the myriads of cures our remedy has per formed, and we pledge ourselves for the future as we have endeavored iu the past, to furnish the best and only valuable remedy that can con trol and cure all the many and terrible troubles arising from disorders of these great organs. Sincerely, H. H. Walker & Cos., Rochester, N. Y. More Effective Than Hissing. The Chinese have a peculiar and very forcible way of expressing disapproval at their theaters. The ill-bred hiss or groan is never heard iu Chinese places of amusement. An incident happening rr cently in the Chinese theater on Jackson Staeet illustrates the celestial mode of ; “sitting upon ” an actor. The mom ; hers of Tuck on Tong Society visited ibe j theater and burled cobbles and stones !up u the stage. One of the actors vug j struck on the head by a missile and dan ; geroindv hurt. The cause of their dis pleasure was tb-ir failure to receive the ! free ptests usually bestowed upon them by toe management on first nights. The ; leader of the Tuck ou Tongs was con victed some tone ago of murder, and the members of the society incorporated with the Check On Tongs. The man agers of the theater knew this, but iu is suing tickets to the last named society forgot to include the new members. The owners of the theater were powerless to protect their company from the assault. 8, 8 8. What is It ? It is an article that is having a greater suc cess than any other preparation of a like nature for the time it has been before the people. It has cured, and is still curing to-day, more ob stinate cases of Indigestion and Dyspepsia than any other preparation known. It is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money will be refunded, for the following ainneuts: —Liver and Kidney Complaints, Impurity of Blood, including Pimples and Blotches, or other skin eruptions, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, etc. It is not a bever age nor a violent purgative. Is pleasant to take, safe and sure in its effects, quick in its action, and lasting and permanent in its cures, the component ingredients being highly sooth ing to the system. They derive their virtues chiefly from the rare merits of the old Burdock plant, combined and chemically prepared with other great curative medicines. Our grand mothers and grandfathers used the Burdock root alone, with the greatest success. Burdock Blood Bitters is a compound that is giving such universal satisfaction that the proprietors in struct all druggists to refund money when re lief is not given by its use. Sold by all Druggists. Tub waistband, which has been so long discarded, is again beginning to take the lead, although not worn as originally around the waist, but instead of a sash to mark the edge of a pointed bodice. It is fastened down by large hooks, the eyes being sewn on the side seams of the bodice. ... > - Brightest Intellects Suffer Young men who have led a life of dissipation and excess, reform! Give tone to the stomach, regulate the liver, strengthen the urinary or gans, relieve those dull pains in the limbs, rid yourself of that feeling of nausea, nervous ness, languor, and debility, by using Dr. Guy sott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, then will you experience a genial warmth and awakening life, iu place of that dead feeling of decay and dyspepsia, urinary sediment a id weak kidneys, etc., no longer undermine your constitution. Delay is dangerous. Madame Adelle made an excursion from Oswego iu her balloon, Columbia, ou the Fourth, and had an awful experi ence. The Columbia passed through a snow-storm in mid-air, and afterward descended to Lake Ontario, the aeronaut being dragged through the water over an hour, until nearly exhausted. At the last moment, the tug Morey, Capt. Papa, which had seen the danger and was in chase, came up and rescued the venture some lady and her unmanageable cruiser. A gentleman writes: “I suffered for years from weakness of the urinary and digestive or gans, and was fast approaching consumption and a premature grave. I happened to hear someone say that Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla was good for dizziness and bad blood. I tried it and have been made well. There’s no such word as “flail” iu the mechanical farm literature of the day. “(■olden Medical Discovery” has been used with signal success in consump tion of the lungs, consumptive night-sweats, spitting of blood, shortness of breatb, weak longs, coughs, bronchitis, and kindred affec tions of throat and chest. Sold by druggists. Mrs. Garfield keeps from hei young children all newspaper mention of them selves. She wants them to be like other children. “ Men must work and women weep, So runs the world away 3” But they need not weep so much if they use Dr, Pierce’s ‘‘Favorite Prescription,’ which cures all the painful maladies peculiar to women. Sold by druggists. At Kingston there is an old elm con taining more than two hundred birds’ nests. The huge, drastic, griping, sickening pills are fast being superceded by Dr. Pierce’s “Pur gative Pellets.” Sold by druggists. California has four women lawyers, He Ray Well Be Joyful. Topeka, Kan., May 12, 1881. H. H. Warner & Go.: Sirs:—After 19 years of unmitigated suffer ing from chronic kidney disease I finally found joyful restoration to health iu your Sate Kidney and Liver cure. D, B. Owens. Some traits run in families. Shake speare’s father, being illiterate, made bis mark. So did Shakespeare. —Texas Siftings. Trouble Saved. It is a remarkable fact that Thomas’ Elec tric Oil is as good for internal as external use. For diseases of the lungs and throat, and for rheumatism, neuralgia, crick in the back, wounds, and sores, it is the best known remedy, and much trouble is saved by having it always on band. Dr. Winchell’s Teething Syrup had never failed to give immediate relief when used in cases of Summer Complaint, Cholera-infantum, or pains in the stomach. Mothers, when your little darlings are suffering from these or kin dred causes, do not hesitate to give it a trial. You will surely be pleased with the charming effect. Be sure to buy Dr. Winchell’s Teething Syrup. Sold by all druggists. Only 25 cents per bottle. Valley City, D. TANARUS., June 14,1881. Allen’s Iron Tome Bitters have sold well dur ing the two years that I have handled them, and I have ye* to hear of an instance where they did not give perfect satisfaction. I can conscientiously recommend them to be worth fully what is claimed for them. H. G. Honrn, Druggist. For Headache, Constipation, Liver Com plaint, and all bilious derangements of the blood, there is no remedy as sure and safe as Eilert’s Daylight Liver Pills. They stand un rivalled in removing bile, toning the stomach and giving healthy action to the liver Sold by all druggists- We wish to call your attention to the Army and Navy Liniment. If vou are troubled with Rheumatism, Neuralgia or Diphtheria it will cure you. ft is good for man or beast. See ad vertisement/ Pure Cod-Liver OiPmade from selected livers, on the sea-shore, by Caswell, Hazard & Cos., New York, It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Chapped bauds, face, pimples and rough skin cured hv using Juniper Tar Soap made by Cas ' well, Hazard A Go./New York Decline of Jinn. Nervous Weakness, Dyspepsia. Impotence, Sexual Debility, cured by “Well’s Health ft - newer.” sl. Druggists. Send for pamphlet to E. S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J. One trial will convinc- yon that if is Ihe best. Ask your dialer fur the Fn.zor Axh Gr> ase, and take no other. Every b-.;x has cur trade mark. Over 20!),' op Howe Scales have been sold, and the demand increasing continually, Bor den, Selleck & Cos., Agents, Chicago. 111. For Rheumatism, Sprains and Bruises, use Uncle Sam’s Nerve aud Bone Liniment, sold bv all druggists. Try the new brand Spring Tobacco. PERRY DAVIS’ Pom-Elk A SAFE AND SURt SSTjjS REMEDY FOR pgi Rheumatism, JJi Neuralgia, I;! Toothache | Headache. SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DFALERS O^^EBRATED^^ f&Sfc _ STO3IACH &ITTEfl S It is the concurrent testimony of the public aud the medical profession, that Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is a medicine which achieves results speedily felt, thorough and benign. Beside rectifying liver disorder, it invigorates the feeble, conquers kidney and bladder complaint-, and hastens the convales cence of those recovering from enfeebling diseases. Moreover it is the grand specific for fever and ague. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. AGENTS! AEXTSI AGEXTS! GEN. DODGES’ bran’ new (took, just published, entitled THIRTY-TIIR£,S YEARS AMONG OUR WHO INDIANS is the grandest chance ever offered to you. - Introduction by GEN. SHERMAN. This Sujicrbly Illustrated, First class ana Thrilling work outsells all others 10 to 1, and is the fastest selling hook ever published. Agents average 10 to 30 orders a day. Cyßoth thousand inpress. It sella like wild-fire. First class AGENTS WANTED. Exclusive Territory and Extra Terms given. Send for Special Circulars to A. G. NETTLETON A CO., Chicago, 111. IpEHH GOOD NEWS Get up Clubs for our CELE SKATED TEAS, and secure a beautiful mjgS "Moss 2cse or Gold Band Tea Set,” .• t'Jjg 44 pieces,) our own importation. One of these beautiful Tea Sets given awa> to tne party auuutug h Club for $25.00. Beware of the so-called “ CHEAP TEAS ” that are being advertised—they are dangurou* and detrimental to health—slow poison. Deal only with reliable Houses and with first hands if possible. No humbug. The Great American Tea Cos., Importers, F. O. Box 289. 31 * 33 VESEY ST., New York. P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE ICTOHIAL history™world Embracing full and authentic accounts of every nation of ancient and modern times, and including a history of the rise and fall of the Greek and Roman Empires, the middle ages, the crusades, the feudal system, the refor mation, the discovery and settlement of the New World, etc., etc. It contains 67 ? Scs historical engravings, and is the most complete History of the World ever published Send for specimen pages and extra terms to Alrents. Address, National Publishing Cos.. Chicago, 111. TP® |Ss in abundance.—Bs Million pounds SL % imported last year.—Prices lower P ' 4JI ay* than ever.—Agents wanted.—Don't lerr 39 waste time.—Send for circular. 10 lbs. Good Slack or mixed, for sl. 10 lbs. Fisie Black or mixed, .tor §•>. 10 lbs Claoice Black or Mixed, for $3. Send for pound sample, 17 cN. extra fer postage. Thee get up a club. Choicest Tea in the world Largest variety.— Pleas.s everybody.—Oldest Tea House In America. —No chronic. —No Humbug.— Straight business.—Value for money. BOB’T WELLS,43 Vesey St.,K. 1.,P.0.80x I‘2S7. TBIITU ISHIGIin. Prof. MARTINEZ, | ItU In the Great Spanish Seer, Astrologer f ' and Psychologist, will, for 30 cents, with age, height, , Ul *7 color of eyes and lock of hair, send a CORRECT PIC -I TURK of your future husband or wife, with name, time, and place of meeting, and date of marriage, psycholog ically predicted. Money returned to all not satisfied. '•JHwzJKfX Address Prof. L. Martinez. lOMont’y Pl.,Boston, Mass. tHKOR.-- W ANTED—A well-qualified Agent, lady or gentle man, to represent our Company in this town and surrounding country. Business permanent and extraor dinary compensation insured. Inclose starrm for terms. Magneton Appliance Cos., 218 State St., Chicago, 111. STOCK-OWNERS! Horses, wine or Poultry and largely increase yield of Milk and Butter or flesh and fat. Send for my book. Free. F. A. MILLER, 346 Dillwyn Street, Philadelphia, Pa. fOi tm ■ ■ im | |" ( Traction it Port able') fot K- |U g_ I |\| 1— Farm, Saw Mill A Plan ks I w " ■■■Vw tat ion For prices, etc. writ* THE AULTMAN t TAYLOR CO. Mansfield, a YflllWr MFN you want to learn Telegranhy in I UliraU IIILW a few months, and be certain of a situation, address Valentine Bros.. Janesville. Wis A MON I H —AGENTS WANTED—3O bes m selling articles in the world; 1 sample free ttAddress Jay Rrouson. Detroit, Mich CoUb-ljk per dayat home. Samples worth Sa tree address Stinson A Cos.. Portland. Maine npfMM Sissrzrsz. eating IS r I IJ If ispeedveure SENT FREE. Dr. J.C. * W IToffmanPOßovlXS rbiemm 111 TITVrriTATTCINEW AND SECOND HAND, r* M IT I IM r.N Address HARRIS IRON XJJiV VI Ail JUVJ WORKS, Titusville, Pa. fllllllKS Morphine Habit fared In 10 Ir llllW t<* 20 daytt. Vopar III! fTiml. IwIVI Dh. J. Stephens, Lebanon, Ohio. a week m ycur own town. Terms and $5 out nr jIOO frew Address H. Hallktt A Cos. Portland. Mr BUS. LVDII F. .■'HKHf.K, OF im, MISS,, j ai _/y. y l v, .*' '■ • p <?->• ,\A OC | 4 i £ **l* }ff ® ; I;' y "■ /• / ft S X 0, .. sSiLf■*%**' 4 ** £ ~ '•' c s \d::? f If . * LYDIA E. PINKHAM’B VSC-ETABLS COMPOUND. ■■—— Ib a Positive Cnrg for nil Uio Pnlnful Ccuplaintti bih< Tenknesuci eoeommon to our kt female popalotbo'. It Will cure entirely the worst form of Female Com plaints, all ovarian troubles, Irfuimniatlon and ra tion, Falling and Displacements, and the conseqrem Spinal Weakness, and ir particularly adapted to the- Change of Life. It wIL lissome er rof! tumors from the uterus In rti early stage of development. The tendency to can i ;rous humors there is checked very speedily by its ■■. It removes faintness, flatulency, destrcjaall cravln for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration. General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indl gestfon. That feeling of hearing down, musing >\ln, weight and backache. Is always pennone-Hy cured by its use. It will at all times and undoi ’ clrctunstances act In harmony with the laws that govern tL c female sysri re For the euro of Kidney Complaints cither sex ihh; Compound is unsurpassed. LYDLV E. PISE jAM’B TIM ETABLE COM POUND is prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price $L Six bottles for $5. Sent by mail in tho in- ” pills, in the form of lozenges, on receipt e . price, $1 pci -os foreithe- Mrs. i’inkhjun freely answers ull letters of inquiry. Send for pamph let. Addresi os abov . Mention this Paper, No fatnliy should About LYDIA 13. P-NKuASPB Li VSR FILLS. - ~ or.re const! nation, hllionanww *ud tomidity o ihe _lvrr. 25 certs per box. X*Spjr all PkijbiMb. ‘&k S2S^REWARD We wilt pay the shove reward for :;ny case of Rheu matism or Neuralgia we cannot cure. It will relieve any case of Diphtheria or Group instantly. The Army and Navy Liniment will relieve pain and soreness and re move any unnatural growth of bone or mi sole on mac or beast. Price one dollar per bottle. Will refund the money for any future. ARMY AND NAVY LINI- M ENT CO., 51 Wabash Avenue, Chicago. J. M. AIyLCOTT & t 0., Agent, Milwau kee, Wls., and by all druggists. H. BOSWORTR 8, Wholesale Agents, MILWAUKEE, WIN. SEff eich mm Parsons’ Purgative Pills make New Rich Blood, and will completely change the blood in the entire system in three months. Any person who will take one pill each night from one to twelve weeks may be restored to sound health, if such a thing be possible Sold everywhere or sent by mail for 8 letter stamps. 1. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Muss, formerly Bangor. Me. “JUST LET ME SHOW YOU” " “"I DR. FOOTE’S AJk*p HAND-BOOK OF HEALTH HINTS AND READY RECIPES. Worth 523. Cost 25c. By the author of “Plain Hove Talk” and “ Medical 1 DU PAGES of Advice about Daily K|§f -VffcrT X—O Habits, and Rec pes for Cu~e of Kpfeilr®’ Common Aliments; a va.liable Book g Reference for ever}’ family. Only *>s The Hand-book contains chapters on Hy- P giene for all seasons. Common -ense on 1 Common Ills. Hyuienic Curative Measure* Knacks Worth Km wing. Hints on Bathing A on Nursing the Sick, on Emergencies, to gether witu some of the Private Formulas gKs||pr* of Dr. Fooiz. and other physicians of high repute,and for preparing food for Invalids. 4#*AGENTS WANTED. Murray Hill Book Publishing Cos., |% —. ] 125 East 2>th Street, Niw York Citw Knapp Ext. of Roots For Making Root Beer. A delicious summer drink Druggists, Root Bee r Makers and Families will hnd this Extract the best and cheapest in the market. Put in bottles at 25c., s‘Jc. , SI.OO, $2.50 and half and gall, cans at $4 and $8 each , which make respectively 10, 25, 60, 200. 400 and 800 gals . of beer. Sold by druggists. Depot, 362 Hudson Street , N. Y. Morrison, Plummer & Cos., Agents, Chicago. MAKE HENS LIL An English Veterinary Surgeon and Chemist, ncnc traveling in this country, says that most of the Hoiss and Cattle Powders sold here are worthless trash. He says that Sheridan’s Condition Powders are absolute ly curs and immensely valuable. Nothing on earth will make hens lay like Sheridan's Condi ..in pow ders. Dose, one teaspoonful to oae pint of food. Bold everywhere, or sent ov mail for 8 letter stamps. I. 8. JOHNSON k CO., Boston,Mass., fonpariy Bangor,M% MAPI FwnflO' l ■ : : the Prospectus of ■*•* I L,k>il JUUPittsfield. Mass (Jj7o A WEEK. sl2 a day at home easny made. Costly •P I mJ Outfit free. Address True Jt Cos., Augusta. Maine M. N. U., No. vJ9. WHEN WRITING to ADVFK TINJERS please say you sau iha Advertisemeut In this paper*