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Questions used for examination oi applicants for the position of assist ant in the district schools. Held on the last Wednesday in August and. besides this, usually in October, De cember and March. arithmetic. 1. Reduce 3 K. 20.4 square rods to the decimal of an acre. 2. What is the value of .732 a of a mile. o. If 4-5 of the purchase price equals the selling price, what is the Joss per cent. 4. A sold two building lots for 8420 each—for one he received 2a per cent, mote, and for the other 2o per cent, less than its value. Did he gain oi lose, and how much. . r >. llow many square feet of boards will it take to enclose a piece of land 80 feet 10 inches long and 60 feet 8 inches wide, with a close fence of » feet 6 inches high. geography. 1. In what direction do the fixer Stars seem to move, and why. 2. is the temperature at the hotfoir of the sea higher or lower than at it:- surface. Why? 3. By what polilieal and natura divisions is Michigan bounded. 4. (a) What is the area of Bonn sylvania. (b) What is tho smallest S.ati in Europe. (c) Name the highest mountain o Europe. (d) Name some of the articles o commerce from Aden. 0. Draw an outline map of the Stat< of New York on a separate piece o: paper, showing the position of New Yoik, Albany, Oswego and the Hud son river. HISTORY AXD GRAMMAR OF THE ENG ■w lisii language. have no plural. Name tfiree that have no singular. 2. Write down the possessive pint’** al ol grief, wharf, handkerchief, life, roof. What is the singular ol beeves, kine, phenomena, formula', cherubim. .3. Decline who, which, whosoever, this. stratum. 4. Write down the second person singular of all the moods and tenses ° 9 of the copula. fj. How many parts of speech can well and calm be. Make a sentence illustrating each use. 6. Explain the terms logical ane ramraatical predicate. 7. Is it correct to say “He is gone. Why ? 5. Correct the following sentences I would like to know why tkataint ir the back of the book. Blease, can I speak ‘r I'm a coining. You hadn’t ought to be so liberal. I intended to have shown you how it could bo done easier. ft. Define? relative, pronoun. 10. Analyze: It will take a much wiser head than mine to say what the Queen ol England's secret is and where it lies buried. Diagram and explain. METHOD OF TllK OBJECT-LESSON. The object should be exhibited fot the inspection of the class, and the qualities important to be noticed should be observed the appropriate senses. 11 the quality you desire to speak of is one cognizable by touch alone, have your pupils touch the object, do not have them say an object is hard unless they have touched it. When any quality is verified, the term by which it is known is to be noted by the class, if they know it, otherwise by the teacher. It should bo carefully pronounced by one or two pupils, then by all, that may become familiar with its sound; then it should be spelt and written on the board, or if it be a strange word written on the board and spelt afterwards, so that its form may become familiar. Then the true aspects under which every word should be regarded are taught, the understanding the ear and the eye are exercised respectively on its meaning,its sound and its form; failing any one of these the word can not be properly learned. When the qualities have been disposed of the ■ next part of the lesson is taken, up in the same spirit. When the lesson is ended the black* board should exhibit precisely the track that has been followed. Facility and neatness in boardwriting I I •’ I EIDTJC^TIOI^r^.X-. QUESTIONS PREPARED BY THE ST. LOUIS BOARD OF EDUCA TION, FOR THE EXAMINA TION OF TEACHERS. Send all communioatioiis for this de partment, to W. T.Pcyton.No.'ii 1 VJtlt St. Leuisville, Kv. i are great helps in giving this instate, tiou lu all instruction, let the lesson |be suited to the asre and advancement iof the pupil. Any child six years is a very different being intellectually from a child nine or ten; and can only to a | small extent follow the same lesson* CLEANLINESS. The personal habits of the chil dren should receive the teacher’s attention. In primary schools he will find it constantly necessary to be insist ■ ing on this virtue with special reference j to the pupils skin, hair and general ap pearance. lie should in fact regard i regular washing and combing as essen tial to a pupils retention in school. | Young children should not be kept in i attendance daily, longer than 4A hours, and only 4} hours when the teacher conducts the recitations and general work in the most judicious manner, and the school-house and premises are in the most satisfactory sanitary eUte. OVER-EDUCATION. New York Tribune: A paragraph is traveling through the news papers which attributes to ex-Senafor *(.’ -tine ron a rather singular and we may say startling opinion. The purport ol this is that in the south the young negroes ate “over educated. 1 his the ex-Senator holds, if he is correct - lv reported, “unlit * them lor work.” It I also “develops their vicious qualities.” It “likewise con verts them into slmrp ! ers.' lt this be true, we must be allow ed to say that it is very discouraging. For if the black youth art: in danger ; from over-education, we can not see 1 why the white youth are not in equal ! peril, nor why education at the north ! is not to V judged in the same w ay. The charge is really one against our i whole common school system. It j also happens that it is a very old one. The opponents of popular education took precisely this ground, even in Massachusetts, in trying to prevent the established of high schools. They said that advanced studies would un fit young men for manual labor. They wanted popular education to stop with reading, writing, aritmetic and, may be, grammar. There are not wanting those who are stall o fthe same mind, although they are not many. ’Unfortunately, these fault-fiuders do not tell us just where, in their opin ion, the line should he drawn. We j do not blame them for this, lor they I ooulcl not if dipy tried. Any educa tion, Cven ortue slightest character. w r ouid have the same result which they deprecate; that is, it they are right or reasonable in their predictions. We do not say. --What will you do with the white children?” for that question 1 is settled bv the common sense of the * . north; but we may properly ask. ; “What will you do with the black j children?” Suppose that they are left in the dense ignorance which preceded emancipation? Cut them oil’ from reading and writing; let them have no more knowledge of anything than is absolutely necessary to the tiller of the soil or the lower order of mechan ics; put out the light which has just begun, however feeble, io illuminate their lives! Do this, and what will come next ? Nothing lias been ac complished except, so far as po.-sible. to repeal the emancipation and make the blacks slaves again. We shall go back substantially to freedom. Names, in such matters, are nothing. Onlv there will be this difference. If you stop educating the freed men, you must also stop their voting. The boon of voting without education will be not only absurd, hut dangerous—in fact neither will de a boon at all. Take away the education and the votes, and wo shall at once have #,000,000 slaves again. Can it he, alter all its sanguinary experience, the country still hankers for the old domestic in stitution, the very cornerstone ol which was profound ignorance ? If the negroes are getting an edu cation, ns the ex-Senator says they are, which “develops their vicious qualities,” the sooner we have an ed ucational reform the better. Laborers most ol these sable pupils must necessarily be; and whether they are laborers or not, it would be to -‘convert them into sharpers.” In some parts of the south formerly col ored men were reluctant to labor for reasous not at all connected with their immense literary advancement; and even now these reasons may still ex ist in certain localities. If a negro here and there puts on airs beeause he knows the multiplication table, anti so refuse to work, let him be dealt with as a vagabond aud compelled to work. It is hardly necessary to pull down school-houses beeause they do not make hopelessly lazy pupils smart. Subscribe for the Itfinsw. the member from cat fish. In F.ln<inent Appeal in Hrhal/' O] a Ilian eh Ho Of/* Vanl. Jjy soma oversight of the Public 1 rin tar, the following speech, made at the last session of Congress by a Territorial delegate, was omitted from the Record : “ Mr. Speaker : It will not astonish me to sea the gentlemen on the other side attempt to tilibuster on this ques tion, but let me tell them, sir, that the people who sleep in the glowing gush of the setting sun are gazing with glistening orbs on the fate of this measure. The people of tlie East may look disdainfully from beneath the rims of their zenith soaring plug-hats upon the demands of the West, but the day has come, sir, when the proud denizens of the mount ain passes that gave birth to the swell ing waters of our rushing rivers have come to know their rights, ami they, sir, have sent me here to maintain them. The brave pioneer who, taking Ins hfe in one hand and American civilization in the other, stepped forth upon the prairies to plant them both, lests his arms upon his gun and looks to you for action. The lonely Indian stands by his wigwam and deties with threatening glances the gentlemen on the other side. The voice of maidens comes over the plains, mingling with the grass that in hales the fragrance of their breath, and the prattle of children is caught up by the blizzard and wafted toward you, all joining in the cry of rage and indigna tion which the opponents of this bill have aroused. Would you divide this na tion ? Would you have the swift Missouri a Seine, or would you maka a Danube? Would you have it a Thames, or would you make it a Rhine? Taking its rise i in the thunder-nursing peaks of the ! glistening Rockies, it pours its flood ! through the fertile prairies and planta | tious alike, cementing the grandest quarter-spheres that ever conspired to constitute a hemisphere. Would you change its destiny V Then tell the peo ple of the West that you hoot their ideas' for justice to scorn, and tlie broad bosom of that stream will become the dividing line between your nation and mine, and States wiil crumble before the march of civilization, instigated by the life-giving, freedom-breathing Terri tories whom you are seeking to crush. Already the East has decided that the age passes without the deal. Already the East has proclaimed that straights do not count, and fixed three of ai kind as the next above two pair ! lint be ware ! Alexander of Macedonia fol lowed tlie victory too far, and his defeat at Partheuia gave Troy to tlie world and paved the way for English jurispru dence. Beware! The hordes of tlie Northwest are settling to the collar, and the glint of their rifles is echoed back from the roek-bouud hill that bore them. Refuse this measure, and you inject rum where all is now peace. You blast the prairie flower with hissing breath and build a monument of bones to the short-sighted policy that denies the God fearing frontiersman the rights which the elementary principles of constitu tional government guaranteed him in his birth. We do not ask mvcli, sir. Our demands are small, but in the language of our common scripture, sir, 1 tell the gentlemen of the other side, that until heaven and earth pass hence, .not one jot nor even a tittle of the American eagle shall pass away until you Jrave adopted some measure establishing * branch wood-yard at the mouth of fish creek.” \ TOO HUXUKT TO RE POLITE. ’ Little Grade had been told that it was impolite to take the last biscuit on the table. The other morning, at breakfast, she was observed to gaze long and earn estly at the solitary biscuit on the bread plate. The temptation at last proved too great. Beaching for the coveted morsel she exclaimed, “ O, mamma, I’se almost ’tarved ! I dess I won’t he po lite to-day. I’ll wait till tome day wheu I ain’t too hungry.” —Boston Tran script. The Review is undoubtedly the best advertising medium in the State. Best Book For Everybody. — The new illustrated edition of Webster’s Dictionarv. containing three thousand engravings, is the best Look far ever]/bod)/ that ihe press lias produced in the pres ent century, and should be regarded as indispensable to the well-regulated home reading-room, library, and place of bus ness.—Golden Era. M S. HERBST. Merchant/Tailor,' 1 Gents' Outfitter, Wholesale ami Retail Dealer m CLOTHING Cheapest and best place in the city, has always on hand a fine assortment o BUY IME [IB TIES, 8. GIVE lIIM A CALL BSTKemember the place No. 99 Pearl !st., between Market and Spring. li •Jstratjov; p.v l’ln rni p.— < »nc of ie I'Qjilrufiih between the school boo! | used liv t!x* fathers and mothers ih» land, when young 1 , and those now the children, is the use of pic tured As, a curious instance of illustrat ing J,e meaning ol words bv pictorial the pictures in the new edoW) of W ebster's Unabridged l>iet iontfy in connection with the following tWei** words: Reef, Roller, Castle, Col tiaM. 7 ®» Horse, Moldings, Phrenolo- Ships, Steam Engine, Tim fLjflillustrate and define the? meaning o»>re than l" words and terms, a 3 ma;»iw seen by examining the Dicton aOj ’ fateful Thousands proe.aim VTv. Bitters the most wonderful In* Unit ever sustained th« sinking aP ,Jo Person ran 1 tike these Bitter.-? *. M Jrdiag to directions, and remain long S V, jßjfl, provided their hones are not de j V i by mineral poison or otiier jJIVmd Vital organs wasted beyond Silious. Remittent and Inter -I,‘Went Fevers, which are so preva th,l in tile vallevs of our great rivers I -fjugbout the United States, especially pc of the Mi ssissippi, Ohio, Missouri, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan . Mtfiod, Colorado. Brazos, Ilio Grand;?, 1 Alabama, MoVulo, Savannah, l{o an*te. James, and many others, with th Sr trust tributaries, throughout our etiSre country during the Summer and A'Bhnin, and remarkably so during sea soft of unusual heat and dryness, are iujfiriabiy accompauied by extensive de ralgemeuts of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a pow erful inlluence upon these various or gans, is essentially necessary. Tlieto is no cathartic for the purpose equal to I)a. J. Walker’s Vinegar. Hitters, as they will speedily remove the dark esfored viscid matter with which tbo bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease Kz purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Jitters. No epidemic can take hold 1+ a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigos!ion, riead .vhe. Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, 'lightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste iTt the Mouth, Bilious Attacks. Palpita nt ion of the Heart, Inflammation of tho bungs, Pain in the region of the Kid neys, and a hundred other painful syrup-, turns, arc tjp? ollsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise ment. Scrofula, or King’s Evil, White Swellings. Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent |n 11 animations, Mercurial A flections, Old : .ores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes. etc. n those, as in all other constitutional liis , pses, Walker's Vinegar Bitters havo bown their great curative powers La tho jt''u obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflaiiiniatory and Chronic Dieuiiiatisiii, Gout, Bilious, Kemit ent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of he Blood, laver, Kidnevs and Bladder, these Hitlers have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiatred Blood. Much uni cal Diseases.— Persons en gaged m Paints and Minerals, such as plumbers, Type-setters. Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject U> paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Wai.ickr’js Vin egar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Tet- A*r, S.ih-Kheum, Blotches, Spots, Kill pies. Pustules. Boils, Carbuncles, King-worms, .w aid head, Sore Eves. Erysipelas, Itch, riemfe Dis ‘oloralions of tho Skin. 11 amors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short time by the use <4 those Bitieis. Fin, J ape, and oilier Worms, linking in the system ol oO many thousands, vt effectually destroyed and removed. No stem of medicine, no vermifuges, no an hM minifies will free the system from worms id- these Bitters. For FenuJe Complaints, in young J cr old. married o. single, at thedawu of wo- V or the luvn of life, these Tor.ie j> tiers display so decided an influence that i,',lavement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when- cr ton !ind its impurities bursting through ll in in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; (1 -!itii'C it when you find it obstructed and s| * n the veins; cleanse it when if. is your feelings will tell you when. Keep A'*4>lood pure, and the health of the svsteia ‘ II follow. ' li. H. MCDONALD & CO.. ij.Ujvgist.s ni'i G« v n. A c;ts., San Francisco, California ir jJ cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts.. X, Y. «old by all Drugglils amt Dealer*. - WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED. “ GET THE BEST.” “DO IT NOW.” Unabridged, page 1164, giv ju -the name of each sail, —showing the value of DEFINITIONS BY ILLUSTRATIONS, i he pictures in Webster under the 12 words, Boiler|Castle, Column, Eye, Horae, jpidings, Phrenology, Ravelin, Ships, (~.3e9 1164 and 1219) Steam engine, Tiin define 343 words and terms far better they cot id be defined in words. few Edition of WEBSTER, has ’ 4f»00 NEW WORDS and Meanings, Biographical Dictionary of over 9700 Names. — rf7*EBSTER’S is the Dictionary used TFT* yjf in Govern’t Printing Office. 1881. W ilvery State purchase of Dictionaries*p Ju for Schools has been Webster’s. Jd •Books in the Public Schools of the*wy U. S. are mainly based on Webster. JEf ate of Webster ’s is over 20 times the 43 y| sale of any other series of Diet’s. £9 rSIHIRTY-TWO THOUSAND have been put, rjl JL in the public schools of the U. S. JL * •fNach new edition has become more and ' Hj more. The Standard. Smeeomtneuded by State Supt’s Schools in J™ 36 States, and 50 College Pres’ts Jt%i rjs IT NOT THE STANDARD ? * Published by Q, &C. MERRiAM.Springtield, Mass, , WEBSTER’S DICTOXARY I KEE. By special arrangements with the publishers, we oiler as a premium to any one sending us six yearly subscribers, with the cash, at our regular rates, $2.00 per annum, ($l2 <>o) six copies of the Kkvikw for one year, and Webster’s National Pictorial Dictionary, sent post paid, to their address. The price of’ this Dictionary is $•) 00. For thirteen Sub scribers with $2O 00, we will send the Unabridged, post paid, and thirteen copies of the Rkvii’-v. The Unabridged is the largest book of the kind publish ed. The price of it alone is $l2 00. Teachers, Ministers and Students, now is your chance to furnish your lbira' ry with what you know is indispensable to every reader, for no outlay of cash on your part. An hour or so of recreation will secure to you this priceless boon. You have only to show the Review to families and it will commend itself. Now go to work and let us hear from von. We will send you r< many sample copies, free, as you may wish. Ayer’s Ague Cure, For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fe ver, Chill Fever, Bemittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Periodical or Bilious Fe ver, &c., and indeed all the affections * which arise from malarious, marsh, or miasmatic poisons. No one remedy is louder called for.by the necessities of the American people than a sure and safe cure for tVvor am<l Ague. Such we are now enabled to oiler, with a perfect certainty that It will eradicate the disease, and with assur ance, founded on proof, that no harm can arise from its use in any quantity. That which protects from or prevents this disorder must be of immense service in the communities where it prevails. Prevention i- better than cure; for the patient escapes the risk which he must run in violent attacks of this baleful distemper. This “ CURE ” expels the miasmatic poison of Fever ami Ague from the system, and prevents the develop ment of the disease, if taken on the first approach of its premonitory symptoms. A great superiority of this remedy over any other ever discovered for the speedy and cer tain cure of Intermittents is, that it contains no Quinine or mineral; consequently it pro duces no quinism or other injurious* effect* whatever upon the constitution. Those cured by it are left as-healthy as if the}’ had never had the disease. #>v«*r ami Ague is not alone the poh poqnenoe of the miasmatic poison. A gvetti variety of disorders arise from its irritation, among which are llhcuiua »i»m. <»oiit. Hruilathe. Bliuilnra, Toothache. Karaclie.Cutarrh. Attlt* ilia. Falpitatioa, Painful Affection of the Niil«*en, Hv»ter|c>i, Pain in the Mowolo. Colic, l»»ralyuin, and derange ment of the Stomach, all of which, when originating in this cause, put on the inter mittent type, or become periodical. This “CriiF.” expels the poison from the blood, and consequently cures them all alike. It is an invaluable protection to immigrants and persons travelling or temporarily residing in the malarious districts. If taken occasion ally or dally while exposed to the infection, that will be excreted from the system, and r-annot accumulate in sufficient quantity to ripen into disease. Hence it is even more valuable for protection than cure; aud few will ever suffer from Intermittents if they avail themselves of the protection this rem edy affords. For Liver Complaints, arising from torpid, itv of the Liver, it is an excellent remedy, stimulating the Liver Into healthy activity, and producing many truly remarkable cure*, where other medicines fail. PREPARED nr I)r. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass.f Practical arid Analytical Chemists. AND SOLD ALL ROUND THK WORLD. Before you buy a pair of BOOTS 08 SHOES (.'nine ami -,ee my stock, it will pay you well. Al: lirst cut'--, goods, bought before the advance. KIP BOOTS A SPECIALTY. JOE. 3D. POUTCH, X. E. Cor. Main and State Sts. 3\T©w Albany, luci: Come! it costs you nottung to look. MRS. LIDIA E. PINKHAM. OF LYNN, MASS. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. Th^Posltlv^Cnre For all Female Complaints. This preparation, as Its name signifies, consists of Vegetable Properties that are harmless to the most del icate invalid. Upon one trial the merits of this Com - pound will be recognized, as relief is Immediate . and when Its use Is continued, In ninety-nino cases In a hun. dred, apcruianentcureigeffeotod.asthous&nd* will tes tify. On account of its proven merits, it is to-day re commended and prescribed by the best physicians in the country. It will cure entirely the worst term of falling of tho uterus, Leucorrhcea, Irregular and painful Menstruation, all Ovarian Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Floodings, all Displacements and the con sequent spinal weakness, and Is especially adapted to the Change of Life. It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus la an early stage of development. Tlie tendency to cancerous humors there is checked very speedily by its use. In fact It has proved to be the great est and best remedy that has ever been discover ed. It permeates every portion of the system, and gives new llfeand vigor. It removes folntnesf,flatulency, de stroys all craving for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, General Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indl gestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, Is always permanently cured by its use. It will at all times, and under oil circumstan ces, act in harmony wltti tho law that governs tho female system. For Kidney Complaints of either sex this compound is unsurpassed. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is prepared at 233 and 235 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Price >l.OO. Six bottles for $5.00. Sent by mail In the form of pills, also In the form of Lozenges, on receipt of price, 51.00, per box, for either. Mrs. PINKHAM freely answers all letters of Inquiry. Send for pam phlet. Address as above Mention this paper. No family should be without LYDIA F„ PINKHAM’ UVEIt PILLS. They cure CoustipatV' '-J. Torpidity of the Li far. 25 cent* V*’ TO MINISTERS. * 31 1 sisters, tio 3or wish to keep posted with the doings of our race? Do you wish . suggestive ideas to quicken you to youi work ? Do you want an idea of the wants of our race? Do you want lo keep abreast with the times V Do you want «a ‘Complete history of the Negro race ? j Do you want 'ho history of our rep resentative men ? In short do you want to be a power and success in your work ? If so, you cannot do better than lo send s>l bO to this office tor a years subscription to the Review, and if you do not find it to be all we claim for it we will cheerfully refund you; money, any time you may see fir. We have come to stay, and need only the encouragement and assistance of our friends to be successful in our new en terprise, g ' P “ / o I 3 3 0 > p t»> 5* s rrr o a c/i *-3 si *“3I 0 ** t m * —sa w £3 n fa DR. RICE, 37 Conri Place, LOUISVILLE, KY., A regular! v educated and legal], qualitied physician and th* most successful, as his practice will prove. SnMBBHBt Jtj ASUS. Spermatorrhea and Impotency, the result ofaeif-abuse iu youth, sexual excesses io ma turer rears, or other causes, and producing acme o f tha toi kwiue; effects: Nervousness, Seminal Emissions, (tight so-. *- fcioos by dreams). Dimneaa of bight, Defective Memory, Phy sical Decs v, Pimples on Face, Aversion to Society of Femaiei, Coufusion' of Ideas, Loss of Sexual Power. Ac., rendering marriage improper or unhappy, are thoroughly aal perm*r neatly cured. SYPHILi IS cUred * ad ea ‘ tireiy from the aystem; Gonorrhea, GLEET, Stricture, Orchitis, Hernia, (or Rupture* Fit s una other private diseases quickly cured. It is self-evident that aphy siclan who pays special attentua to o certain class of diseases. and treating ihuusands annu ally, acquire* great skill. Physicians knowing this fact often recommend persons to my care. When it is inconvenient to visit the city for treatment, medicine* can he sdnt pitvninny and safely by mail or express anywhere. Cures Guaranteed in all Cases undertaken. Consultations j>er*onmlly or by letter free and invited. Charges reasonable aud correspondence strictly cvuhd«uu*L PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of 200 pages, sent to any address, eeiAtrely sealed, for thirty (Wl terns. Should be read by ati. Address a» above. Utt.ce hoars from aA.M.to 8 P. id. Sundays, 21» iP. da. rtllilY YEARS SEEOItE VUE DR. C. M^LANE’S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC -OR VERMIFUGE. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. THE countenance is pale and leaden colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or both cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pupils dilate ; an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid ; the .nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds ; a swell ing of the upper lip ; occasional head ache, with humming or throbbing of the ears ; an unusual secretion of salvu; slimy or furred tongue; breath jerv foul, particularly in the morning; ap petite variable, sometimes voraciou , withagnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach ; occasional nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels irregular, at times costive; stools slimy; not unfrequentlv tinged with blood ; belly swollen and hard; urine turbid; respiration occa sionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough ; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but generally irritable, &rc. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. MV LANE’S VERMIFUGE Will ceitainlv effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MLiIvURV In any form ; it is an innocent prepa ration, not capable o f doing the si ifiti-st injury to the most fen iter infant. The genuine Dr. MVLansV. Vermi fuge bears the signatures of C. MV La:; l and Fleming Bros, on the wrapper. OR. C. M?LAN£’S LIVER PILLS. «* These Pills tire not recommended ns a remedy for ‘‘all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in affections of the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases ot that character, they stand without a rival. AG U E AN D FE V E It. No better cathartic can he used pre paratory to, or after taking Quinine. As a’simple purgative they are un equal ed. UEWARE OP IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax sen! on the lid, with the impression Dr. M* Ran;: s Liver Pills. Each wrapper hears the signat u>es of C. MVLani. and Fleming Bros. Sold by all respectable druggists and country storekeepers generally. c