. - * ... «... ' A " „ iAT. x>" -< ' - \ ', - u- ! V ' * • * .\:*.- •>• -, •• - ' • • >v • . ••'••• ' - . - "" :' r :;• *• .*>*>> - . ' • ' 1 - . 1 " • " * . • • •- . .." •' - ••V VEGETINE. ACTS AS A TONIC. Tegcttne also acts as a most powerful and grateful fonle. and chis feature !s most noticeably experienced •Jby persons recovering from acute diseases, and by wo- tjnen who have long been afflicted with Ills pccull.tr to Jtlielr sex alone. Invariably has It been found to lr- Crease the tone or power of the nervous system, by hlch, la tarn, all other portions of the frame are rengtliened, and the quality of the blood improved. '« man, woman or child It will Unpait strength *hen Tength Is wauling. It will revitalize the system of the overworked being, who«c life Is being frittered iway In endless cares and anxieties ; it will Infuse the strength of Iron and the roseate tint of health Into the 1*eak sinews and bloodless countenance of women brushed by many hardships and oppressed by the dan- re of child-bearing:; it will give new life to the pallid :;1 cffi&eistcd Coin! srIio«i amirtUe is gone, whose ovemente are feeble and nerveless, and whose whoi« iky stem is one of decay and debilitation. VEGETINE is % true tonic, and hot a deceptive stimulant; the pood It imparts ttKlay is not succeeded by Injury to-inor- %i%, "if: i-"•.ft VEGETINE Rev. O. T. Walker Says : tt K. * L'164 STEBCT- I feel bound to express with my signature the high fSInelplace upon your TKGKTIXE, My family have lised it for the last two years, In nervous debility It Is .Invaluable, and y recoi.omend It to all who may need an , Invigorating, innovating tonic. ' -r_. . .. O. T. WALKEK, Iwuttly Faster of Bowdoln Square Church, Boston. VEGETINE PURIFIES the BLOOD. „ „ Boston, Mass., Jan 13,1877. MR. B. R. Btevbns: Tkar Sir--I have been using Vecetlne for some time • with the greatest satisfaction. and can highly recom mend it as a great cleanser and purifier of the blood. J. L. HANAFORI), • Sister ft B.'ileston Square M, E. Church. VEGETINE Rev. J.-P. LUDLOW Writes: 178 BALTIC STREKT, BROOKLYN, N. y., ) _ • _ November 14,1874. > H. H. STETEXS. ESQ. ; Dear Sir--From personal benefit received by Its use, *8 well as from personal knowledge of those whose Cures thereby have seemed utmost miraculous, 1 can most heartily and sincerely recommend the VEGETINE for the complaints which It Is claimed to cure. JAMES P. LUDLOW, Late Faster Calvary Baptist Church, Sacramento, ClL VEGETINE I Regard m a Valuable FAMILY MEDICINE. MR. H. K STKTOIS: ,AM'*' 1878" Dear Sir--I take pleasure in saying that I have used the Yegelhie in my family, with good results. and lhave known of several cases of remarkable cure effected by It 1 regard it as a valuable family medicine. Truly yours, rev. wm. Mcdonald. The Bev. Wm. McDonald is well known through the United States as a minister hi the M. E. Church. Thousands will bear testimony gfand do It voluntarily) that VEGETINE Is the best medical compound yet placed before the public for renovating and purifying the blood, eradicating all humors. Impurities or poison ous secretions from the system.invigorating and strength, enlng the system debilitated by disease; In fact, It is, as many have called it, "The Great Health Restorer." VEGETINE PREPARED BY H. B. STEVEN'S, Boston, Mass* Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists; Chicago SclioolofArt --AND-- Drawing and Painting Academy.' Oil, Water Colors, India Ink, Painting, Pastel, Crayon Sketching, Object and Antique Drawing, Modeling Sculpture. Mechanical and Architectural Designing. Oil and Water-Color- Paint- ing a Specialty. A few pupils can be accMinnunlateil at residence of manager. Decorative Art Classes now open. Summer Classes now open. Special terms to Teachers. PROF. M. H. HOLMES, Manager and 1'rojirietor. 1009 Indiana Ave., near 24th St, Chicago. ADVERTISERS BESMKIXG TO MtMBACH The README of THIS STATE CAST DO SO 1N TMJB Cheapest and Best Manner sv iBDiptnt E. E. PRATT, 78 J»okeo& Street. Chloaoo* Hershey School of hlusical Artj At H«r«ii«y Manic Hall. ChleaKii, 111. All branches of MUSIC, MODERN LANGUAGES and ELOCUTION taught. Ihiusual facilities offered. Con certs, Classes in Harmony, Sight-sinking. Italian, elo cution. etc.. frte is nil vutdi*. Send fur Circular. IMPOSSIBLE Kept by Dealers. HARR III) to have an accident with our Automatic Safety Lamp, HARRIS Si SMITH, Janesvilie, Wis. Catarrh & Consumption. & Deafness of 50 yeans' staiulitigcured by Mrs.Dr.Keck,Dav enport. Iowa. 513 Krady St. Circulars frw Graefenberg 44 Marshalls " CATHOLIGON AN INFALLU3LS BEPMBPT FOB ALL FSMALB COMPLAINTS. PBIOB $1^0 PBB BOTTLE.THB BZPBB1BNOB OF MANT TBABS AMONG TBI MOST CULTIVAT ED AND BSFINBD HAS RESULT ED IN STAMPING THIS BE- MASKABLE PREPARATION AS THE ONLY RELIABLE BBMEDY FOR THE DISTRESSING DIS EASES OF WOMEN. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. „ GraetenbergCo.56 EeadeSt N.Y H U N T ' S R E M E D Y ^ ^ETSKhciME I , HUN1 klDNr TIBIOMIJ fur tke abovt it hM KSXuftodi. Even Mile vanutei 8cad to W. • o F A R M I N G is LANDS l*900«000 Acre# W»T trom • hlrairo At $6 tot&Tln ftrm wis and on terms to suit all classes. Send postal-canl for maps and pamphlet descriptive of 1« counties. Low freights. Excursion tMcets. nut and baek. free to buyers. Start right! transformation apply to Iowa R. R. I-and Co.. 9* Rw»«loIplt HOSE, FiKI AND GARDES. --Rice Waffles^--To one cupful and a half of boiled rice add two cupful* of flour; mix it with milk. The batter must be rather thicker than pancake batter. Add a little salt; then beat two eggs very light, and stir them in the last thing, giving it a good beating. Bake in waffle-irons. --Fried Lettuce.--Chop lettuce rery fine, and, if liked, the tops of two or three young onions. Add two well- ing-pan, ana when mei^eci pour mixture. Turn when of a light brown and serve with or without vinegar. --Lemon-Syrup.--Squeeze the lem ons; strain the juice carefully lest any pulp should remain; to one pint of juice add two pounds of sugar; set it away till completely dissolved, stirring it oc casionally; then bottle it. One or two teaspoonfuls of this svrup stirred into a glass of water will make delightful lemonade. --The Philadelphia Farm Journal foes for a man who cuts firewood in arvest time, but advises the good wife to stick to cobs, chips, old broom han dles, buckets, etc., until the last sheaf of oats is in ihe barn. Come "West, young man," where coal is mined from under a soil whose surface, tickled with a hoe, laughs with golden crops. If not, cut your fuel when the snow flies. --Prairie Farmer. --The following is a good recipe for making poor man's pudding: One cup of water, one cup of molasses, one tea- spoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of soda; stir stiff and steam three hours. The sauce for it is: three-fourths of a CUD of butter, one cup of sugar, one tablespoonful of flour. After it has cooked a little, stir in four well-beaten eggs and a tablespoonful of vanilla; or, prepare a vinegar sauce.--N. Y. Times. --It is a fact first observed and made known by an £ngljsh farmer and agri cultural writer, Mr. John Hannam-- recently deceased--and widely confirm ed by many experiments during several years past, that the later stages of the ripening process diminish the propor tion of flour and nutritive value of the wheat. The time to secure the best grain is when^ the kernel is still soft enough to be crushed, but is compara tively free from moisture, and breaks into meal between the thumb-nails.-- American Agriculturist. --Mr. Mechi, that accomplished farmer, says in a letter to the Gazette, a quarterly journal edited by the stu dents at the Agricultural College, Cirencester, Eng.: "Many a worthy and even wealthy English farmer, now advanced in years, laments the want of that education and enlightenment which was not available to him in his early days. Education cannot give brains, but it can cultivate and improve them; and even the barren mental fields gain by cultivation. Ignorance in agriculture is not bliss, it is unprofit able." Selection of Wheat for Seed. There is a reason why the produc tion of grain in the Western States has not reached the perfection which at tended the growing of stock. The farmers have not considered the „ im portance of. good parentage, nor have they given any attention to the matter of selecting commensurate with the importance of our grain crops. This season there will be an immense yield of wheat. The price will be very low, and to the farmer who gets but fifteen bushels per acre, there will be scarcely any profit, and even his labor will be poorly paid for. On the other hand the man who secures thirty bushels per acre will have the margin of whatever this extra fifteen bushels will bring him, less the extra cost of handling, which will be very slight. This extra yield is worth more to a farmer in wheat than in root or potato crops, because the expense attending the gathering and marketing is a very slight addition on account of the increased yield, and be the price ever so low the extra yield is nearly clear gain. This margin, to be sure, depends largely upon character of soil and qual ity of tillage, but a very important ele ment is often lost sight of, and that is the pedigree o£ the seed. The man who would consider another demented to put a valuable cow in a herd con taining a scrub bull, even if there be in the herd never so good bulls of her own kind, because of the losing chance, accomplishes this same piece of folly each year with his wheat crop. He takes the rye and cockle out of his seed, to be sure, but leaves the kernels produced from roots bearing one stalk and a short head with these from roots bearing fifty stalks and long heads. It is a well-established fact that a single head of wheat awa;y from all others does not till well--in other words, a crop is produced in a field of wheat largely by cross fertilization. The im portance. then, of having seeds from stalks well fertilized--that is, fertilized hy the male element of good heads from good roots--becomes an impor tant matter. This can not be consolida ted in wheat as perfectly as in cattle and horses, but it can be so far man aged as to create a tendency toward better seed with each generation, and now is the time to begin. Select first from the largest stool, be cause the chances are that, with a good many heads together, the fertilization was from the same plant, and as the plant itself is a good one, in choosing from it the promise is for a good re sultant. By going through a wheat- field, in a little while one can secure the cream of the field, which, if plant ed by itself another year, and perhaps the short heads and poor roots taken out, will certainly give a quantity of seed that will increase verv materially the produce of an acre. Every farmer cannot go at work upon crossing wheat artificially, with success. This requires peculiar knowledge and skill; but not one but can, by using his best judgment in selecting, increase the value, in three years, of his crop, by 25 and perhaps 50 percent. Thisis no theoretical estimate; it has been tested5 and found to work. We wish also to suggest, in this con nection, that in preparing for a grain show at the State and county fairs, let a good bundle of the grain be shown, not a single handful of a dozen heads, but a generous bunch, showing head and stalk, in' connection with the This is a good work >ys; perhaps by so doing the others may be drawn to cleaned grain. for the txr attention of this matter of selection, and thus a good influence got out from this simple work. Fairs are for the education of the people in all matters that promise, to increase production and benefit the farmer. Here is a chance to drive a wedge,--Detroit Free iVess. The « Cnsnspecling" Faraifr* Every day brings us new develop ments in tne swindle business. The " tricks M devised to entrap the unwary farmer are uoiii numerous ami Inge nious. A correspondent tells us that two " nice-looking " fellows, in a " nice- looking carriage," stopped for dinner at the house of an intelligent farmer of his acquaintance, not long since. They made themselves "agreeable" during the dinner hour, and succeeded in convincing " mine host " that they were men of importance engaged in the laudable work of writing up the agricultural resources of the country for a well known metropolitan paper. After dinner they sat on the front porch and quizzed the farmer as to the resources of the district, average yield of crops, etc., etc. The time for depart ure arriving, they asked how much the bill was. " Nothing!" O, they couldn't listen to that! They were well paid by the proprietors of the aforesaid jour nal, and could afford to pay their way. They couldn't think oi " sponging." They always " paid fifty cents apiece for dinner and the same for horse feed, making a dollar and a half; hadn't anything less than a ten-dollar bill,', which tnev tendered to the farmer' insisting that he must take the dollar and a half out of it and give them the change. This was accordingly done, an appeal to the wife's butter money being neoessary, however, before the change could , be made. * By this time the horse and carriage were at the front gate, and with many kind expressions on both sides, the two voung men drove off, leaving behind them a character for intelligence and generosity, which, had it extended over a Congressional district, would have been ail thai was necessary to secure them seats in Congress. A few days later the farmer went to town to pay his June taxes, when he found to his unbounded surprise that the bill was a notorious counterfeit, and that the same ten-dollar bills had been " shoved off" on no less than three other men in the county. The farmer returned home a wiser but humbler man, and now no induce ments are powerful enough to make him entertain travelers, no matter how " gentlemanly" they may appear. --Practical Farmer. Age. " It is hard to grow old gracefully, spme authority tells us, and when "we see the strenuous efforts made by many to resist the incursions of time, we readily agree to the proposition. But it is like fighting against the stars in' their courses, and perhaps the struggle only renders the ravages of jrears more apparent. People are constant^ grow ing old, and yet no one seems to get used to it. Doubtless we ought to ac cept every change age brings as an in cident of the journey merely, as we ac cept the changes of the seasons, taking part in the pleasures peculiar to each without hankering unwisely for those beyond reach and unseasonable. Wrin kles should not appall or gray hairs afflict nor the loss of bloom sadden, since, we would not barter our experi ences, our memories, the fruit of years, tor all the beauty youth can boast. Those who earn their bread have a feeling that age disables them in the eyes of the world, and diminishes their chances of obtaining a livelihood; others, who have been used to being merely ornamental, to being admired and complimented upon the very charms of which age divests us, cannot endure its approach with equanimity, rebel against being supplanted by younger people, against being laid upon the shelf like a book that has out grown its iutcrest, and they endeavor to repel it by a, .thousand arts-and cos metics. They are afraid to grow old, and fear is always ungraceful. But has age no advantages, no comeliness, no attractions? Hsis not the oM person weathered many a dangerous point? Has she not survived many a vanity, many a heart-achf r Has she not learned to live from day to day, to find pleasure in trifles, to suffer without; whining? Has she not the monopoly of giving advice? Is not her conversa tion as interesting as a historical ro mance? Could any other make the past defile before us as in a magic mirror? Who can tell us so faithfully as she of the manners and customs of fifty years ago--how the hair was worn, the gown cut? Is she not an encyclo pedia of the details which go to make up history? Does anyone elbow or contradict her, or tell her that her problems are all unproved, and her en thusiasms only unripeness? No pre cious possibilities keep her restless. She is acquainted with youth no less than with age, and claims the advan tage of having seen them both, near at hand and in perspective. Her work is done and harvested; and though she may regret the time when she bore the burden and heat of the <lay, yet what has she to dread from frost or blight? Moreover, does not age have the arm chair, and the seat in the horse-cars? Harper's Bazar. --When the officers of the Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., received from an unknown man in Philadel- Chia a draft for $25,000 on a New York ank, they supposed somebody was im posing upon them. They made inqui ries in business circles in Boston and searched the Philadelphia Directory, but could not find his name. They then ventured to send the draft to the New York bank, and it was cashed at once to their surprise. The giver bad never been a student at Andover, and little is known of him beyond his name and that he is an old man. A widow in Paris has made Vior- tune by keeping American pumpkin pies at her restaurant. Tfce Perils of Iced Tea., Beware the cup. In these days of raging thermometers and busy Cor oners it is fraught with peril. It amazes us, sometimes, to think how long the people of America have been permit ted to go on dallying with this living death, unwarned by the monitions of science. It is seldom that scientific men have been so criminally negligent as they have shown themselves to be in this matter of iced tea. They have been prompt enough to warn us of the poi sonous qualities of everything else we like to eat and drink, until they have about blotted out everything fit to eat or drink from the bill of fare, and starved us do*"n to a bran-bread, diet, arid acw comes along Dr. Holland, in Scribner for July, and assures us that the Gra ham system of diet starves more,^5ew Englanders to death in six months^thajy die from all other causes in a year. Blessed be the name of Dr. Holland for that statement. He doesn't put it quite so strongly as that, but that is the way we believe it. Scientific men, learned men in the professions, have compelled us to drop the luscious straw berry in terror, by screaming out to us that it would give us the hydrophobia. They have made us heartsick with ap prehension by showing that the tempt ing peach in our hands was reeking with the deadly prussic-acid. They; have filled our ice-cream with poison ous impurities. They have forbidden us to drink water that has passed through iron pipes or lead pipes, or that has stood in a wooden vessel, or lain in a cemented cistern, or If j§pled from the rock of the hillside, impreg nated with heaven and chemistry only know what awful substances, until one restriction after another has made it the only safe way for a man to get a drink oi water, for him to lie down on his back, open his mouth and wait for the shower. Science has kindly warned us of the death that lurks in the coffee- cup. The cup that blesses the breakfast- table impairs the digestion. Large dosea of it produce palpitation of the heart. It is adulterated with Venetian red and natiqe sesquioxide of iron. It has also warned us against the use of warm tea, bread and butter, meat, vegetables, fruit, grain, roots, berries, milk and similar articles of food. Singular enough, science has not vet assailed iced tea. But it will not do to permit people to enjoy this cool, delightful beverage, sim ply because its taste is grateful to the duty, thoug science may shrink from it, and the wearied svstem during this scorching weather. We must do our duty, thou, people may cry out against us. There is danger in iced tea, and if you would live long and well, shun the cooling cup. We have not the space to devote to an extended discussion of this mat ter, and can only cite a few instances from a long series of carefully made experiments, which cannot fail to carry conviction to the most incredulous mind. On June 10th, of this year, John C. Hempstead, of West Ilill, began to drink iced tea at dinner and supper. He kept up this practice for nearly three weeks, and tnen one day, going dojflra the Division street steps, he slip ped and fell, abrading the skin on both legs, and running a sliver into the ball of his thumb so far that it made his teeth ache when he pulled it out. His clothing was also considerably torn. When he went home that evening he learned that his oldest boy had l>een whipped at school for sticking a pin as far through another boy as the head would let it go. He was warned to quit drinking Iced tea, but he persisted in the practice and he is now sleeping in the valley, between West and North Hill, where he lives, and says he never felt so well in his life. But maybe he lies about it. Henry Esterfeldt, of Eighth streefc drank iced tea regularly every summer for three years. lie noticed that after drinking it about two months, his boots began to run over at the heel. He per sisted, and one Sunday afternoon while he was out driving, his horse ran away and smashed seventeen dollars out of a borrowed buggy. He paid the money, but neglected the warning. He went on drinking iced tea, and in less than six weeks somebody poisoned his dog. These statements can all be verified by Writing to Mr. Esterfcldts who is now living in Kansas City, the father of eleven children, all of whom inherit their father's vice. A young woman, who did plain sew ing in this city, while employed in the family of Ralph Henderson, of Mapie street, became addicted, during the summer, to the use of iced tea. She soon ran a sewing-machine needle through her thumb, and for many days, whenever she picked up a cup of iced tea a sharp pain ran through her thumb. She refused to obey the warn ing, however, and in six weeks she was carried away. The man who carried her away married her first, and they are now living in Sagetown. Last week, at the beginning of the heated term, two eminent scientific fentlemen of Burlington took a strong, ealthy, black-and-tan dog, and im mersed him in a tub of pure cistern water, into which a weak solution of iced tea had been poured. They held the dog's head under the water fifteen minhtes, although he struggled vio lently, thus showing the natural and instinctive averson to a substance which intelligent human beings blindly and eagerly drink, and when the gen tleman took him out of the tub he was quite dead. If a tea-cup full of weak iced tea, in a tub full of water will kill a dog, think for yourselves what must be the effect of a strong, undiluted cup of this decoction upon the system of a weak woman. Last summer, a lumber puller in the employ of F. T. Parsons & Co., of this city, declared *that he could live on iced tea. Before he had time to go up to his boarding-house, however, he feU off the raft upon which he was at work, and drowned. A single drop of iced tea poured upon the tongue of a living rattlesnake, will produce the most startling effect, instantly causing the man who ad ministers it to fly for his life, and his life will be in imminent danger, unless he distances the'snake before the first turn. Eleven grains of strychnine, mixed in a tablespoonful of iced tea, will kill the oldest man in America. These instances and facts might be multiplied by scores. We have said enough, however, to warn every person of the danger that lies in the tempting foblet of iced tea. If suffering and eath ensue from its continued use, the Hawk-Bye feels that it has done its duty and washes its hands of all responsibil ity in the matter.--Burlington Hawfoi A horse with a snake in his eye was in town last week on exhibition at the stables of the Knapp House. The rep tile is comfortably located in the watery humor of the left eye, is perfectly y-v4p litV«,|f <5 1 1..^, .. the size of an ordinary darning needle. It is plainly visible, and is constantly on the move, wriggling and twisting in every direction. Its presence does not seem to annoy the horse in the least, and has evidently created no inflamma tion in or about the eye. It has, how ever, changed the color of the eyeball, which is of a lighter shade than that of the right eye, and has affected the sight somewhat.' The snake was first dis covered about two months ago, when i* was much smaller than it is now. How it came in the horse's eye is a Juestion which puzzles scientists.-- 'enn Yan (N. Y.) Express. NERVOUS MID eon aam h$ restored to perfect hoaith and bodUg energy, at home, thtussqf medicine qf any kini? PUL.VERMACHER'8 ELECTRIC BELT* AND BANDS, Hr mUf-appUmtion to any part of the meet every requirement. The most learned physicians and *iai of Europe aiul this country indorse the0$^ Hold on there, Biddv! Save the slops. Don't squander wealth. A Down- East Yankee firm is now making all kinds of jewelry out of sour milk, and every family able to keep a goat will soon have a chance to put on more air» and gewgaws than a city bean at a rustic picnic.--Breakfast Tabte. A simple-minded man having an at° tack of the gout, wanted to know why he should be so afflicted, as he had al ways lived a temperate life. "It is probably hereditary," said the doctor. " Sure enough," responded the poor victim. "I understand it now; my wife'8 father had it awfully." --Cosmetics.--If ladies would eat meat but once a day, pickles but once a month and sweetmeats never; if they would bathe freely in cold water, and live a3 much as possible in the open air, they would not require any other cosmetics. --About five-and-twenty new histories of the United States, so-called, have been published within the last three years. A H'Im Deacon. " Deacon Wilder, I want you to tell me how you kept yourself and family ao well the peat ne»Kou. when all the rest of have been sick bo much, and have had the doctors running to us long.'1 liro. Taylor, the answer is very easy. I used Hop Bitters in time and kept my family well and saved large doctor bills, 'three dollars' worth of it kept us all well and able to work all the time, and 1 will warrant it has >st you and nwjat of the neighbors one to two hundred dollars apiece to keep Rick the same time, i guess you'll take my medicine hereafter.1' See other column. Th^se noted Curative appliances have no#, stood the test for upward of thirty years, arts are by uet-tere-Patent- in all tt# wiacipal countries of the '.vorld. They wes® Lecreed the only Award of Merit for Klectrte Appliances at the great World's KxluMtie Appliances at the great World's Kxhitutiooft --Paris, Philadelphia, and elsewhere--an# have been found the most valuable, safife t far simple, and efficient known treatment the cure of disease. READER, ARE YOU AFFJCTEB? wish to recover the same symptoms or class of symptoms meet diseased oondltlon ? Are you suffer'-- Imperial Endorsement* Owing to the perfect purity of Dooley's Yeast Powder, and its superior excellence In every respect over all other preparations, it health, strength, and energy as experien< In former years? Do any of the following. neet yoor . iring bom Ul-health In any of its many and miMtiffcri- ons forms, consequent upon a linger! ng, nerv ous, chronic or functional di^ -' ' Do yon feel nervous, debilitated, fretful, timid, anA - lack the power of will and action T Are you subject to loss of memory, have spells of faint ing, fullness of blood in the head, feel listless, moping, unfit for business or pleasure, end subject to fits of melancholy ? Are your kid neys, stomach, or blood, In a disordered con dition t Do you suffer flrotn rheumatism, neuralgia or aches and pains"? Have yon been Indiscreet in early years and find your self harassed with a multitude of gloomy symptoms? Are yon timid, nervous, ana forgetful, and your mind continually dwell ing on the subject? Havs you lost confident* In yourself ana energy for business pursuit* t1 Are you suit torn*: Rest mare, streams, . fUlness, confusion of Ideas, aversion to society* dicsineKs In the head, dimness of sight, pim ples and blotches on the face aud hack, and other despondent symptoms? Thousands of young men, the middle-aged, and even the old, suffer from nervous and physical debil ity. Thousands of females, too. are broken down in health and spirits from disorders peculiar to their sex, and who, from false modesty or neglect prciong their c:iCTeriugs. Why, inen. further neglect, a subject so nnpr.; •. ductive of health and nappir.ess when thsin • Is at hand a means of restora iion ? . v 14 PULVERMACHER'S ELECTRIC BELTS AND BANDS Cure these various diseased conditions, ftftsf ail other means fail, and we offer the most convincing testimony direct from the af flicted themselves, who have been restored to- HEALTH, STRENGTH, AND ENERGY, after drugging in vain for months and yean. Send now for DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET and THK ELKCTRIC QUARTERLY, a large Illus trated Journal, containing full particulars and INFORMATION WORTH THOUSANDS. Cop ies mailed free., Address, ; , PULVERMACHER GALVANIC C0.,^S Otr. Sifhtb and Vine Sts., CINCffiHATI. | Wm lias been adopted and used in tne ivoyai house holds of the following countries, viz.: Ger many, England, 8pain, Russia, Denmark, Sweden, Italy and Brazil. It was long ago adopted and is to-day used by thousands of royal American households scattered all over the western world, and the high esteem In which it is held in this country luliy justifies its introduction and use as above stated. WILHOFT'S ANTI-PERIODIC OR PBVBR AITD AGUE TONIC.--This invaluable and etanda>d family medicine is now a household word and maintains its reputation unimpaired. It is in dorsed by the medical profession, and pre scribed daily in Hospital service. Why? Be cause, after years of trial in the worst'malari al districts of the United States, it has proved Itself a positive antidote for all diseases caused by malarial poisoning ot the blood. WHEEL- OCK, FINLAY & Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. FOR BY ALL DRUGGISTS. SWISS TONIC tor disordered menstruation. 8wlss Tonic will cure epileptic fits. If yim w a man o! business, weakened bj the strain af jour duties, avoid stimulants sua take HOP BITTERS. It >011 are a man of letters, tolling over your midnigtt work, to restore brain and nerve waste, take HOP BITTERS. B you art* young, and suffering Trom any Indiscretion or dissipation, take HOP SITTERS. H jou ar i iiiairiru or single, old or young, sutfsrinjr 'rasa soor health, or languishing on a bed of sickness, take HOP BITTERS. 'TOu.aver you are, wherever you are, whenever you fast that your system needs cleansing, umlngor stimulating, without intoxicating, take HOP BITTERS. iMe f«u diftpeptto, Man*# or dlfr ease of the stomach, bouwls, blmd, liivr, or itfmetf You wH! f»e cured if yen tato HOP BITTERS. K m* sri-s Kuniilv aiiltiK. are weak and low-spirited, it! ~ Buy it. Insist upon It Your dragidst keeps it. HOP BITTERS. It may s»v© y©ur Ufr. It ha* »*ved hundreds. Hop Bitters Tg Co., Rochester, ft. Y. PENSION] A WE PAID ev«7 soldler disabled^ line of ' Ml iistinnuish cpurious IttAJTs PLY BRK& Jkl*ttt*(kantFbrtititin KILLSallthe -- P L I E S in a room in TWO ^ HOURS. soc. worth will kill more flies than $10 worth of rtyPapw. H No dirt, M trouble, Sold by Divoctm Xrw , m Bptaaic Medicine JBKFORK BUYlXti OK|RKXTIX<« A- SABINETOILPiRMIQPJM Lars, with nsw styles, hkdvckd priciss and much tn- foniiuliiiji. SetUf, tfTll ASG2! Si ilAMIJN OBQAN W. Boston, Now York or Chicago. o.. Buffslo.N Y --The Choicest ia the World-- fcHOi porters' v. pri- -es--LztrgfCcstpsny to ..... article-pleases everybodj--Trode c-- _Jy Imeasintr--Agents wMkS Ancements wasta tl» send to? CMbi to BOBT WEIIS, 43 Vests? St. M. ». U. Bm. j'JST ra«al»ft-- tetoSSTl#' M ' • feMttMavKw. Mi w&rtsirke 824 tttwr Wm Mv«rsid« Institute, Lyons, Iowa, £ Sflect Boarding School, tor both sexes and ail ages. Do not decide where to attend school before jou have seen our catalogue fcnd school paper. Address HEY. W. T. CTRRUfi, A. M., llliicipaL AWNINGS, TENTS • * »• lllllllVlWairr-Froof €ovee Signs, Window Shades, 0 8.Desplainss-st. Chicago. "• Waitr-i'roof Cove**, etc. MURRAY * BAKEK, 10$ x Send for IUuttr'd JPri e-ZM. If It but slight, or Biwaw of LV^CM. BOVNTV--Discharge for Wound, Injur ies or Kupture, (I ve* FT" I..I. Bounty. £oiit Honn, Olltcei*' Accoaats and all War Claims aettled. HE- SV:t~TEl> CLAIMM RKOPKSKU. Send £5 centa tor a Copy or Art* on f»K*MIOXA. BOt'STY ASI» L %Itn CLA1X8. Mend itamp for Circular*. wat. r. crnMisuA « co., 0.8. CLAIM A< IT'S i n'! PATENT ATTYB, Box 500. Waalitngton, D. C. FREE HOMES. SSJI I* i!.T 1 atead," aS<Sress S. J. Gilmore, Land Com'r. TO BINI. „„J Writing. j;"ull Outfif scntTwith ^«™;VOU8it*0h^mV *Price! 87& aeauireaneUgant handwriting at home. Price, h«c. *"* in-™--- A(Wrwa pjtor. E. A. HALL* Dr. Footc*« Health Momthly. royal octavo pages. Edited by Dm RR FOOT*. Sa and JR. Sent on trial for fl nxwUia for RORK »-ceat STAMPBI Murray Hill Pub. Oa, K. 28th St., N. Y- retail price 1280 only WS. PI AN05- retall price if. 10 onl> f 185. GraM- bargaius, BKATri.WasmngtonJU. ORSANS mui HPIII l|W"Hiousaiidscured. JUwest Prices. Dyjwjt Ul IU 1*1 fall to write.Mr.*\E. Jlarsli.QuSuey.MlBlu to agents Helling our T FBKE! J. ANspoar, ran. . inrk'a I®. I*. Insect Powder. Sure IVath to all Insect Life. Ask jrourdmirtrist or Krocerfor It 2B eta. per box. Agents wanted. Sent free by mail on receipt of price. Add. Jas.L»Clark, 40 N.5th-8t,Phlia. m iTirril Akcmiis--Everywhere, to sell WUll 1 CU our new Invention-* necessity--no ramnetltion--used In every house--srlls on sight--(irullti lawe. Don't fail to write to S* J. SmJUM* fc<X>..ClucWk urroan's SONS, HabitA Nkin VH*euK«M. riiousands cured. Lowest Prices. IV fall to write.Mr.>\E.Marsli.Quiuey,: It1 Aft to'rJW per mon th to agents canvassing $iUU for Taylor's Copying House, Rochester, N. T~ Reduced Price-List of 8cal«r, CHICAOO SCALX oa, Chicago, BL FREE TO ALL $66 GOLD A W EEK in vour own town. Terras and ma outfit free A'ddr'sH Hallt t&Co..Portiand,||s. Any worker can make $ 12 a day at- home. Costly outfit free. Address TKUK & CO., Augusta, Me. (C i. ftn per day at home. 8amples worth $6 v0 *0 $<£U free- A<f(lret*s STINSOM & Co., Portland,!!* Particular* of Smlthography. Agents' Director, copy Agts* Herald, etc.,free. L. Luui Soilth.PhUa.JBa. AA Mixed Cards, Snow fluke, Damask, &e., no- 0v2 alike, with lianie.lOc. J.Uiakler ^CoL^Uk>sau.a.X. K Fashionable Cards, uo 2 alike, withnaiqa 10c.. postpaid. QSO. I. KKXD ft CO., l A 82-cot. monthly Story faper _ a year on trial to all who scwd 25 _ _ ets. tor 5© «o»tl Leaf Cartfa t new •_ with name, elecant case. Also U Via* MUrd Ca wttii name, la cents. MACK & CO., Springfield. m imeTu) w JILCOX <& GIBBS Elegant Cabinet Cm* A. N. K. ITHK.V H ITIME TO I 'F FC'1* pieniiv M<ijy fs<»M «MH> th* .trfwrhVew** 4M thin paper, llftf '« ***** NkcH MM* where *A«<r ldwrtto*. mrm jNHUm lirt,