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UU4 F. H. TRAXEL, Baker and Confectioner The only manufacturer of PURE CANDY in the city. Orders lor weddings and parties promptly attended to. niyodly f. lTtrayser, PIANO MANUFACTURER Front St., -I doors vest of Iffill House Grand, Upright and Square Pianos, also the best make of Organs at lowest manufacturers' prices ; 1 1. n 1 n i 1 1 d 1 ( i aii.i g. nl.7 tTj7curey, Plumber, Gas and Steam Fitter dealer in Bath Tubs, Hydrant Pumps, Iron and Lead Pipe, Globe, Angle and Check Valves,. Rubber Hose and Sewer Pipe. All work warranted and done when promised. Second street, opposite White & Ort's. ap3 GARDEN SEEDS. We have reopened our Seed Store on Market Street one door above the Red Corner Clothing Store and have on hand an entirely new stock ot DREER'S PHILADELPHIA GARDEN SEEDS, We have also Seed Potatoes, Onion Setts, Greenhouse and Bedding Plants, Fruit and Ornamental Trees and Cabbage, Tomato and Sweet Potato Plants of all varieties In season, Also a full stock of Florists' Goods ot all kinds at wholesale or retail. CUT FLOWERS AND Floral Designs, made to order at .short notice. iamditw C. P. DIETr RICH & BRO. WILL AM CAUDLE, Manufacturer and Inventor of TRUSSES, Made Double or Single for men or hoys. Ad dress apUdawly T. WILLIAM CAUDLE. careT. K. Ball A Son, Maysvllle, KV .DKALEH IN STAPL E AND FANCY ' GROCERIES Rfl BHB V K0 1 MR V BIB 8HHB wWKr Teas, Tobacco, cigars, Queenswrtre, Wooden-ware, Glassware, Notions, Ac. Highest price paid for Country Produce. Goods delivered to Cor. Fourth and Plum Streets, ap21yd MAYSVILLE. KY. One A sure cure for blind, bleeding, Itching and ulcerated piles has been discovered by Dr. William, (an Indian remedy,) called Dr. Williams' Indian Ointment. A single box has cured the worst chronic cases ot twenty-five or thirty years standing. No one need suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful sooth- STICK ' Jll medicine, Lotions instruments and turles do more. harm than good: Williams' Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the In tense Itching, (particularly at night alter get-ling warm in bed,) acts as a poultice, gives instant and painless relief, and is preparded only for piles, Itching of the private parts, and nothing else. Read what the Hon. J. M. Colli nberry, of Cleveland, says about Dr. William's Pile Ointment; I have used scores of pile cures, and It affords me pleasure to say that I have never found anything which gave me such Immedi ate and permanent relief as Dr. V llllams' In dian Ointment. For sale by George T. Wood or mailed on receipt of price, Si. HENRY & CO., Sole Prop'rs, 02 Vesey Street, N. Y. fekiti Diseases Cured By Dk. Fjiazikr's Magic Ointment. Cure as if by magic, pimples, black head or grubs, blotches and eruptions on the fuce, leaving the skin clear, healthy and beautiful. Also cures itch, barber's itch, salt rheum, tetter.ringworm, scald head, chapped hands, sore nipples, sore lips, old obstinate ulcers and sores, &c. skin diseask. F. Drake, Eq., Cleveland, O., suffered beyond all description fioma skin disease which appeared on his hands, head and face, and nearly destroyed his eyes The most careful doctoring failed to help him, and alter all had failed he used Dr. Frazler's Magic Ointment and was cured by a few applications. The first and positive cure for skin diseases ever discovered. Sent bv mail on receipt of price, fifty cpnts HENRY & CO., Sole Prop'rs. 02 Vesey Street, N. Y. For blind, bleeding, itching or ulcerated piles. Dr. Williams' IndiaruPile Ointment is a sure cure. Price 31, by mail. For sale by George T. Wood, druggist. Dr. Frazler's Root Bitters. Frazler's Root Bitters are not a dram-shop whisky beverage, but are strictly medicinal in every sense. They act strongly upon the liver and kidneys, keep the bowels open and regular, make the weak strong, heal the lungs, build up the nerves and cleanse the blood and system of every Impurity. For dizziness, rush of blood to the head tending to apoplexy, dyspepsia, fever and ague, dropsy, pimples and blotches, scrofulous humors and sores, tetter, ring worm, white swelling, erysipelas, sore eyes and for young men .suffering from weaknessor debility caused from Imprudence, and to females In delicate health, Frazler's Root Bittois are especially recommended. Dr. Frazler : I have used' two bottles of your Root Bitters for dyspepsia, dizziness, weakness and kidney disease, and they did me more good than the doctors and all tho medicine I ever used. From the first doso I took I began to mend, and I ara now in perfect health, and feel as well asl ever did, I consider your medicine one of the greatest blesslngsn Mks. M, Maktin, Cleveland, O. Sold by George T. Wood at 81 per bottle. " HENRY'A CO.. Bole Prop'rs, .02 Vesey Street, N.Y. THE OLD FAR?!. Out in the meadows tho farm houee Hop, Old ami gray, ami floating the west; Many a bw allow thither flies, Twittering under tho eve1 ing BkieR, In tho old chimneys builds her neat. Ah 1 how the sounds mako our old heartB swell! Send them again on an eager quest; Bid the sweet winds of heaven tell Thofe we have loed to long hiid well Come aguin home to the dear old ne3t. "When tho gray evening, cool and stn, Hushec the brain and heart to rent, Memory comes with a joyous thrill, Urings the .voting children hack at will, Calls them all homo to the gray old host. Patient we wait ti'l tho golden morn KIse on our wearinet8 ha f confessed ; TilJ, with the chid and the darkns gone, Hope fha'l arise with another dawn, And a new day t j the Mid old nest. Soon shall we eee all the eager E iPt ttriglit with tho tur, at Heaven's behcet ; Soon, from the bondage ol clay released, Ripe th the Pa ace, the King's own feusr, I3irdB o: flight from tho lat year' ne3t. Plants That Eat Animals. We have nil beard of animals tho eat plants, but only recently have we learned of plants that live on animals. By recently I menu within the last twenty yeai s. That these q'ler plants do really devour very small insects is now on established fact of history. In 1860 Mr. a man who studied these wonderful things, aud then very kiudly published books about what ho learned, so that other people may also study them, began to notice some curious things about these singular plants, and then turned his attention to a study of .them. He spent a great many hours watching the plants and their behavior. Day after day he would continue, till finally he had the pleasure of knowing so much about the subject that he put it in a book. Many other naturalists hive been studying these curious plants, both before and since the public ition of Mr. Darwiu's book. In New Jersey, North Carolina, and other States, as well as in England, those plants are to be fdund. There arestve al varieties of them, but I have room in this article to give you an account of them in only a general manner, and verv brieflv at that. The leaves of these pi nits form a kind of mouth, and this mouth the plants can open when they choose. The leaves are the lids, and ins'de tho mouth is a sort of throat. The throat extends down ward toward the body of the i hint, aud has inside a great many little bits of very short beard, which are close together and very iuzzy. In some throats arri at least two hundred of' thete little hairy bits. At the end of each of these is a sticky substance somewhat like common mucilage. Now, when the plant opens its mouth you see the trap is already set. All he has to do is to keep his mouth open. By au ac.ideut a fly alights on tho plant or a bug, or some other small insect and the moment it does so it sticks fast to the gummy substance the plant is all the time making, and is caught. Fly off he can not, and the more lie tne3 to move the more he fastens himself to the sticky substance. The plant is now sure of a meal, for the moment a ily, a bug, or otkQr substance touches the throat the murfVh of the plant begins to shut, the leaves, or lips, immediately c?ose over the victim and strangle him to death. Then the plant eats the insect very much as you eat a bit of meat. The way you aiid I eat, is this : We swallow the lood, and the stomach digests it for us by means of ""fyh'at we call gastric juice. The gastiic juice is a sour and bitter liquid, which cuts the food Ave have swallowed up and malces pulp of it. Then tile glands Of our stohiach br drink tip this fluid, aud it goes ltito the' blood and gives us health arid 'strength. T , ' . , In the same xyay Mr, Plant eats the. fly or -'bug. A sort of sour aiid bitter juice starts from the leaves on the inside and r ry f yrr .- EVENING BULLETIN " HEW TO THE LINE, LET THE CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAT." VOLUME 1. MAYSYILLE, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 7, 1882. NUMBER 169. KEY WINDING WATCHES CHANGED TO STEM WINDERS. J. BALLEXGKRnt Albert's Chlna,Storo ad-Joining Pearce, Wallingfoid & Co. s Bank. apMOmd J. C. FECOR & CO., AGENTS FOR BUIST'S OardenSeed A iresh supply just received. 2NT O OLD SJ 33 23 33, "Jr All this year's purchase. Call and get a ?WALL PAPER. WI3SrDOWDS:KADES Every style and pattern, as cheap as the cheap est. Give us a call and examine our stock, a p2 1 1 y J . C. P ECO R ct CO. BARGAINS. LACE BUNTINGS FOR 10 Cents worth 20n per yard. Cheap Lltwns, India Linens and Dotted Swiss, Call and see them. aplilyd H. O. SMOOT, LANGDONS -CITY BUTTER- For sale by all grocers. PILES! TILES! P1LES2 np2l3md A Sure Cure Found nl Lust Xo Need Suffer! cuts the Tiug iuto pieces, and then into a sort of and after this the glands, of which the plant is very full, suck this jelly or liquid up and carry it all over the plant, and give lite and strength and vigor to all its parts. As soon as olio intect is eaten in this way, the leaves open again aud the trap is for another. Hov many an enterprising plant, of average industry, will catch and devour in a day I do not exactly know. I suppose it'depends upon the nunib?r of them in the air. The plants are not over particular about their diet, and will take beef, an egg, gelatine, and many other things of that nature. At the same time, they huve some choice about their food, and will not cat grass, starch, oil, or anything that is too i'atty.' A gnat tickles their palate, as turtle does the tongue of an epicure ; and as for a dainty, tender butterfly, why it is said that you could not please the plant better than by feeding one to it. So delicately is the plant made, and so sensitive are the hundreds of beards that line its throat, that a piece of human hair, one-eight-thousandth part of au inch long, dropped on the plant, will cause it to close immediately. HalVs Journal of Health. A Peculiar View of the Question. It is refreshing to hear of a genuine con vers 'on, if it be from darkness to light, especially when it is speedy and complete. A few years ago a friend of mine was taking a country walk with a friend, a clergyman, when the latter suddenly wheeled round his face toward home, with the remark: "Let us go back, I'm tired; was colled up in the middle of the night to baptize a child that was dying." "Were you in time?" asked my friend. "Just," was the reply; "another half miuute and I should have been too late." "And if you had been, what then?" " Why, then, I suppose the poor little thing would have been lost." "Eternally?" "Well, yes, according to our belief." "May I ask what sort of boots you wear?" said my friend. "Boots? Elastic-side, always." "Now, suppose you wore laced, tliey had taken two minutes to put and on, the child would have been dead, and lost eternally, ay?" "That's a pecu'iar view of the question; and I must think over my position. " Two days alter the clergyman met my friend and said: "I have thought that matter over and must alter my view. The boots did it." London Spectator. Sun Dogs. A parhelion is an attendant imnge, more or less distinct, of the sun's disk, which may appear with any halo at one, two, or more points near the suu, but which is more frequently formed in the course of the horizon al or vertical white bauds, or in both, at or slightly without the intersection of these with the ordinary halos. They seldom appear at once at more than three or four of the intersection, and sometimes present a sort of tail in tho direction opposite the luminary. They are popularly known as sun dogs or mock suns. The largest trees known are probably a eucalyptus amygda Una, or "peppermint tree," growing in Daudenong district of Victoria, Australia, which ia said to measure 370 feet to tho starting point of tho crown, and 417 feet to the top, and another specimen of the, same species, mentioned liy Baron Ferdinand von Mueller as having attained the night of 480 'feet. r ' .Humility: is to make a right estimate of one's self. It is no humility for a man to think less of himself than he ought