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THE FARM AM) HOME. iIKMKDY KOlt IJI’RNH. —UllO OUIICC of pulverized borax, one quart of boiling water, half ounce of pulverized alum. Shake up well and bottle. Wrap the burn up in soft linen, and keep con stantly wet with the solution. Do not remove the linen until the burn is cured Tkach Tcpdino. -Heat the yolks of six eggs and one eup of sugar light, moisten one tablespoonful of corn starch with milk, and stir in the yolks of the eggs; flavor to taste. Htir Ibis mixture in one quart of boiling milk. Let it boil up once. Janie the bottom of a pudding dish with peaches peeled, cut in half and sugared. Tour over them a layer of the custard, then peaches, and so on until dish is full, leaving the last layer cus.ard ; cover the top with the whites of the eggs whipped to a froth; put in the oven and brown. Serve hot or cold. Tim farmer should be a student as well as a teacher. 'The well regulated farmer’s home should be a school a manual labor school, and should be made so attractive that boys should love it above every other calling. An Oskaloosa farmer says “clover bloat, so fatal to cattle, may be cured by fastening a stick in their mouths and compelling them to bold their heads in an elevated position, the poisonous gasses escaping. He says it never has failed. A I‘lanbr and h'nnnrr correspondent has known speedy relief to be given to several hundi. ds of choking cows by throwing a lahlespoonful of saltpeter well hack on the sullerer’s tongue. The obstruction invariably in his experi ence moves one way or the other in a very few minutes. t'IIMCHK, as met with in the market, varies greatly in composition. <iood kinds contain from HO to do, and inferior kinds HH to 45 per cent, of water ; rich sorts include from 'Jo to HO per cent. o( fats and about the same proportion of ahuininates. I’oor cheese often con tains only 0 per cent, of water. The amount of ash varies horn and to 10 per cent. Kvkhv year milk and its products are becoming more and more appreciated. It is demonstrated by scientific investi gation that milk and llesh contain nearly the same elements of meat, and as a cow can and does produce more valua ble food hy her secretions of milk than a steer hy his llesh, the cow is rising as an economical food producer. At.l. meal-producing animals should be killed when they are in the cool est stale, or when respiral ion is the least active. Their llesh will then keep much longer fresh, and be more I tiful, sweet and healthful, When killed iua healed condition, or immediately after a Inird drive, the llesh will lake longer to cool through, spoil sooner, while the llesh and fat will have a dark, feverish look, caused by being foil of Hood, and hence will not be so inviting in appearance or so heallhyas food. Tiik Sacramento Hit says : “We are constantly told that small farms will not pay m California. Mill we know a farmer within twelve miles of Sacra mento who owns Kill acres, and who on that land supports a family of seven, and puls in the bank every year SI,OOO as clear profit, lie raises chickens, tur keys and vegetables, and sows much of his land in wheal and buckwheet, and oats for poultry feed. The chickens are eared for by the young children, and a dog herds the turkeys. This man has a good wagon and several horses.” Stackino Cohn Roma n. A writer in the I'rndicnl luiniur says: " I have prac ticed slacking fodder for twenty years never had any spoil, and after trying various ways think it decidedly prefer able to all other modes, because first, none hut the butts, the worthless por tion, am ex posed to the bleaching rains of winter, and second, because a larger quantity can be placed close by the feeding place than by any other way. 1 put usually fifty shocks of HK) hills each in a stack. A few sticks are placed on the ground to raise the centre of the stack. The slack must be made of such diameter only as to allow the tops of bundles to lap, and thus keep up the center, a single row of bundles only forming the circle. The finishing of the stack should be in form similar to an ordinary 100 hill shock, and be well lied with a band. I feed only lour iiead of cattle from such a stuck, and never had any damage by rain; only one course appears to get damp, and the cattle prefer it in that condition. If a snow-storm occurs, or a sleet-storm, or a very heavy rain, I immediately re move one whole course, and set on end all not fed. I feed in the ordinary box manger, always in the stable, being particular to have the butts of the bun dles placed in the bottom of the man ger, None is ever wasted not even a husk. The stalks remaining arc thrown under the cows, and make good bed bedding, always keeping them clean," Tin: I’lNi: llom:u. Prof. Cook, of tin* Lansing agricultural college, has been investigating in the lumber districts of Michigan the habits of the pine-boring beetle. The damagw committed by these insects is sometimes very great, one firm alone having lost SoOO,IKHI worth of timber from their depridations in a single season. The beetles attack only dead or decaying trees, into which they bore deep oval tunnel-ihat destroy • heir value as lumber. The eggs are laid in the rough crevices of the bark. In a few days the larva* hatch • ut, and begin to work their way into the heart of the tree or log. The rasping notes which they make in this work are rhythmical, and in the quiet forest re mind the listener of the ticking of a clock in an empty room. In a few wet ks the larva* are full grown and as suine the puna form at the closed end of the tunnel, which is near the bark. The beetles soon emerge and cut their way out. After a careful examination, I’rof. Cook reaches the following practi cal conclusions: I. 'Trees kept green and vigorous, are safe from attack. 2. Trees burned or cut in August are free from injury during the same season, but should be sawed or got into the wa ter the next spring. *‘L Trees cut or killed before August will need attention the same season, and if killed in .lone are liable to serious damage. 4. 'I rees can be saved, either by peeling oil the bark, or by immersion in water. 5. Cutting tlie bark from off the top of the logs only will be effectual, as it causes the bark to peel off. Dampness will not destroy the borers, but if exposed to the hot rays of the sun tiiey die at once. (I. Teeling off the bark not only secures against the attack of the borer, but helps to ensure against lire, in case a little pains is taken to remove the bark a shost distant from the logs. Hiioc’ki.nu Wiikat.— ln shocking wheal, an advantage in capping it is that the principal part of the wheat is less exposed to the action of the sun and winds, which cause the grain to shrink. 'The grain in the cap-sheaves will invariably be found to be more shrunken than in the sheaves set be neath them. 'There is quite a difference between shocking and capping wheat properly, and pilling it up, as it, is too often done by inexperienced men and boys, who, though they possess the ability have not the will to do it properly. 'The best way to set up a shock of twelve sheaves is ibis: “ Set up six bundles, three on each side, thrusting the butts of the i heaves, once only, on the ground, lean the heads toward each other; place two more on each side and place the tops of all compactly together. Now take of the two best bound sheaves that have been reserved, hold it before you with the beads of the grain up, break it down over the band, a handful at a lime; then spread the butts consid erably without changing the position of the sheaf, and place it on the shock; prepare and put the other on the op posite end of the .shock, and luck a few heads of the top cap under tin band of the lower cap, and neither will be easily blown off. When damp, hot fog gy weather occurs, such as promotes mildew in badly ventilated rooms then open the shocks and air the bundles whenever the weather will permit. If, on the contrary, the weather is cool the foregoing is not the best plan. lAinn mill Firt'niilr. ItiMir Hunting in Russia. Tim following singular means of cap turing nr killing the hear is said to lie fr' 11 if‘til ly practiced hy Russian peas anls who cannot easily procure lire anns. As il is well known, the hear has a ureal fomlness for honey and will track his way a great distance to where the wild hees have tilled some hollow tree. Their sting cannot hurt him, and they and their stores are entirely at his mercy. In a Incest known to contain hears, the hunters examine all the hol low trees, till they discover a wild bee hive. A hranch of the tree is then chosen, directly above (he hole; if there is no such, a stout peg is driven into the trunk. To this peg a strong cord is fastened, and to the end of the cord a heavy stone or a cannon hall is sus pended, at about half a foot from the ground. The hear in his researches comes noon the treasures of honey. The pendulous harrier obstructs and incommodes him a good deal. He is an irritable brute in such cases one of the most irritable as well as supid in the for est. lie begins by shoving the weight or stone one side; but it presses against ins head, and he gives it a slight knock to free himself man the inconvenience. II recoils a moment, and he receives a smart lap on the ear. Mis temper is roused, anil he again pushes oil the hard and heavy mass, hut more vio lently; he gets rather a heavy blow on the side of his skull on its return. He becomes furious.md with a powerful jerk sends the rock swinging away, The pendulum cannot he the lirst io lire of this game; and il is a game in which the blows are fell on one side ex clusively. riu> hear alone sutlers; and the point is that he sutlers as much hv the blows he gives as by those he gels. He takes double punishment. Hi very retaliations are all against himself; and tor every furious push which makes his skull ache, he receives an immediate equivalent, which makes it ache again. A* last his rage is unbound ed; he hugs the block; he strikes it; he bites it; but whenever he would thrust his head into the hive, back on his car falls the obstruction, against which hi> terrible hug or the blows of his paws are of no avail. The brute is madden ed. lie faces his strange and pertina cious tormentor and once more makes it rebound from his skull. Hut back again it swings like a curse, which re turns upon the head Irom which it start ed. The bear falls exhausted under these reiterated blows, one more vio lent than another; and if he be not • lead, the hunters, who have watched the contest from their hiding place, soon dispatch him. Tin* Till) Minnow ife. The careful tidy housewife. when she i s uivi"K her house its sprint; cleaning, should hear in mind that the dear in mates hi ln>r house are morn precious than housi's, and that their systems nn'd cleansing hy purifyinj; the Mood, regulating Urn stomach and howels to movent and cure tho diseases arising from sprim; mal iti iand miasma, and 'he should know that there is nothing that will do it so perfectly and snrelv as Hop Hitters, the purest and la st of all medicines, See other column. THE NATIONAL BIRD. A Change Imperatively Necessary. The Hon. (ieorge W. Peck, in his fourth of July oration at La Crosse, said: It may have been noticed that thus far i have made no allusion to the American Eagle, the national trade mark, patent applied for, but it is not that I do not appreciate the position that species of poultry occupies on these occasions. The poet, alluding to the eagle, says: Illnl or (hi! linin') and lli-eting wing. Thy home in high in hen vim. This is too true. He is a high old bird, and the committee that selected the eagle as a national emblem should have been arrested for disorderly con duct. Oh, great bird! You live on mice. Yon soar aloft on pinions airy, until you see a poor little mouse with one leg broke, and then you swoop down like a ward constable, and run bim in. You are a nice old bird for a trade mark, for a nation of heroes, you old coward, You sit on a rock and watch a peasant woman hanging out clothes, and when she goes into the house to turn the clotbes-wringer, you, great bird, emblem of freedom, you representative of the land of Hit! free and the home of the brave, you swoop down on the plantation and crush your talons in the quivering flesh of her lit tle baby, take him to your home high in heaven, and pick bis innocent little eyes out. You bald headed old repro bate, you would turn your tail and run at the attack of a bantam rooster. (), eagle, yon look well on dress parade, but yon are a unanimous coward, and you eat snakes. Yon arc a fraud, and you are counted in by a vote of eight to seven. The bird that should have been se lected as the emblem of our country, Ihe bird of patience, forbearance, per severance, and the bird of terror when aroused, is the mule. There is no bird that combines more virtues to the square foul than the mile. With the mnle emblazoned on onr banners, we should he a terror to the foe. We are a nation of uncomplaining hard-work ers. We mean to do the fair thing by' everybody. We plod along, doing as we would be done by. So does the mule. Wo as a nation are slow to anger. So is the mnle. Asa nation we occasion ally slick our ears forward and fan llies olfof onr forehead. So does the mnle. We allow parties to get on and ride as long as they behave themselves. So dues the mule. But when any nation slicks spurs into unr Hanks and tickles uur heels with a straw, we come down stiff-legged in front, onr ears look to the beautiful beyond, our voice is cut loose, and is still for war, and onr subsequent end plays the snare drum on anything that gets in reach of ns, and strikes ter ror to the hearts of ail tyrants. So dues the mnle. When the country gets older, and congress has time lu gel m its work, the eagle will he superceded by the national trade-mark, and in its place will rise the mnle in all his glory, and hi pluri/mn initni), our motto will he changed to Von plurihun mi'hvn, xir, din li'wprr, n/d/xini. \ Cal Tale. Of all the legendary and improbable cat.', perhaps the most improbable is an aliened eat who lately resided in New Milford, Conn. It mav not lie riilit to assert that this eat is utterly incredible, lull she is beyond doubt the most im probable beast on record. Some time ago this eat lost a large family of young kittens, all of whom died within three days. The nature of their disease is not known, but they were probably the victims of an acute attack of mill-pond. The bereaved mother was ardently attached to a re spectable duck with whom she had long been on terms of the closest inti macy. That a eat should descend to as sociate with so silly and tough a bird as a middle-aged duck is certainly im probable, but it is one of the least im.- fealnres in connection with the New Milford cat, and it would be a waste of time to undertake to disbelieve what :s a mere unimportant incident of the storv. On the very day when this really doubtful cat lost her kittens, the duck died suddenly, not w ithout suspicion of tramps. This left nearly ado/eu of eggs in an advance state of incabat ion, which it was naturallv supposed would perish without material care. In these cir cumstances that surprising cat, recog nized the great truth that there is no remedy for sorrow so ellicacious as ac tive and earnest beniticenee, took her dead friend's place upon the vacant nest and proceeded to hatch those eggs. Al though totally nnaceiistoimd 10 sitting, tiie cat discharged her pious task in the most unexceptionable way, and in three days hatched out eight small goslings. There may be persons who can believe this w ithout permanently straining their intellect, but it is, to speak plainly, next door to incredible. As the goslings grew older, the cat took them out to walk, and scratched up worms for them with exemplary diligence. She taught them to take their morning catnip with as much relish a* if they had been young and fashionable kittens. She was a little grieved that they should not take kindly to mice, but 'ln' forebore to press her own view of the matter upon them. In referrence to bathing she was liberal and indulgent. She would not herself enter the *' ■ 1 pond, but when the g 'lings waizf unl swim she would lead them and sit on the hank watching them .and occasionally atfcctiotjatolywurning them not to go out too far. The time was close at 1 and, how ever, when that tend foster-mother's heart should break. One afternoon, jn>t be fore ilark, she was seen leading the g s *ling.i *oward the back fence. Her face wore a happy smile, and her perpen dicular tail proved that she was a proud and satisfied mother. With consider able effort she induced the goslings to mount the fence and to range them selves in a row on its summit. Then taking up a position at one end of the row, she howled with wonderful brilli ancy and expression and looked in uuiringly toward her family as if asking why they did not imitate her example. They remained dumb and motionless, and again and again that earnest cal besought them with entreaties and example to howl. Instead of obeying, they deliberately went to sleep. The disappointed mother mewed to them, licked them and even cuffed them on the head, but the stupid goslings only slept the sounder. Finally, overwhelmed with disappointment and filled with dis gust, the eat kicked them one and all oil'the fence and then raged and swore to such an extent that the nearest neighbor felt compelled to shoot her dead. Mr. Beecher must have preached in New Milford and convinced the people that there is no ‘‘ warm climate” in the future world, to which Mr. Anderson might be properly sent as consul. Else they would scarcely attempt to palm oil’ a case upon the public so improbable and in credible as the alleged step-cat of the motherless New Milford goslings. Mysterious Metal—Austrian Art in Slpcl-Hmnze Onus. Lon 1 1 on News. It is we ll known that the whole of the Austrian held artillery is now armed with the new sleel-hron/.e breech-loader of (Jen. Von Uehatius. The fact that £2,000,0*1(1 have been spent from first to last by Austro-Hungarian government upon the weapon is proof enough of the confidence felt in high quarters as to its ellieieney; and we have the testi mony of many experienced officers that for accuracy and endurance the gun rivals the much more costly steel cannon of Her Kruppe. He this as it may. it is reported that the Austrian governmenment is now about to set to v.ork on the manufacture of heavy guns from the same inexpensive ma terial, and to produce ship and siege guns from tempered bronze. Two six inch experimental weapons which have fired several hundred rounds are said to be still in serviceable condition, and at short ranges may lie considered armor piercing guns. A shot at fifty or sixty yards is capable, we are told of piercing the armor of such ironclads as the 1 Vnrriur and Hlnrk J’rinr< ■; and there is little doubt, therefore, that a ten or twelve inch cannon constructed on the same pattern would be a match for most of our stouter battle-ships. The Austrian gunmakers seem to be able to make bronze as hard as steel, and as capable of resisting the wear and tear of rilled projectiles, since it would be altogether impossible to pierce army • plates with a gun made of bronze in the j ordinary way. If we are to believe the | last reports of their big gun experi ' incuts, the bore of the weapons after some hOO rounds bad sustained no in jury at all, notwithstanding that com paratively heavy projectiles were tired, and with battering charges of gunpow der. Hut the most surprising feature about the I’enatius gun is the fact of its secret having been so closely kept. The Austrian government has placed no dilfieulty in the way of an inspection of its guns, and has permitted even the presence of foreign military attaches in the government workshops. Nay, more; samples of the wonderful steel-bronze metal have been freely distributed, and chemists have tried their best to dis cover its mode of preparation by ana lysis. All has been in vain. Despite fair means and foul, the secret of the Hchalius metal still remains a mystery, and bids fair to do so until its inventor divulges the composition himself. Hestlul Nights, Hays free from Torture Vwait tln> rheumatic sufferer, who resorts to 110-letters Stomach Hitters. That Has be nignant cordial and dcpunoit is a fur more reliable remedy than colchh’um and other poisons u-ed to expel the rheumatic virus from the blood, is a tact that experience lias utisfuctorlly dem .mat rated, b also enjoys 'lie advivuiiige oi being—unlike them per fectly sale. With many persons a certain predisposition io rheumatism exists, winch renders them liable to its attacks lift it exp ■- sure in wet weather, to currents of air, changes of temperature, or to cold when the body is hot Mich persons should take a wineglass or two of the bitter* us soon ns possible after in curring risk from the above causes, as this superb protective effectually nullifies the hurtful intluetice. for the functional derange ments which accompany rheumatism, such is colic, spasms in the stomach, palpitation of the heart, imperfect digestion. Ac., the It;tiers is also a most useful remedy. It Is only ne cessary in obstinate eases to use it with per sistency. Holloway’s Pills.-What is Life In surance? Apoplexy, Ac —Man? people insure their lives to tu-uerti their families h? death—how paradoxical is this To prolong life by preserving the health would be n far more rational manner of i assuring It. Apoplexy Is swift and Insidious in I its attacks, striking Its victim without a moment's : warning! Happllv, a preTeutltive has been dis covered Holloway's Pills—the only safe and eet lain antidote for th s disease, ths? cool the blood j and equalize its circulation through the system. To preserve the stomach in a sound condition anil the blood pare Is the true secret of health 1 Holloway's fills will do this mo. t eflVetus :v, and thousands owe their actual existence to them at the present day IS.! ' 1 mroHTANt None*.—None are genuine nnic*- the signature of I. Hayhock. as sgeut for the l’nlt*d Mates surrounds each box of fills and Ointment. Boxes at ifo cents, 6g cents and each. s¥*“ There is considerable saving hv taking 'he larger sir.ee. Hollow at a to.. New York. An English lover of 01l hooks r* ■- t [cenlly made a purchase which is li k< 1 y MM boa most luckyone for him, Hr tl un old I took for a shilling. l lV * *\ou examining it found between tlm l*'" Y 8 a marriage certificate of the K k'i' yf lhi Wiley. Tar purchaser then I an introtlurtion to Lord Kitz jhanln’C and his solicitor, who gave ] him u chi rk for £lO and promised him tT.ooo if tin document should prove to I be anti entic. Economy.—No housekeeper .rt-onk is fully prepared to enter suc cessfully upon her culinary duties wilh iiit bavins D. 15. Del,and it Co.’s Bt’xt ('lifiniciil Silmilvs on hand. It relieves die mind of much of the care and mxiety experienced hy a skillful cook. Fur sale hv must merchants and sroc ers. (’all forthe epuuinein redpapers. It is lictter than Soda, and far superior to most brands of Saleratus. u. j/1 ,\ JJAV. HW ti> make It. Something new 1 . I fur Annas. Cuk, ViiKOK*l'<’*..M.Louls.Mo. Well Auger, Kk lirllli and Drilling Machine*. .net out. Send .nr illustrated Catalogue. A. lun'SFOKt>At 1 0..5t. nulls. Mo. ■f/'T> II I ’TO AIA.. Keduerd Prim I.UI of I' 11 |j .scales. CHlcaoo s, ai.k Cos., Chi cago, 111. 2 ton Hay Scales, sgi ; ton. sno. UKVOLVKK FKKK.—Seven-stmt Revolver with liox eartridgi's. Address Down A Sou. HWttlSs Wood St., Pittsburgh, l*a. VOUNC MENmM^Wii " month. Small salary w hile teaming Situation fur nlsbed. Address It Valentine, Manager.Jnnesvllle.'Wis. CLOVKIt. Send for "Clover I.eaf," (sent free.) A paper giving valuable Information on raising and harvesting elofer for seed. Address tiirdsell MTg iSonlli Uend, li,'. Itl ioiti: lit \ I M. OK TtlvVfTSli A CABINET I PARLOR ORGAN He sure to send for our Lutfst i’utalogur and f'ircu lur.i. With NEW STVI.KS, KKDITKO PIIK’KS and nim*h Information. Scnt/rr \ MASU.N \ HAMLIN OIUiAN CO., Host on. New York or (*hlr;xo. WANTED. \\ r AN TIC I). \ KJCW (1001 l AM) r.KUAIU.K > > men to take orders lluongh this and adjoin - lug stales for trees and shrnhs from onr (Itdieva Nurseries. None hut reliable men. who ran fur nish good referenees, need applv. Hood wages to good men. Address U.II. PAX HA Cl l,.(ieneva, VV. 4 UllOI) AORNTS WANTRD ; nnein'each B eg El gm eity, town, village an t *chool district iu R I I I Bj B B th*' Went and South t<> sH our goods to 1 9 9 9 1 9 1 They ct.mj rise tcu distiue'. ■ BB BB BB li ii(*s, and ovi r forty different grades, B \0 and are us staple as coflee. Their sale is thoroughly respectable, and makes a permanent home business by which any industrious man of ordi nary intelligence. who can command s’;'s capital, can depend on earning a steady income of $H to a week. For particulars atfir*s, “JOBBER,” ttux 2482. ST. LOUIS. MO. the Kldneyi, iftlmlder tiui Urinary Or* I (ana. Hunt's ICemetly i purely vegetable snd I prepared exprenly fr tin* above Uiarster It h* I cured thousand*. Kvtry bottle warranted. Send to W. I &. Clarke, Providence. K 1., tor illuit. ated pamphlet I If yoor drnggift don t have it. he will orefer it for yoo. I nr —nr • • n mT m ~'ir‘ —— mrnwj.T ■ Cincinnati. K<iablih* 'l for th** cure f Cancer, Tumors. I leer*. Scrofula, m l Skin DUcnne.-*. ML t'nuoer cured without the uac of the knife or caustic*. For information.encloaciwo stamp* frlM><-kcnritalD I UK theory of treatment, tcsimcnial s froni patients -ur- l, m l first-••;*.** cry ref. rem es, cic. Address IHBBfIH 1.. ll* Crutlgny, M. IK, box .V.)*, Cincinnati, 0. 1100.000 uorc* taken in four months hr 85,000 people* Good climate, anil, water, and building atone, and good so. •kty. Address, s. J. Itiimore, Land Com’r, Saliua, kaustu. KSTAHUSIIKU 1861. ELECTRO MEDICAL INSTITUTE. >IU.\VAI KKH. Win. Je OSf S dfiitlallv I>r Mi Nahjiu hSO jfffa NL BUOAIOVaY. Hi- has reme iunvi-i'--1-1 tlu-ir 1 1. 11 \ ijror. and the mind to itsoiigl n.tl cheerfulness a ><l strenirtti Thu 1>,,.-1, r's skill with tin-Turkish anil Sniplmr Baths cannot he excelled in Hu- healing at t. Circulars sent tree W/ftja Dr. I. WILLIAMS, MedicaUf Surgical Institute 435 East Water St., Milwaukee, Wis. Thu bont appoint'd Medical institution in tho West. (’bartered W 9 by the Mate hcinslaturc. Dr. Williams has had greattr experience than any specialist in the Wont in the treatment of Private, Nervous and Chronic affections of both sc.xrs. Young, niddle-agcd and Old Men. snfTcr ing from nervous Debility, Lost Manhood and other diseases arising from the Errors of Youth or Secret Vices of Manhood, whoareoflsn deceived by adver tising unacks, before consulting any one should ♦*•- Dr. Williams, or read his two finely illustrated med ical works, containing over r*oopages. “The War liageGulde and IHhcu*cn of Wonicn.’' and the “ IMaeaaeN of Youth and Maiihood.” Either book sent on receipt of bo cents in stamps, or both for il. Dr if the books are not wanted, send b statement of your trouble a valuable Tlouo graph and letter of advice free. If you are a man of business, weak* ned by the strain of your duties, avoid st tnulante andlak# HOP BITTERS. If you are a man of letter*, tolling over your mid. nielli work. to feature hnun and nerve a* e, taa. HOP BITTERS. If you tin- young, am: snHi-ring tr-in any Imli* iTt-tioo or dissipation. take HOP BITTERS. If yon aif married or single old or young. sutler tug {tom poi-r lu-a.th or languishing on a t'i-d of sickness. taae HOP BITTERS. Whoever you are.wherever you are. win never yon lee, thai your system need* clean?;tie. toning or slim eating, without tntoricaiin'i. u.u HOP BITTERS. Haveyou u>j > p*/>•ia, ktdnty or urinary rnplaint, chscav of me to trait A, bo w> .’*. blood *trr, of nerve*? V u will be cured If you aae HOP BITTERS. If yos are s.mi-.y a...ng. are wea. and low iplj lied. trv it! Bay It Insist upan I, V uir druggist Keep, u HOP BITTERS. It ■*e your life. H ha. ~ej hundred*.