Star of the Cape, 13 May 1874 IIIF issue link — Page 4

Tfa*4«, MlkemaU,*** k«*

•yinto'P'i*? ‘■ Ik. f«t «JHnb»l o LJh U- riin. *“ Sfa? rf ttajoinu ttd wf»

kt It oool, ud drink when TM. j. . ewMdn cnre lor fe MBC. Th« irritor rcocired it froi fin, tad found it to be the'm

- Bet ft to oeuo from menld!

I To (old Uu .Mrybaod. Mid atraiciit ft f Bat Ibouth th« <Uy b. ponr, I m*y M

bet ether te regarded aa far , m eblororona. It it stated, as - • it and the oomt chloroform ia t

tether.

'body haa a

Try thi.

. f pulrerired nod aalt. Satorato a piece of col-

or the little - na sot a breath of wind, and though the tide was np, sot a single one of all

*J> 1 1 . >.010 fiahing-reMela had yet retnmed.

£K£«wrc{S££

;? OB. and tb« ««aed to get no I

the bid bine aea was Secke their white sails, as the sky is timra dotted by lines of wild clanging to their homes, only -ise there waa no noise. -Thtr sre sighed faintly sa it reached the one beneath ns, like some exhausted simmer who gains the shore with his

ist gasp. The tiiur f ip shore us conld i

hearily npon "

positMB to earn bat H than < rVatpssassrt. Tobeindo onreoa^r^^eT! T^t’md^d’ ta«. Mylnorbid fancy pictured anon winding up that Terr street, ag on their aboniden a dreadful hing with a white pall upon i hich contained our Utile Baba.

jra£2S-i£j-tg- ^ SS^y?ea’td^liBflwlfw^'sj^i “ it e

rtmld hare been*4emblo ordeal; bnt he good Undlady waa np and .boat,

^oS. U for , BnUm*»^~ °LS‘

t good fora fall crop...

TooricBK-—Nearly onro for the tooths,

recipe : Take equal parts

Deaton,] Ohristianbnrg, Ohio, who had the rheumatism nineteen years, ssji the following is what cored him : "One quart rye whisky, one- ounce wild cherry bark (root), one ounce prickly ash root, one ounce yellow dock root.

If one bottle don

is frequent inquiries are made of the price of securing a homestead npon the pubUc lands under the Homestead set, we gire the following figures as to what it costs s poor man to get a For a grant of 100 acres, sained ot »1.2.1 per sere, (It (fees when entry is made;) gi (less on issue of certificate., For a grant of 80 seres, sained at 81.25 per sore. 87 (fees when entry is msaej) $2 (fees on issnoof certificate.) For a grant of 40 acres, sained at 81.25 per sere, 80 (fee when entry is mute;) 81 (fees on issue of certificate.) Fora grant ot 80 acres, sained at 82.50 per acre, 813 (fees when entry is Bade;) 84 (fees on iasne of certificate.) For a grant of 50 acres, sained at 82.50 per acre, 88 (fees when entry is —’"i) 83 (fees on issue of oertifi-

t 818:

scres, ^; tS'smre, 87. The 82-501uida is that included within the limits of the railway grants, and only open to soldiers under the Homestead act. A soldier must settle on his claim until the time of settlement added to his term of sersios in the arms makes up flse years, which is the length of r*“'-

ment required from settlers who not sorted in army or nary.

lamb is dropped, whose dam doe afford milk enough for It, to feed it twice a day with cow's milk, warm from the cow, in addition to what ths dam affords, snd next fall they will base more and better lambs. Don't bother with a tea-spoon unless you want to fret and say wicked words. I see by your morning paper that absep are suffering in tome localities from stretches. Remedy —sure snd simple : Steep thoroughwort sery strong, sweeten with rnolaasst, fill a quart bottle with it sa warm as the patient can bear it, stand astride of its neck, pul the loft hand undrthe jaw, holding up the head, and tur it down her throat, and if taken as too

JlVST SUB’S PA5IC. The moat beautiful spot in England it CloreUy, in North Dersn, mads ~ miliar to every reader by Kingsley's Westward Ho.” The view afforded from the village is not extensive, but it includes almost every element of natural beauty. On the west, the sea, down to which its single street descends so steeply that no wheeled conveyance, nor horses' hoofs, may traverse it; snd a small but strongly built harbor, where the fishing •boats toss and tumble, or lie strended on their sides, according as thirtide is in or out. On the north ‘ east, wood overhanging wood, elond on ckmd,'' and crowding to the cliff-loos, against whose bases the Atlantic wave forever beats and foams. Nothing bnt thane objects—which for beauty, indeed, are all-snfBsient—are to be seen by those who sojourn in CloreUy—these ends little strip of sky. The houses are too near their opposite neighbors to admit of more extensive vision. A noble park, however, stretches to southward ; and beyond it, headland after headland, till ths last of md'a soU yields I

;e of tlioiri

measure of deligb

„ and gloat npon the present urea. It Is fair here, surpassing bnt would be fair there also, e ia no apprehension of oversteptbe barrier of home hematics, end ng npon anything barren. e honaea fn the little town are -selves moat picturesque and pleasant—to the eye at least; and each of ' from porch or window.

otberperema about the harbor bnt ourselves, but the witchery of the scene stilled our talk, and little Baba'a prattle waa the only aonud that broke the silence of aea or shore. After a while it became the child's bedtime, and Lucy

rose to accompany him to tha inn I expressed my intention of remai Frank kindly offered to etay witk .aw how great ware the attraohim of seeing Baba in his bath

“I’m a! mr cloth

» soon sa I had expected,''wl._ , rat words,' “ for her aiater, who helps or with the washing, fallen ill. All b . is small thingv shall, however, besent

without fall, aha says."

My heart seemed to atop beating, yet i I aomahow * ■“-* — -

somehow contrived to say that there 11 IS no hurry about the things. If so Mr. Bt —I, .. „ ^11., nr n nair of eeff. had ■“06 >>

' the SL Paul sad Pa d Company. Pawed-yaaa, SS, u

it tha Spanah Gariists

With ;

^ ipied myself at once with packing np not only my own r clothes, bnt all of Lucy’s that I could 1

lay hands on. in order that the be ready to send after ns, and

CO for tha relief of pa

tired to bed—not

bnt tc

are very enterprising ; bnt I don't •hat anybody—even in Ciovellylink of running away with yonr no." And so J was left alone.

In that still summer night, with the quiet stars shining above me, and below me—for the great deep waa like a mirror—an old woman like myself, you

may aay, reader, might have c —““ “ v -r

■on the transi-

„ latter days,

xnucaa mo/ wort principally fixed • i certain picnic that waa to take place

rtead o? reflecting n rinses of lifa, and a;

io cold meat and polled tas bent, if possible, o le fruit, principally on rant, and aa a surprise.

sitting room dear Lucy's

hich we had engaged for the mo _id waa slowly toiling up the steps to the inn, when this occurred. Half-way

In the morning, Frank got np benaa, aa waa hia custom, to go ' bathe. As he ran whistling tha stairs, I thought with a aht how ho would have to pass the infeeted house, and perhaps bring him the very peril from wi have preserved him ; still apeak. I knew his nervou lion, and that he wonld not be able to keep the dreadful secret from Lucy ft a single hour. At breakfast, all aai _ myself were in tha higbeat spirits, look5 forward to their day of pleasure, even planning othera to be en'— J while this beautiful warm wt

lasted."

3 to me as though the oatures were dancing if their own graves,

got them off, and we walked

together to the top of the hill, which waane nearest spot to which a o ‘

could bo brought, and began on: nc*r. Every mile which wo put b ourselves and the village took rom my heart, and yet taiey rail tpon my silence. I did my I leem like myaelf, bnt the aflbrt

daughter went througlMne like a knell,

nd I feared to speak, lest I should

irly 1 ^ * —^ 1 • *—

OT?veu!^M!ua' l .ubSti2rim > M»snd. .. tha U«U lUghta lull, pro riding tLat 1U '

prorWan* ahall apply to schools and public insulation' of Iseraing or bsnorolonos —* -

". by law and endowsd by ill" Uuitad

isreafUir endowsd by any hi sic

r. Piatt, if Indiana, from the Oot ’eusiaiis, reported back the bill amt mttam ( of'lk?jfarofTs^. aadto s^lrtelien'there frornlnconeei'tlchce oyally to the Oorortinienl'T'laced

r. Neglcy, of rsnn.. allied laare to

ilobou iustmctlng Lbs OonuniUeo c md tbo set ofra of Juno, 1571 w honorably discharged toMlem and sallora, r wldowa and orphan ehUdran to sc™irs icrtcads on the pqUie^lauds. wjlluia

t Uie paragraph mqmrtng 1

of a planet by Pallta, in right asesnsn 15 boom 20 minutes, declination 17 degrees i is, tenth magnitude Although Coi

ESrS^jrssari;

which all tenau -thejocean. I vanlage-gi

Whatever little oolgno

by their dwelitreet, ia filled

lings — with flowers j bnt in Iht

village, at the beginnig ol the winding steps that leads down to tha harbor, •■-ere ia a vacant spot, in which ia placed long low seat, where all that havft fled up the steps may atop and rest: id where in the calm eves, when toil is done, men come and ait, while the

and pours her

huuihle.-it kin.l ' Ich lords H n

aiss of any

loo long, inflammation takes although you may get on f the bowels, it often does no goon. Don't wait a minute, bnt run for the herb, which ia probably wrapped close in an old newspaper and plainly labelled. Steep strong, administer at onoc, and the thing ia done.—

The Rural Borne, of Rochester, givea this bit of history :—During the year 1857 a man named Arthur Dugan went to the town of Palermo, N.T., and bought sixty acres of dir sandy laud, with here and there a little tendency to gravel. Ho paid 81,800 for it. He knew

nothing about farming, b '

chinlat by trade. After m, land ho had 8200 left He found his

land waa worn out He began by !

ing aahea and plaster; wonld draw , tntocn fourteen miles to Oswego, and load Ida team back with manure from the livery stables His crops increajwd. Hia aahea were spread correepondingiy thick. He 'raised principally potatoes and wheat Now 2.000 bushels of ashes

a year is about what he buys Hii

talosa. for several yean past, have aged 260 bushels an acre ; Ills winter wheat thirty bushels or over; and '

has saved, from hia farm alone, till

now holds 812.000 in bank stock, s wonld not Bell his farm for 8100 an I acre. In 1868 ha Bold in potatoes and I wheat over 83.400 worth. He is r 1 —

kmygn as the beat fanner in the oc

M. H. Wooden, of Madison, Ind., says : “I had a very pretty plmr ‘—

iu my yard last summer. It had

few nfami on it It looked healthy, bnt the fruit fall off until only seven

luma remained, That

d even the little inn them, as being twice ta neighbors, is such

or even commercial ■avaler may deem but a sorry reatinglaee ; to others, howercr, of a more uaginative type, it will afford a richer ocommodstion than many a so-called hotel.” Its little rooms are famished -•ith rare china and curious ornaments, “picked up" by the Olovelly men, who are all sailors), in many a distant

and; and its faro, if plain, ia o’ " beat—the thickeat cream, the In i, flab straight from the net ■ a store of fruns. homesmad

ibranco of them,

ad yet in this earthly paradise the . of the serpent U over all, in a oer“ancient flah-like amell" which pervades the whole lovely distracts one’s thoughts fro veloua beauty. The ocean b aa it comes up the woody cleft, la often tainted by it, and by the time it reaches one, speaks of the finny deniaena of the pathless deep rather than of ita cavernous cells. When there ia no breexc, and the noonday son beats down —aint village—which, notwithst narrowness and the shades of rironing woods, it does with pitiless force—the case ia greatly war— ,m - thsppy visitor likens hiaual S hot bed, and a hot-bed ol

“^3tmd I neiftew Fla s sat toget

Ale Inn, di _ . _ jve described, glntting the eye with i

noble feast, but much at the expense of our olfactory organa—“Good Heavens !

suppose any epidemic was to bi in this Eden here, uot a sou

shadow of the arch, I wi any passer-by wL- .. . jtely touch me. I had scarcely reached this resting plane when my ear [ was struck by tha faint and anppresaed ( ' • ---- "he was evidently io ' other aide o* c

I leaned, ans. „ _

touched her with my “Dead, dead, dead!'' aha -Oh, what ahall ws do wit!

bread winner ?"

I waa about to knock at the cottage Mr, to aoe if I could be of any sort of imfort to this poor bereaved creature, ■ heard the step of a man coming 1 - Mil. so unsteady that I could ielude that he waa in liquor. Such an occurrence ia not an unexampled one in a fishing village, but I have rtioular horror of a drunken perand therefore alirank quickly back into my corner. The nun came on, ami itopped at the very door at which I had

-i—-. »- knoot laas?" I heard him say.

■' Matter enough, mao," returned she, —.—— " Our PollyV

r first halting-place, he

•u-n-lookcd-foi opportunity If of conferring with Frank alone, I told him all the wretched story, o my intense horror, when I had

te dona, bit only reply

At first, I thou

d the National Currency acts, sad toes- , ii free banking. Referred to the Banking , tVNrll. of PSg presented a petition to privates, In tha Marina Corps to tbo benefits o

«L I tho child hi

•n* TWs says Dr. Walpole has te*

Ragged stockings and ^ protrndir

autTY vwarts' axr

Chari es'Sumner. -"i-ST''"

P finite tna ft,

15,000Boldin 80 Ban. Mills •■srrtinrturA-

§iillijpi0 ProfitableEmplpvment

]>r. J. Walker's California

m the (ewer ranges ot

aofOidite-

as of TmoAl Bn-

lood purifier and a Hfe-glrlngprtnotpto, perfect Renovator and Inrigorator f the ayssem. Never before In ths btory oT ths w«M has * medidna beau

gears.. “EAT TO UVE?’ F. E. SMITH Jl CO.’S O

CRUSHED

WHITE WHEAT. . S iSh wSr

aaaMaa af Ttmaau Bmuaa In MalligBte sick of every disease man is hair la. They tha liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious

Eedatire. Connter-Ir

rus, baxstire, Dlui itant. Sudorific, A1

Tin Markets.

■wsuw A TBS aOXXTV

, TEA.

>n Person ran fake these Bitten according to directions, and remain long unwell, providedthelrbonea are not daitroyod by miDersl poison or other moans, and vital organs wasted beyond Bilious, Remittent and Intermitteut Ferers, which are,so prevalent In tho valleys of our great rivert throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Mlsaouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberiaud, Arkan- ■' ' Colorado, Rroioa; Rio Grande,

. A«r.'j

^V^MlUSMSillM^ret.^Wrtt,

at, my dear Aunt Sno, it's ke,” cried he : “ I beard al.

alory of Polly'a death thia morning, and what she died of. Polly't a oo: - and the foolish woman it belonged thought it had died of the cattle ' “

S 25w , eu P 8‘*“»^ify^!^iS i S HO! FOR COLORADO! “ \‘5jsss? s&r'fesrif su:

led— moorings 'all right, but In taking a t

M

down th

with hia

“Bot, Frank, I their brei ’

Jo it wi

. in a

tpply the milk to ..•eature had reallv

coarse all

and if t!

And or

re she burst into

' repeated he, ... ,

daxed way, aa though he eonld not picture to himself tho dread reality.

Don't say ahe’a daqd 1"

Hash I Don't speak so loud, man. tho ia dead, and dead of ’’ here aho appeared to whisper

rmething in hia ear.

Great Heaven I What waa it that »e poor woman had died of, that tin .so should be so secret about it? terrible eonviotion. flashed upon me that tho hideonadiaeaae of which Frank and I had spoken that very morning had antmsllv hrcVan not in t'-- —'

Yea, sh And h

a tbo p

ith no “ ties,” hail bnt my own safety i look to ; and directly I had attend

le remark, I regretted it.

within five mil os, I a

iu thia cloven ravine without i of air,. And there’s amall-po

3 ho, with riddai cr thonglu of that

actually broken . of all othera where w

to fear it.

“ Ton will not breathe a word abont

it, Alec,” oontinned tho sobbing voice. "It is bad enough as it ia; but if it jmea to be known how she came by

er end, it will be even worse." For an instant it struck me that the

poor creature whose death they were diacuasing bad. been put out of the

rid by foul play, and such is the aelinesa of human nature (though, to

... rae justice, tho thankfulness would not have bee* on my own account,) that I should have been almost thankful foranch a eolation of the affair. The next few words, however, convinced

" Gan I see her?" inquired tho mmi,

gravely, hia fuddled brains appearing to have become cleared a little by the greatness of bis loos. "If I had thought her to hare been so bad, I wonld r~‘

have gone np-street to the alelionae. 1 " Ton couldn't have saved her, AR naught could have saved her, ■

e disease, of would ha—

destroyed. Aa to the ah waaherwoman, who does not happen live in the village at all, I waa told, . •*-- little poat-offleo this morning, >g other loeal intelligence, the* she lias got hay-fever. That's not

er to be afraid off"

burst into tears, throw myaelf Ini

ink's arms, and fainted away.

Then I came to myaelf, Lucy wi

wetting my forehead with eau-de-Co-logne, and Baba fanning mo aasiduonsjy with the “Gnide-book to North Devon," while my nephew waa regarding their united efforts with r ’ : -

which concern struggled will

strong sense of the ridionlona

"Rank," whispered I, imploringly, " don't tell them that I packed np

things, or anything about it.”

“ It was the heat that had overcome

'■ rogue would inquire

ie that he would call U up for action l* -.and be gave uoUce tlist^bo^wooid l s'wifa. noder Uis preteodi^ ssnehon « its tom Of polsgsmj, to the great scandal disgrace of the people and tlosonimoul of Unllsd Statse; and proriding for tho appe

trot, according to the census nf ISTU athoriiine thoMeretnryor tha Treasury , — —•bdrew legal lenders te the amontit of ' twenty-Ore per cent. Ol lhe addiUonal^lw _n iaredimadto m,m,OoS^ncb r legal tendara to he held aa a raftrve, to hi

i- —-i of emergency.

Uelltab, of S. Y., Introduced a

.eo broeght tho veeaol over. Tho dead weight J tho low aide kept her from righting he ain, and her alanUngalUledo prevented thoeo ii i tbo tap from getting to tho high eld

f GOOD, D0EABLE ABD CHEAP T Shipped Ready for Use. 4 ManofirtmTi! bj J. W. CnkPlUB

aaa, lieu, kJoiorauii, nra—, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Ri — ■ 'imes, and many othera, with

t tributaries, throughout our

jntry during tbo Summer and - Antmpn, and remarkably so during aeaaoua ef unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive deomenta of the atomacb and liver,

oilier abdominal viscera. In thek

ment, a purgative, exerting a pow. erful Influence upon these various onguns, is essentially neeeasary. Them la no cathartic for the purpose equal »> Pit. J- Walker's Vinegar Bitters.

speedllj rid matt'

bowels are loaded, tUmnlatlng the secretions of the liver, , and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organa. Fortify the body against dlseasa by purifying all Ita Holds with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold Of a ayatem thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain In tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Cheat, Dizziness, Sent Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste

Lungs, Pain In the region of tl neys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, nro the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One Bottle will prove a better guarantee of Ita merits than a lengthy advertise-

— —ing' Swellings, Ulcers. F.ryilpol

. Goitre, Scrofulous ln(

iHBaanscux rLouuM'i

I building iu Stockii ■ Transit Company wa Benata by a veto of > payable In Breton

FLORENCE i

V FLORENCE

NaJTJSkS

lariat the dnvthe rot Except for Out, I

enjoyed ■

r. Southard, of Ohio, moved to anepand the - ' adopt a reaolution directing the Com- . Benklag and Ourroucy to report what eqoitable apportionment of tha whede elUUng

injuring four other employeee A med Mitchell, a grinder In the Thayer Scythe 1 irks, la Went Wlnsted, waa Instantly killed j

Sergeant Bates Again. Sergeant Baler Is preparing a grand inflation for the world. While in Chicago recently hi nouneed hia programme. Tho plan ia

Agreed to. The preamble to the reeoluUon re- ’ dice that there I. an exeeaa of Urcuktloti In ■ tho Eastern Slates of 810.teO,OM *

Middle State, af 50.41(1.603. and n

- — inotot Columbia and tha B eatem Hlaioa of t51.0m.II03. In Hie i Sir ten of t31.4K.iill,and (.1 tharaelfie

nd Tvrntorieo of t7.623.5Sd. aqSab!^ SlanSaUaa^rf SSSmI

” drowned."

and Italy will each furnish c ’ier of thair respective arm! grand peace march throngl .naa named. Each aoldu

mounted

; who

black homo, bearing th<

is country, while leading th< will be one on a white hone,

white banner, labeled.

olden time, readers may remember, the c generally prevailed, “ ‘ 1 "

(Had Tidings for the Slaves of King

Alcohol.

ny a manly form ia palsied ; a noblo mind ia destroyed ; a prioeleaa soul lost through >( strong drink I To tho despairing victims of the Satanic tyrant, Aloohol, whose shattered nerves, and trembling limbs, and racking head- --■— —m to find no relief except in ed nao of tho fatal poison

School Teachers Wanted FREE TO 800K AGENTS ! An Elegantly Bound Cauvoaslng Book a

tft ^ a"DOMISliC:

iowu their grant curmtin powers in the 0*1 obstinate and Intrectahle cores. For Inflammatory and Chronla Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit, tent and Intermittent Fevers, Disease* of Blood, liter. Kidney* and Bladder, •o Bitten have no equal Such Diseases caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.—Persona end In Paints and Minerals, such aa ■beta. Type-setters, Gold l oaten, and ra, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of tho Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Waleis's Vm-

>d spread o

e lightly

leaved out nleely.‘waa*iuu‘ < of plums, and nearly all remained on until ri peso full were the branche« that I bad lo tie them up to support tho weight. The fraitwHqaite period in size and shape, and I am sure tha manner of treatment w of the Improvement I

hich were not connected with _- art,” as be called iL He was a really xoellent landscape painter, but hia (’ - rioua nuisance to those who haltl to hia diaacriationa upon it ceassuy not only to admire w] nired. bnt for the same ider.ti

think many frni

frail they woulc

H tha body can ba an iXaiinSi

SSs^SHSa^third, Thus, by intordieting tire use of in foto thronghout the fever, no' no moans to be deapiaed ; but it ia much

a impossible, m bis “chop," take hia goods

Frank seldom eseapi and be compelled yt

whether yon would or no,; uu, wu

d he were the hamlaomeat you

couple I have ever seen, and were < —• -other, and to Bni little boy, jnit ia years old, and their idoL I think th wonld have allowed, ton, that he hac "iird worshiper iu AnntSue. Hu always

soompstnied ua in onr excundr— tado the very prettiest figure ble ia the “ foreground " for t t'a pictures. At home. too. o

ay, ho waa quite

naught but harm could a Mg to look at m

w done is to 1

we shall be — inn folks should be frightened

away from us,"

The inn folks I Here waa a family who evidently derived their living from the customer* at tho inn. The man perhaps had a boat for hire; tha womai doubtless took in the washing of iht visitors—our washing amongst othera Whether it was small-pox or acarlel fever, we were equally doomed if anj article waa used from that cottage; am I silently resolved that it should not tu used. The things from tho wash, th. landlady infarmed me, wonld be sent home towards the end of the week ; and

.ntime I wonld devise leaving Olovelly withe

possible, giving any shook to poor '•But l

knowing 3-Uflt get

„ , „ — the thermometer rose above tho degree marked temperate and lighter clothing bf

ho will carry . white nanner, (.omea, ” l b< ’ Fence on earth, and good will to tq pnrify the Hood. But,i

31^ IhTTEr

joy!

a cavalcade, which will Sergeant Bates, will atari fro! dam, and will visit in torn

Stockholm. St. Petersburg, Berlin, Dresden, Vienna, Venice, Rome, Floree, Geneva, Paris, London and some ker plnoea in Europe. They will then ibnrx at Liverpool for the United States, and after visiting Washington, will commence a march io tho West, passing through New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois to Chicago. Tho march will probably not begin until next spring, though the Loudon parties desire to start at a Sergeant Bates expects to reach Chicago in abont fire months from tha time hia

flags are unfurled at Amsterdam.

Absurd and silly aa thia contemplated pilgrimage may seem, it might yet strongly arouse the people, and the march of the fourteen may yet be aa

hygienist They „ salts, calomel and jalap, and pills

merabla. There was, however, a

truth in the idea that the more s tary and in-door habita of the cold hydro-carbonaceous feeding—butler, sugar, lard, pork, gravy, eto. —occasioned obstructions of the excretory

''is liver, akin, kidneys, 1 ige, rendering special at. _

tion to tho general depurating function expedient But, tkanki to tha health

drunksni

„ ... tho iila of . They restore tone and the ayatem, and entirely

ie pernicious appetite 1

y a few bottles of Vm

—id yon will never o atrong spirits again, bnt find your : health repaired, yonr mind restored, and be once more a man in the beat 1 use. Health ia cheap when Vueoob

imtns are 81 a bottle.—Cbm. “ For the Blood Is the Ufa.”

CiMojtri* Miami

STgBgRry

“.SK

srsteei,wbtrhnre stwnT*^rt(aiitcsS ^SrrhUetwI^touia^^n^slwlj

Scald-head, So'rs Eye*. F.rysiprlas. Itch, Scurfs. Illscolo rations of the Bkln, limn res and Disease* of the Skin of whatever noma nature, are literally dug up and earned it of tha system In a short time by ths us* ' these Bitter*. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, rkiajr in tho system of so many thousands, _e affectually destroyed and removed. Ne system of medicine, no vermifuge*, no anthelmlnitle* will flee the system from worms .... For Female Complaints, hi young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or tho turn of life, these Toni* Bitters displsy so derided an influence that improvement Is soon perceptible. Cleons* the Vitiated Blood when ever vou find Its Impurities bursting through ths skin In Funnies, Eruptions, or Bores; cleanse It whan you find It obstructed ud sluggish In the veina;.cleanse It when''.! la foul: your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of tee system . MCDONALD A CODruggists end Gse. Agio, 8*ahT*wrlssn,OsMfcswla Iron in the Blood

IO whole range of mnlodiee k re prevalent in early apring *' ble to peraonalhab|ta; and J,

' urged tho ms certificate "

Whist 1 Come , mnnago that" Thou the door cloeed behind him, and f heard tho rtepa of ' ith of them aaoending some rickety airs to the upper floor. Though'almost breatbleaa with terror, I contrived to stagger away from the hateful house, the very touch ef which seemed to be contagious, and renohod tha bench ot which 1 have spoken, at the top of tho steps, and there 1 sat down to think tha matter out ' mi waa aa heavy aa _ Gideon's fleece. How the morrow's tun would aooreh np that street, and fructify

> the sound of the Maiaoiliaiso.—A'o-

-Good Hints for Everybody, The way to get credit ia lo be punctual ; tho way to preserve it ia not to use it much. Bottle often ; hare short its. Treat no man's appearance; anaes are deceitful, perhaps asI for tbo purpose ol obtaining credit Beware of gauds exteriors; rogues, usually drees well. The 1 'lia; treat hija. if any one, i 1 but Uttle on hia back. Ns

in Bummer. Tho preventive mens nr therefore, may be all summed up the words, wholesome regimen. Bnt when the apring maladies appear, whether in the shape c “*• boils, catarrh, influenza, lia, rheumatism, ery aacho, etc., "Do thj Take no dreg atafl. I blood. Submit to no blii Neither vomit nor purge. Sw( Swallow no hard eider. Do n bother with herb ten. But bathe daily, diet abstemiously, exercise moderately, prefer regain ble food, drink only water, — seasonings, gir* These terrible which ao many era drugged

FAMILY PHYSICIAN

iiffirtiTn.

MINERAL ROCK SPRING,

CURES

[ Drops. Diabetes, stfeatlon; Bright's Dll

CONSUMPTION “ Ad I to Onro.

■WTLLSON’a

Carbolated Cod Liver Oil

WISH ARTS

TV

Kit Carson

Nature's Great Remedy THROAT amd LUNG

DISEASES!!

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