Port Royal standard and commercial. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, July 06, 1876, Image 4
FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD.
Question* and Answer*. I When
butter oomes soft and white J1
and the buttermilk will not separate j1
from it, what can be done with it i
Remove it from the churn and salt it |
nearly as much again as yon would have !
done had it come in good condition; put,
it in a cool place and let it remain ever j
night. The next morning turn it over a ;
few times and set away again; continue !
this light handling of it for three or j
four mornings, when there will be no j
trouble in working it, and it will be of a
fair color. The Fait with time separates i
the buttermilk from the butter. JNever
use the hands in working butter, but
take wooden ladles at all times.
What is the cause of the sheepy taste
in mutton ?
Some people say that the strong taste j
designated as sheepy is due to the contact
of the wool with the meat. Others |
believe the true reason is found in the j
delay before removing the intestines;
these should be taker* out as soon as life
is extinct. Proper care paid to the
butchering of well-fatted sheep will prevent
the objectionable odor and taste
too often found in their flesh.
What is the remedy for lice on cattle?
Among others given is the saturating
of a coarse string with mercurial ointment
and tying it around the animal's
neck; also, the application of oil is effective,
as is washing with carbolic or whale
oil soap.
What is the rule for sotting out raspberry
plants?
Some farmers recommend placing
them in rows four feet apart each way;
others advise planting them two feet
apart in the rows, and the rows four feet
apart Again, the plants are set two
feet apart in rows five feet apart. A good
width in rows is necessary to enable the
a TTinoo in fV?a oni?in nr
lOA&Ug VUV V4 ?UU T 4UVO AAA VUV
and the last role suggested is a very
good one. The ground should be deeply
plowed and put in good condition to
receive the plants.
Is there a remedy for vermin in
horses?
Try rubbing powdered white precipitate
into the roots of the hair v here the
lice are located, and keep the animal
from being heated for several days after
the application.
What is the best prescription for a
hoof ointment ?
A good ointment for horses' hoofs is
made of Venice turpentine, pine tar and
raw linseed oil; take four ounces of each
and melt them over a slow fire; when
melted remove from the fire, thoroughly
mix, and stir in while cooling three
ounces of spirits of turpentine. When
cold it is ready for use.
Orchard and Nwaer;.
Newly planted trees should be mulched
with hay, straw or other litter, to
eDable them to recover from the effects
of moving.
Juno is considered by many the best j
. month for removing large limbs from old i
trees, but unless one has an abundance
of help it is difficult to spare the time at
this busy season. Cover all cuts with
shellac varnish, paint or melted grafting
wax.
Grafts will need looking after, and if
auy shoots have started below the graft,
rub them off, to prevent their robbing
the cion.
Slugs on the foliage of pear, cherry, i
and other trees, may be destroyed by
lime or wood ashes, dusted upon the
leaves.
I
Borers may be prevented by applying
a strip of heavy papert a foot or more
wide, around the lower part of the trunk, j
so that the lower edge is an inch or so
below the surface of the soil. Where
they have entered the tree, a wire or
whalebone may be used to probe for and
kill them.
Weeds must not be allowed to grow
either among the trees in the orchard,
or the young seedlings in the nursery,
but the horse and cultivator must be
kept in motion where they can be used j
without danger to the trees. A hoe will i
be needed, where the cultivator cannot i
go.?Agricu Uuriat.
For Horse*' Backs.
Some one gives, in the Cure, the fol- j
lowing directions for treating a horse i
with a sore back: Let the sore place be |
bathed with warm water, not very hot; i
nor must the plaoe be rubbed in the j
least by the cloth, but it must be
dabbed, and this must be continued for j
an hour or two, till a white him comes ;
over the wound, when it must be well
wet with a strong solution of chloride of
lime and water, and left so that it can-!
not be rubbed either by clothing or j
roller. It will get well almost immedi-'
ately. There is no cure like this. It is !
also an exoellent plan, when the place is j
only smali, to have a very thick saddlecloth
with a hole punched in exactly
where the sore would press against the
saddle. I have just tried this plan with j
great success.
Royal Self-Destroyers.
The self-murdered ex-sultan of Turkey
was, in the ornate language of Mr.
Hurlbert, the "first of his race, bearing
the titular authority which centered in
his person, to quarrel with fate or fight
with written destiny," aDd "in that ancient
line, which the sultan of Stamboul
represented in no doubtful wise, the ;
Byzantine emperors, no suicide stained
or gilded the disgrace in wnich msny ;
a reign closed." Assassination has been !
an ever recurring incident of Turkish I
sovereignty from the fifteenth century to
the nineteenth; but among his thirtyfour
Ottoman predecessors, Abdul Aziz |
could find no example like that which he
has given. This demented sultan re-'
sorted to a most ignoble weapon, when |
he terminated his career with a pair of !
scissors.
Royal suicides have been less numerous
in Christendom since the period of J
Constantino than they were in the previous
pagan times. Eight years ago
Theodore, king of Abyssinia, killed :
himself rather than submit to capture
by the British after the fall of his capi-1
tal. In the early part of this century I
Christopher KiDg, of Hayti, shot him-1
self to escape the vengeance of his subjects
during a revolt. Walter Scott says
that. Napoleon the First attempted self- j
destruction at one time, when over*
whelmed with misfortunes; but the accuracy
of the account is not sustained. '
Frederick William, of Prussia, the
father of Frederick the Great; once attempted
to strangle himself tovard the
close of his violent and debuched life.
Though but a few such incidents arc
to be picked out of modern history, there
were many of them in the ancient days of
Rome and Greece. The Roman Emperor
Nero destroyed himself in the fifth century,
and soon afterward the Emperor
Otho died by his own hand. We might1
go on with many other names, running
backward from Cleopatra in Egypt, and
Sirdanapalus in Assyria, to Saul, the !
Hebrew, who fell upon his sword,
No New Diseases.
An Eogiish physician of note has
written a book in which he claims that A
diseases of to-day, which are generally j
supposed to be of recent orgin, are in j
fact only such as have appeared at dif-1
ferent periods of the world's history,,
and that the number of ailments has ,
neither increased nor decreased, but i J
Bimply disappear for a time, only to be , .
rechlistened on its recurrence. He;
states that the malady known as ague j
was once so common in London that the j
metropolitan physician looked upon it!
as one of the most ordinary disorders c
he was called upon to treat; now it is so ,
rare that a practitioner may live for years
and never see an example of it; but J
when it is met with it is found to be !
made up < f the same symptoms as when a
Sydenham so graphically depicted it. The ?
B WC?tl/AJLIg? fHUttiiCCV? nillUll uivauuu juu^- i a
land with fcue Earl of Richmond, and I
which, when he became the triumphant; 8
Henry the Seventh, obtained the second I 1
name of " the king of England's sick-1
ness," has not appeared in the epidemic j
form since 1551. Yet, in our own time je.
a typical, though happily isolated, example
of it has been witnessed. The
black death is still represented in
malignant typhus. The great plague of ,
Athens w as neither more or less than a j A
terrible visitation of what we now call j j
malignant scarlet fever. Smallpox has |
shown no abatement of its fury when it! .
has had the opportunity of becoming
fully developed from that which it
showed when Rhazes of the ninth ceu- J
tury, following Aaron of the sixth, committed
to parchment the description of ,
its phenomena. In brief, the more
deeply we study the past history of ^
medicine the surer is the conviction
that, throughout the whole of the known
period of human existence on the earth, ,
not one new disease has been added, not .
one withdrawn. The great plague ,
which visited Constantinople in 543, ,
the plague of hallucination, drowsiness, I :
slumbering, distraction, and ardent j
fever, with eruptions on the skin of black : j
pimples the size of a lentil; this plague, !
which usually killed in five days, and ,
left many who recovered with withered
limbs, roasted tongues, stammering ,
speech ; this plague, which had passed .
into mythical learning under the name
of " cerebrospinal meningitis," has
also in our time reappeared.
Minerals in Australia. f
Queensland and New South Wales t
have large breadths of coal land, and so j
thick ore the veins and so easily are they ]
worked that the coal is delivered on 1
barges at 83.50 a ton. This coal is bitu-1i
minous, and its value may be judged by
iron men from the fact that it makes fine i
coke, which is so much in demand for 1
n/tAnn ofanmflM f Vl O fr. if Calls frtT A ,
tUC VVWJIU l^/dUlViO VUMV AW WWW Vwv - J
ton. This coke is much more solid j
than coal, and it looks somewhat like a ]
metal.
Iron ore is plentiful, but such is the {j
d earn ess of labor that none is yet manu J j
factored, and the Australians will be 11
oontent to buy American edge tools, and j I
even railroad iron, if it can be shipped j <
cheap enough. They have a high1 (
opinion of much of our hardware, espe- j <
cially saws and axes. The American j ]
woodsmen's ax is their ideal of a perfect 1 <
tool.
There is a large export of copper to j
England. Some of their mines are as 1
much as two hundred miles from ship- j 1
ping ports, and it costs $60 a ton to! j
haul the copper thither. But they are 1 i
building railroads as fast as they are 1 1
able, and soon great facilities will be I ]
afforded. The standard gauge of their 11
railroads is noticeable. Six hundred j ]
miles of the Queensland road is three t ]
feet sir.. These roads enter mountains ]
from the coast region by tunnels, and ' <
wind by heavy grades to an elevation of 1
2,000 or 3,000 feet Miners' wages are 1
from $2 to $3 a day. Antimony is ]
shipped largely. Gold was first disoov- t
ered in Queensland in 1868, and the '
yield since then has been $35,000,000. 1
Other colonies have yielded much more. | ]
Little or no silver has been found. Lead ! j
is plentiful, but it seems not to be ex-1
tracted, and there are no white lead I;
works in the country. ]
No metal is more profitably worked 11
than tin, and none has caused so much I i
excitement and influenced so largely j'
the industry of the country as the com-1
paratively recent discovery. The plen-1
tifulness of the ore at present is such
that the main cost is in labor and trans- j
portatioD. It is almost all stream tin, |
coming from old river bars, and it i9 60 \
found nowhere else in the world. In the j
time of Julius Caesar, however, the tin :
of Britain was found in similar locali- <
ties. Not all the gold excitement of j
Australia has equaled the excitement
over these tin mines, and it is under
stood that their production has been so <
%reat that the Cornwall mines are closed ;
and even the price has been reduced.
?-? j i
t,
Horrible Accident.
One of the most painful accidents j
which it has for a long time been our 1
duty to record, says the Leavenworth 1
(Kan.) Times, occurred in the molding :
room of the Great Western foundry. A 1
; young man named Frederick Keiper, I
who was learning the trade, is the un- 1
! fortunate victim. It seems that he was
j engaged, like the older molders, in car- 1
j rying the molten iron fr m the cupola 1
or furnace to patterns, and ^Jiile in the i I
act of taking a full ladle of the seething j !
mass, weighing eighty pounds, across I]
the room, he struck the bowl against the J
pattern board, which, by some accident, i
had been left with one end projecting J
into the gangway, and, as he was walk- 1
ing rapidly, the contact of the ladle with 1
the board threw him around in such a i *
? ? -? ~ lnll norvin in Arnitftni i ]
pUMl .Uil llittl JLiia icii> lug w?uio xu uuutuvif i with
the edge of the bowl, which, being 1
held by a long, slim handle, was tipped j'
over to one side toward his leg, spilling i ]
almost its entire contents against the I '
leg of his pantaloons, whicji, in a sec- j 1
ond, was destroyed, and the red hot j 1
mass forced its way downward into the j ]
leg of his boot, and almost as soon burn-1J
ed through the bottom and ran out on <
the ground. Realizing that he was 1
dangerously injured, the young man
threw the ladle away and begun trying
to remove the boot, at the same time
calling for assistance.
A colored man who is employed in the <
foundry ran to him and soon got his j
boot off, which took with it large flakes j j
of skin. The wounded man was made j j
as comfortable as possible until the arri
val of a physician, who examined the <
wound, and discovered that the heel was ^
nearly burned off and that a semi-circle ,
of flesh, reaching half way round the j
ankle, rcross the bottom of the foot, j.
was literally roasted to the bone. The i ,
whole foot will have to be amputated. (
! (
Not long ago a billiard player in Lon- i1
don in lighting his cigar accidentally let <
his match fall on a billiard ball, which <
at once begun to burn with a flame that! *
could not be extinguished. It was ap- f
parently an ivory ball, but was made of ! 1
oellnloid, r mixture of gun cottoD and j *
camphor, compressed and dried. j 1
A FT Hi MASY YE IRS.
Youthful Lover, Separated from his Afll- { '
nnced by au Auibltlou* Father, Meets her j
when Middle A*rd nod Consumates bis | I
l.lle's Work. ; t
"Next!': shouted a barber in oue of '
he Detroit barber shops, according to J1
lie Free Prexs, the other afternoon, and 1
u response the chair was occupied by 1
tali, fair looking, middle aged man, *
?ho remarked as he sat down : (
" This job over and I will be ready to t
omplete the work of a lifetime!" c
The traditional man who talks is the (
>arber, and naturally his customer's re- *
uark excited his curiosity to the extent* ?
hat he asked numerous questions with j
k view to ascertain what was the aforeaid
work of the aforesaid lifetime, and .
luring the next half hour, while thejeusomer
was treated to a shave, shampoo,
md hair cut, the following romance was f
elated : 1
Twenty-two years ago, or in the spring *
>f 1854, Enos Dalrymple was a clerk in i
i general store near the corner of .Tef
erson avenue and Bates street. Dal- i
ymple had been over irom .England
ibout one year, and during his ocean
royage had made the acquaintance of
Hiss Louisa Merkham. With their
parents they came to this city, and were
hue enabled to cont'nne an acquaintmce
which soon changed to love, and
;he consequent engagement resulted.
Liouisa's parents, being pretty well slipped
with this world's goods, were much
)pposed to Dalrymple as a son-in-law,
shiefly because he worked for a living;
jut their opposition was useless. The
roung couple met in secret and carried
>n a correspondence unknown to any
>ne but themselves. Too poor to get
named, young Dalrymple, as soon as
le reached his majority, started West
n search of his fortune. He had not
>een absent many months when Miss
Vferkham's parents, discovering that
,heir daughter was still corresponding
vith Dalrymple, sent her to Quebec to
>e educated, ostensibly, but really to
vean her from the object of her affecion.
"For eight years," said Dalrymple,
41 heard not a word from Louisa, durng
which time I moved to Melbourne,
Australia, and established myself as an
ittorney and counselor at law. At last,
n 1868,1 was surprised at the receipt of
i letter bearing the Liverpool postmark
ind the signature of my lost sweetheart.
Ln the letter she stated that she had long
bought me dead, but seeing my name
11 an Australian paper her old love had
prompted her to write to me, something
jelling her that the Australian attorney
;vas the Detroit clerk of '54.
441 answered the letter promptly, and
[vith the old feeling of affection, but
tvaited for a reply in vain until at last I
nade up my mind that either I had been
imposed upon or that death had claimed
ny sweetheart.
44 Still a bachelor, I toiled at my profession
and accumulated wealth, and at
ast filled with a desire to revisit Detroit
md my old home in England, also in
tending to visit the world's fair at Philadelphia,
I took passage on the steamer
Calcutta for San Francisco. Without
delay I started east, and since that time
nave traveled across the continent three
;imes.
"I was at Chicago, and to pass away
;he time I visited one of the theaters.
What the play was I do not recollect,
save that there was a reunion of the two
principal characters after a long separa;ion,
and, as ufoal, the audience was disnissed
in high spirits. Especially was
[ happily impressed, for in the person of
i lady who assumed the part of a kind,
matronly old woman, I fancied that I
recognized the voice and features of the
tove of my youth, and try as I would I
xrald not dismiss the fancy. So deeply
tras it impressed upon my mind, that
ifter going to my hotel I examined the
play bill, and after long consideration resolved
to call upon the "old woman."
rhe next day I carried out my resolution,
and there occurred a mutual recog
oition, which, bad you seen it, you could
never forget
"The result is that after nearly ten
years of life on the stage, Louise has
left it for good, and together we will return
to Melbourne to end our days in
peace and happiness, as I hope."
A Five Pound Dwarf.
One of the most remarkable human ,
beings ever seen in this country, says
li_ ^ vr
[lit) new wneuuts iiz-jjuuliuuii, ui perhaps
in any other, arrived in this city
recently, and is stopping at the St.
Charles Hotel, with her parents, direct
from Mexico, and unknown to the American
public. This child, Lucri Zarate,
was born at Vera Cruz, and is said lo be
twelve years old. She is twenty inches
high and is said to weigh scarcely more 1
than five pounds. Imagine a French
doll walkiDg and talking to you and
some idea of her appearance can be had.
Standing on a parlor floor her head
reaches to about the seat of an ordinary
chair, and yet her limbs and body are in
all respects well proportioned.
Mrs. Belknap could get no more than
one too of her foot into the Mexican
girl's shoe. Her head, about as big as
a man's fist, is well shaped and covered
with soft, brown hair. The only thing
out of line with her size is her nose;
that was evidently made for a larger
girl, but it will do. She has bright,
black eyes, and is intelligent, conversing
with a little voice in the language of ;
her parents. She runs and plays about
the room as if she enjoyed her little life, %nd
salutes and bids adieu to her guests '
?rith evident propriety. In the way of 1
1 joke she offered to carry a fat reporter '
on her back, and stoping over asked I
him to climb on her shoulders. The lit- <
tie midgit will astonish any one who i
sees her, because she is so tiny and so ;
human. Standing by the side of Tom j ]
Thumb she would reach his elbow, and i
the general would look like an over
jrown and bloated aristocrat. The lili- (
putian is to be taken to the Centennial (
Exposition, and stops here for a few
lays to consult dolls dressmakers about
'ashionablfe wardrobes for herself.
<
I <
Undesirable Neighbors. ! I
I
Back of a country storo in Campo, j
3al., are four graves, each containing the I
x>dy of a Mexican bandit. Two brothers
aamed Gashell own the store, and they
:ell how the bandits were killed. In 1
December last a party of six made a de- ?
jcent upon Campo,. which is composed j 1
jolely of the store, blacksmith shop and ! |
esidence of the Gashells, intendit g to j <
iill the proprietors and carry off all the j ]
noney and goods. One of the brothers i1
vas shot down in the store, and left for j ]
1 ad, while the robbers went to kill the \
jther in the blacksmith shop; but the 1
.vounded man revived, armed himself, ?
crawled into a good position, and picked 1
)ff three of the robbers. A fourth was i
iliot by the other Gashell, who was him- 11
self wounded, and the remaining two ]
led. Displeased with their failure, the <
inrvivors on their way tried to rob a 1
i*rrUman. but were again repulseti. I
SUMMARY OF >T2TY?.
team of Intercut front Home and Abroad 7
The preliminary woik on the tunnel between
Yance aad England has been commenced on
he Frf u:h side of the channel . ...Mireouii's
)emocrati: delegati s to the na'ior.al co'jven- ^
:on were uni"8trncted, and are di vitied be- r?
we'-n Hendricks ? n 1 TilJen Vermont's P:
)emocrat.c delegates were unins'.ruc'ed but ^
avor Tilden A* a shorthorn cattle ealo at
Cambridge City, Ind., forty-two cows and r<
leifers brought $17,530 The new sultan P
>f Turkey promises important reforms ^
Jeorge Parker essayed a second time at Fieot- o
rood Park to ride thirty California mustangs H
105 miles in fifteen hours. He became blind, ?
lowever, and had to give up after the 216th
nile. Another rider undertook to accomplish a
'orty miles in two hours, and succeeded in
loing so, with sixteen and one-half minutes to u
ipare Forty-niue Cincinuatians, on the w
vay to the Black Hills, under command of t!
Japt. Stone, were massacred by Indians about j(
ifty miles from Red Cloud agency? Knights p
n ' * ?Q o fna f A ttlA
L till V'lttl O 11 UUi uvatvcf tv vuw
lumber of eight thousand, made an imposing ?
larade in Philadelphia. It is stated to have .s
icon the largest gathering of Knights ever u
leld. c
As a freight train was passing Sing Sing c
irison at a speed of fifteen miles an hour, six
:onvicts ran to the wall and jumped on the ^
:ara and tender, four of them boarding the r
mgine, one of whom presented a rovoiver to
:he engineer and ordered him to increase the *
(peed, while another nnconpled the locomotive p
'rom the train. They successfully passed the S
juards, who were afraid to fire on account of 1
he engineer and fireman. When near Tarry- j
awn the convicts ordered the engine stopped f
ind they jumped down and disappeared in the *
voods. All had citizens' clothes under their *
prison suits. Two convicts who hid between t
die cars were recaptured A nammoth ox
weighing five thousand pounds was shipped ?
'rom Jersey City to the Centennial for exhibi- 0
ion, but when the car train reached Philadel- t
phia the ox was dead. *?he owners valued it at a
110,000 Revenue Collector J. A. Holtz:law,
of Atlanta, Ga., is a defaulter to the i:
imount of $13.000 The new sultan of J
Turkey has confined his uncle, the ex-sultan, E
n a magnificent palace, but gives assurance y
.hat no harm shall befall him Goldsmith
Maid trotted three heats at Philadelphia
n the endeavor to beat her record of 2.14, r
Put did not succeed, the time being 2.21%, *
115 and 2.19% The Obiricahua Indians p
refuse to remove from Arizona to the new r
reservation assigned them, and propose to c
make an armed resistance While Andrew r
Moore and Frederick Lawler, fourteeen-year- e
ild boys, were quarreling in New York, Lawler i
struok Moore, who instantly stabbed him t
twice with a knife he was using. Lawler fell
to the ground and in two minutes was dead. I
An oil tank containing twenty-one thousand (
barrels of oil. situated near Oil City, Pa., was '
struck by lightning and exploded, setting fire
to another tank containing twenty-three thou- '
Band barrels, all of which were consumed. 1
Loss, nearly $1,000,000 The remains of a J
man, woman, and girl were found in a secluded {
part of the woods near Bellevilie, 111. The i
woman and child were shot through the head *
and the man through the heart. -From the
position of the bodies it is supposed the man i
shot his wife and child and then killed him- J
self Abdul Aziz Khan, the recently deposed
sultan of Turkey, committed suicide by |
opening the veins of bis arms with a pair of <
scissors. He was buried with all the honors
due his former position A schoolteacher i,
named Allen O. Laroe put poison in the family | ]
coffee pot and killed his father, mother ana a 1
Mr. Moses Sohng. The object was to gain 1
possession of a sum of money known to be in ]
the house Jarrett & Palmer, the theatrical
men, ran a fast train from New York to San
Francisco, carrying twenty-five passengers at 1
$500 a head. The schedule time was eighty- (
four hours, but they succeeded in making the ,
trip in twenty-six minutes less?part of the \
timo running at a rate of over a mile a minute, j <
At Alpine Bush, N. Y., Cyrenus Stevens was j
Instantly killed by bghtning while leaning ^
against a porch pillar. A wire clothesline at- i
tached to the pillar connected with a locust
tree, which was shattered Mrs. Catharine
Newkirk, wife of Isaac Newk'rk, of Fort Hunter,
and her daughter were drowned in Sclio- i
harie creek, N. Y Nineteen physicians of <
Constantinople have signed a report that the j
ex-sultan died of wounds on his arms; but ,
the foreign journals ge' orally scout the idea '
of suicide Wilhelmina NYeick, who was
convicted in Buffalo, N. Y., of the murder of
her stepson, Michael Weick, in November last,
was sentenced to be hanged on July 21,1876,
The eentence was received with indifference.
During the month of May twenty-two
bodies were taken from the waters about New
York city?only ten of which were recognized.
Another member of the Laror. family^
Alvin, has died in Easton, Pa., from the effects
of the poisoned coffee administered by one of
the sons. This makes the fourth victim
Many counterfeit 5's on the Hamden National
Bank of Westfield, Mass., are in circulation.
A dispatch states that all the Fenian pris- '
oners confined in Western Australia have escaped
on an American whaler... .The Mexican !
insurgents have been badly beaten in several
engagements during the past month, and those
who are well posted in the matter state that the 1
rising w.ll soon be over. A Protestant church
in the city of Mexico was burned by fanatics.
In consequence of the judgment if a
Bremen court, Prinpe Bismarck, as chancellor,
has issued a notification prohibiting for two 1j
years the circulation in Germany of the Nor- j j
damerica, the weekly edition of the Philadel- i
phia VoUublatt A reunion of the Army
of the Potomac took place at Philadelphia,
and after being called to order by Gen. Han- 1
cock waa addressed by Gen. John A. Dir. A '
poem was read by Wm. Winter and brief j
speeches made by Gens. Sherman, Sheridan, i
Hooker and others Daring the month of (
Btl&y 13,310 immigrants arrived at the port of (
New York Sam Anderson, a colored man,
ander arrest for attempting to outrage a Mies 6
V'aughan, of De Soto county, Mies., and who *
jut the throat of the lady's young brother, was *
taken from the officers and hanged by a mob. ]
As Marshal Harrington attempted to levy
on the steamboat Kate Dickson at Mayeville, 1
on the Ohio river, he was fatally shot by the
oaptain, Taylor, who was instantly killed by
he marshal's aids. 1
_t
t
Valuable Invention. ,
As compared with other devices of the 1
dnd, the peculiar featuro in the con- *
jtruction of the new English safety 1
lamp for mines, is that the admission of ^
jas extinguishes the flame, so that it c
oanuot under any circumstances be ex- t
ploded by the lamp?the great danger *
which characterizes other lamps in mines, s
In this new arrangement, the whole of a
he air for feeding^the flame has to pass t
hrough an air chamber in a limited t
jpace at the bottom of the lamp, and as
the impure air, such as hydrogen, fills *
ip that limited space, then the passage i
for the oxygen which is requisite to sup- t
port combustion is stopped, and conse- 1
juontly the light becomes suffocated for J
want of air. Successful experiments e
lave demonstrated this. -
FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS.
he Buataese of General Interest Traaoaeted.
SXRATX.
Mr. Allison (11 jp.), of Iowa, from the comlittee
on pensions, reported favorably on the
nate bill to amend the pension U-\? co as to
-movo the diubilitits of those who, having
Brficip-?tod in the civil war, have nit ce its
timiuation enlisted in the army of the United
.ate-.
i he Chair laid before the Senate the bill in
elation*to the Japanese indemn ty fund, the
ending question beiDg on the amendment
abmitted by Mr. Tharman (Dem.), of Ohio,
) strike out the clause authorizing the return
f all accumulation of interest, and insert in
eu thereof a clause authorizing the return
f the eum paid by the government of Ja)?an
'ithout interest. Rejected?yeas, 18; nays, 23.
Mr. Sherman (Rep.), of Ohio, moved to
mend so as to provide that after returning
tie principal, which is in bonds, the residue
ball be delivered to the secretary of thetreasry
to.be canceled, and that the portion of it
-hich is in mouey shall be covered into the
reasury of the United States. Agreed to.
Various amendments were offered and reected,
and the bill was read a third time and
assed?yeas, 24 ; nays 20.
Mr. Sargent (Rep.), of Cilifornia, presented
petition of the disbursing clerks in the Exeutive
department of the government, remon
trating agaiust the passage of the bill legaliz,ig
assignments of pay mado by officers of
be government. Referred.
The Houw bill transferring the custody of
ertain Indian trnst funds was passed.Mr.
Allison (Rep.) of Iowa, called np the
>6Iiai<3 UUl pruviumg lur bu agiucuicuu nuu
he Sioux nation in regard to a portion of their
eeervation, and for other purposed.
Mr. Edmuud8 (Hep.), of Vermont, offered a
ubstitute, authorizing the President, with
he advice and consent < f the Senate, to appoint
a commission of five persons to visit the
lioux, with the view to negotiate with them a
roaty or agreement for the cessation of th6
ight of those tribes to the Black fliils, in
)akota Territory, and appropriate $50,000 to
?ay the expenses of said commission. Agreed
o, and the bill was read a third time and
laased?yeas, 30; nays, 8.
The Senate resumed the consideration of
be bill m-king appropriations for the legislaure,
executive and judicial expenses of the
;overoment for the year ending June 30,1877.
he pending question being on the amendment
if the committee on appropriations to restore
he sa'ary of the President to $50,000 from
nd after March 4, 1877, and it was agreed to
-yeas, 31; nays, 1L
Other amendments of the oommittee restorag
the salary of the private secretary to the
'resident, and the salary of employees in the
)epartment of State, the Treasury departaeut,
and the Army and Navy departments,
rere agreed to.
HOUSE.
Mr. Jones (Dem.), of Kentucky, offered a
eeolution declaring it to be the sense of the
loose that Congress shoold pass without delay
i bill repealing the resumption act, and should
trohibit any further contraction of the curency,
and, if necessary to meet the demands
if the people, should provide for its increase,
md should provide for the displacement of
k&tiODal bank notes with United States notes ;
ind should also provide for a speedy return to
{old and silver. Referred.
The bill perfecting the revision of the stautes
of the United States was passed.
The Bouse proceeded to consider the bill to
jromote the efficiency of the army, to provide
'or its gradual roductiou, and to consolidate
sertarn of its staff departments, and after
mme discussion the bill was passed?yeas,
120; nays, 82.
On motion of Mr. Ward (Dem.), of New
fork, the House proceeded to consider the
sill to amend title fifty-three of the revised
statutes, relating to merchant seamen. It
provides for appointment by the secretary of
:he treasury of a commissioner, to be known
is a " shipping commissioner," for every port
}f entry which is also a port of ocean navigation.
Passed.
The House went into committee of the
whole, Mr. Springer, of Illinois, in the Chair,
3n the Indian Appropriation bill, the question
being of order made by Mr, McCrary, of Iowa,
iganst the section to transfer the Indian
bureau to the War department. The Chairman
jverruled it.
Mr. Maginnis, of Montana Territory, offered
in amendment providing that any person desiring
to trade with the Indians shall receive a
license on tho certificate of a district judge or
i judge of the supreme court of any Territory
that he is of good character. Agreed to.
The ccmmi tee reported the bill to the
r* r-. J
aouse, ana it w as passeu.
William Robertson's posthumous volame
contains this passage : "In the
larkesfc hour through which a human
3oul can pass, whatever else is doubtful,
this at least is certain. If there be no
Glod and no future state, yet, 6-?n ther,
it is better to be generous than selfish,
better to be chaste than licentious, better
to be true than false, better to be
brave than a coward."
Pimples on the face, rough skin,
jhapped hands, saltrheam and all cutaneous
iffections cured, the skin made soft and
smooth, by the use of Juwipkb Tab Soap. That
made by Caswell, Hazard <k Co., New Tork, is
[he only kind that can be relied on, as there
ire many imitations, made from common tar,
whioh are worthless.?Com,
[From the Toledo Blade.]
Specialties in Medicines.
We publish on our eighth page a lengthy
article describing the system of the noted
specialist, Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y.,
in which he sets forth with considerable force
and clearness his reasons for devoting bis
whole time and attention to a single department
of medicine?the treatment of lingering
chronic diseases. The same article also takes
up the subjects of diagnosis, methods of consultation
and treatment, etc., and will be found
to contain many valuable bints to the invalid.
Dr. Pierce is the author of a work which has
alreaJ.. attained a large circulation?"The
People's Common Reuse Medical Adviser"?
containing some nine hundred numerouslyillustrated
pages; and devoted to medicine in
all its branches ; a work well calculated for the
guidance and instruction of ths people at
large, and which may be had for $1.50 (postpaid)
by addressing the author. Dr. Pierce
has now been before the general publio long
enongh to enable the formation of a careful
estimate of the efficiency of bis treatment and
bis medicines; and the verdict, we are glad to
know, has been universallv favorable to both.*
Johnson's Anodyne Liniment may be
need to advantage where any liniment is desirable.
In cases of severe cramps and pains
id the stomach it is undoubtedly the beet
article that can bo used internally. *
Habitual constipation leads to the following
results : Inflammation of the kidneys
uck and nervous headache, biliousness, dyspepsia,
indigestion, piles, loss of appetite fend'
strength ; all of which may be avoided by beng
regular iu your habits and taking, say cne
)f Parsons' Purgative Pills nightly for four
jr six weeks. *
Medicated baths are expensive. Not
io, however, Glenn s Sulphub Soap, a cheaj
ind efficient substitute, which answers the
tame purpose as far as local diseases of the
'kin, rheumatism and gout are concerned.
Depot, Crittentou's, No. 7 Sixth avenue, N. Y.
Hill's Instantaneous Hair Dye producos
latural effects and is Bafe. *
Db. Schxnck's Pulmonic Stbup, Sea Weed Tonic
lND Mandrake Pills.?These medicines have unloubtedly
performed more caree of Consumption than
iny other remedy known to the American pnbllo. They
ire compounded of vegetable ingredients, and contain
lothing which can be injurious to the human constituion.
Other remedies advertised as cures for ConsumpIon,
probably con>in opium, which is a somewhat
w
langerous drug in all cases, and if taken freely by
onsumptlve patients,it matt do great injury; for iu
endency Is to confine the morbid matter In the system,
rhich, of course, must make a cure impossible,
ichenck's Pulmonic Syrup 13 warranted not to contain
i particle of op'.mm. It is composed of powerful bat
larmless herbs, which act on the lnngs, liver, stomach,
,nd expel all the diseased matter frcm the body. These
.re the only means by which Consumption can be cured,
,nd as Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup, Sea Weed Tonlo and
dan drake Pills are the only medicines which operate in
his way, it is obvious they are the only gennlns core for
ulmonary Consumption. Esch bottle of this Invalu
ble medlolne Is accompanied by fall directions. Dr. j
lohsnck Is professionally at his prlnoipal office, oorasr
lUtfa and Arch Streets, Philadelphia, every Monday,
rhete all letters for tdvice most be addressed,
HALF A DOLLAR I
(KWmSjjjB CHICACO
LEDGER:
For the Next Half Yeari
The LrrxJllt to ft lanre 8-PUT?. K-cohrom, tndependor f
Newspaper, which no intelligent farailr ahoold be with- ]
ZhW, m. '
Asbesto* Koofln*-With Light Omar Fik? Paoor
substitute for tin. In use by ell of the Lexocsr MahTJTact
Aebeetoe Palate* ell oolore, reedy for nee, rnex celled I
Aebeetoe Mean Pipe and Boiler Corerina*. T
Aebeetoe Mean Packlna?Indeetrnctlble, self-lobrl<
Anb?(to? Rwt Coating, for restoring: and prsservt
Paint, for lia Roofs, Iron Work. etc. Fire-Proof I
Hheathlncm Vermin Proof I.ln luffs, etc.
Send for Pamphlet, Price List, Samples and lilt of partle
factory lndncementa and sxciqsits right of sale will be gin
where oar eoode are not kept for aale. TT TXT "
Established 1868. Patentee and Mannfactnrar.^* " *
A professional steeple builder states |
that all properly built stone steeples will 1
rock slightly and wooden ones mnch '
more so. If they did not, he wonld
know they were out of plumb.
.
The Markets.
hew tobx.
Beef Oattle-Prime to Extra Bullock* $ 09% 4 lOJt :
Common to Good Texans 18 ? Oi
Milch Oows 40 00 375 00 |
Hogs?Live CT ? 07
Dre?se<l 07X9 08
Sheop fO*
Lamle 00X9 14
Cotton-Middl U 9 12X
Flour?Extra Western 6 65 9 7 00
State Extra 6 86 9 7 00
Wheat?Red Western 1 0? 9 11"
Ho. 2 Spring 1 20 9 1 20X
Rye?State 96 9 97
Barley-State 1 06 #1(4
Barley?Malt 00 9 18
Oata?Mixed Western 86 9 4 X
Corn?Mixed Western 68 9 69
Hay, perewt 70 9 1 f6
Straw, per cwt 1 00 9 1 05
Hops 75'a?12 910 ....olds 04 9 00
Pork-Mess IB 26 919 *
Lard 11X9 11
Fish?Mackerel, No. 1, new 20 00 928 00
" No. 2, new 15 CO 916 (X
Dry Ood, per owt....f 3 26 9 5 0)
Herring, Scaled, per box.... 22 9 22
Petroleum?(Sude 08X?<-8X Refined, 14
Wool?California Fleece 18 9 28
Texas " 20 9 26X
Australian " 40 9 40
Butter?State 25 9 28
Western Dairy 21 9 24
Western Yellow...... 20 9 20
Western Ordinary 10 9 /0%
Oheos*?8tate Factory 00 9 11
State Skimmed 03 9 09
Western <VJ <M 11
Eggs?State 13 16
iuin
Wheat 1 # 1 87
Bye?State 91 9 83
Corn?Mixed 04 9 66
Barley?8tate... 9>i 9 Bo
Oats?State 38 9 60
BUFFALO.
Flour 0 26 910 00
Wheat?No. 1 Spring... 1 24 9 1 24
Corn?Mixed 63 9 63
Oats 87 9 37
Rye 80 9 80
Barley 92 9 92
BALTOfona.
Cotton?Low Middlings..... 12X9 13*
Flour?Extra 8 76 9 8 76
Wheat?Red Western 1 vO 9 1 20
Rye 75 9 78
Oorn?Yellow 60 9 60
Oats?Mixed... 46 9 40
Petroleum 03X9 O0J.
philadelphia,
Beef Cattle?Extra 04 9 08
Sheep 03 9 07*
Hogs?Dressed ll 9 13\
Flour?P-nne. 'vents Extra 7 ';6 9 8 26
Wheat?P.ed Western 1.00 9 1 20
Rye 84 9 86
Corn?Yellow.. (8 9 68
Mixed (4 9 67
Osts?Mixed 86 9 86
/!.?!? mt/itnt/ D.6.aj| lil
ii^l
WATEBTOWTf, MA 88.
Beef Cattle?Poor to Choice 4 76 % 9 75
Rbeep 3 CO % 8 60
Lambs............ . . 2 0>i (A d 8f'
OK FANCY 4'* RD?, new styles, with name. 10e?
poet paid. J. B. Hgated, Nassau, Renas Co., N.F.
O ft FANCY C AR08, ? styles, with name, lOeta.
Lif) Address J. K. HARDER. Maiden Bridge, N. Y.
Q ft CAR DM, 8 Tint*, Name neatly printed, sent for
QJ 10 ct*. Advertiser Steam Pre?a, Waterfowl, N.Y
KA Visiting Cards for 25c. Price list and 10 sample*
OU for 3c. stamp. X1CH014.A Co , Plattabuxgb.N.Y
KA Mixed Tarda, with name, 25 eta. Samples for
el"" 3 ct. stamp. J. Mtnklxr A Co , Na?saa, N. Y.
OA Fxtra Fine Mixed Cards, with Name. 1*) eta.
CV) poet-paid. L. JONES A CO., Nassan, N. Y.
OK FANCY Tarda. ? Styles, with Name, 10ots.
Li O Choice. A. Traveb A Co., North Chatham, N. Y.
6 VERY desirable NEW ARTICLES for A rents
Mfr*d by J. Q. Oapxwxxj. A Co., Cheshire, Conn
41 O a day thome. Areata wanted. Outfit and tenm
<? ? ? free. A 'drees tKUE A CO., Angnsta. Maine.
"Profitable, Pleasant work; hundreds now employed;
A hundreds more wanted. M. N. Lonax. Erie. Pa.
WANTED AGENTS. tempi* and Omtfitfr*.
11 Better than (fold. A. OOULTKR A CO., Ohloago
CK to con * day at home. Samples worth 91 w'
,T)Q LP fraa. STTNSON A CO., Portland. M
WPflFTP Bwt to th. World. **?? ]?*?? frw.
\STHIIAarfiU,"'? * POPIIAM A CO.. IS A Sth St. PhUa. Pa.
Seodft*ChromaOsMfft
' H.Bcrroao'sSobs,Borior. >tv
W A ?n One or two good men In every county.
It iin I LlU Large salary to the right men. Parti culars
free. VaBIXTT MaWUT'O Co., Cincinnati. O.
\I7ANTED.?A? Active Aaenf to manage the
11 exclnsire sale of Cigars In every oonnty. Address
N. Y. TOBACCO CO., 38 Renwlck 8treet, New York.
Jf.naynw Ihrtirulnrifrtt. H. 7.Ateisyst
KYstliel llj" C. A. CLEGG(?> Dosm st.N.T.) U r?M.
mMi A rtunbU. HS offer, Ag?nU atmerdinmy Inducement*.'1
A FORTUNE can be made without cost or risk,
ix Combination forming. Particulars free. Address
J. rv outturn, ainifsr, luwiioa nromiDir.
A |TT?WPQ 73 ruberriber* in one day. Beet lit-ran/
a.\jJalB X u paper. Only 9 I -AO a year. Three #10
chromoa free. Mcwtow A Sppygm, Pubs. Pblia., Pa.
CiQAA PKR MONTH guaranteed.
'iUOar" Badness first-class. Aq*nt? vanted everywhere.
Address, with stamp. T. S. PAGE. Toledo, O.
A gents War ted.?Twenty Ox 11 Mounted Oiwroo?V
for H 1. 2 samples by mud, poet-pald.rOc. Oowr
ytvtai Ohbomo Co.. 37 Nwm Street. New York.
flirt PA A Month.?Agents wanted. 36 beet sell
Nh. a 5111 1?* articles in the world. One sample free
UJUIJU Add'aa J A V K RON wQN, Detroit, Mich.
Learn tpleora'htt
TFIK BF.^T OFFER ever made to Youny Y
MEN and LADIES. Address, ndtb stamp, JL
Mil ERMAN TEf,. CO., OBERL1N. 0.
A A fo *BO a Week and Expenses. or 9*00
Otc' " forfeited. All the new and standard Novelties,
Ohromos, et?. Valuable Samples fate with Cironlare.
R. k FLKTOHFR, 111 Chambers Street, New York.
fltmpf A WEEK guaranteed to Male and Te
M f "?*'e Agents, In their looallty. Cost;
UJ I I NOTHING to try it. Partlonlare Free.
T P. O. VIOKBRY k PP.. Aognrta. Ma
i jinti isji Ail Want 11?thousands of Hens and
i P |r II *1* V mllllona of property saved by tt-fortuu?
fllTnn 1 LJ with It?particulars free. O. F,
uuai' * M LnOEOTQE k BBO..NewYorkA Ohio .
AVtnrw and Morphine Habit absolutely and
flDIIlW "P??d"y cured. Painless; no publicity.
I V I | || Vfl Send Rtsmpfor Particulars. Dr. OaUr
a will ton, 187 Washington St., Chicago.m.
a, A P A A MONTH ? Agents wanted every.
SX inll where. Business honorable and first,
.ft/ail II class. Particulars sent free. Address
U/AIVV WORTH k PP.. 8t. Ionia, Mo.
Iff A Vfrit L'T^-A few reliable, energetic men
UU AMI Jul/ to solicit orders. No peddling.
If 2111 Traveling and hotel expenses paid. Liberal
alary and eorauilsa'on. Address Union Industrial
Works, < tncinnatl, O. All applications answered.
Mind Rending, Psvrhomnncy,, Paaelnatlaa.
Soul Charming, Mesmerism, and Lovers' Guide,
thowlng how either sex may fascinate and gain the love
and affection of any person they ohooee Instantly. 40(1
oacee. By mall 5Qr. Hnnt k Qo.,139 8. 7th 8t,,Phlla.
YOUR own Likeness in oil colors, to show oar work,
pain led on canvas. 5Xx7X, from a photograph or
in-type, free with the Home Journal, 92.50 a year.
Sample of onr work and paper, terms to agents, etc., 10
eta. L. T. LUTHER, Mill Village. Kris county, Pa.
i (JFNT* WANTED in every City and Town in
A. the United States to sell a NEW CENTENNIAL
SOUVENIR, des red by all throughout the land bam.
ales sent free (with ra'ea of discount to agents), npon
receipt of 'in cents by ma'l or otherwise. Sdd esa
ij.bl PAN HOLPEN. 15Q Worth Hi., New York City
'FlTTi a o ?The choicest In tha World?Importers'
J. JCiiV^e prloes?Largest Oomoany In America?
(taple article?pleases everybody?Tnuie cootinnelly
increasing?Agents wanted everyw.ere-best Inducements-don't
waste time?send for clrcnlar to ROBT
WELLS, 43 Veeey 8t, N. Y. P. 0. Box 1287.
ms a Fiasly Printed Brlstsl Flat tin
^ (lards sent posted for 25 eta, hen
k 9 stamp for samples of Glmaataurda,
'J **
ioente Wanted. A. EL FPilJP A Oo.. Brockton. Massr
CIWAK II.HOKK COLIifcGK. Ten Mllsa from
O I'blUdelpbta. Under the care of Friends. Gives a
iioronsh Uol egiate Education to both aex s, who bete
arsue tne nune coarse# of study, and receive the seme
ingress. Total Kxprnsea-Incladlng Tuition, Board,
hashing, Use of Books, stc.,9360 a Year. ho Extra
sviSSasaaK5
i
HALF A DOLLAR -$&?&
CHICACO dP'ImSjB
LEBSER^PF
For the Next Half Year.
The Lepoer Li alsrjre P-pa*e, 56~eohunn, Independent
Jfewsrwier, which no intelligent family ehoaid be with- ?
>ut. The best Story Peperprtnted. T17IL -M
AJdrow. THElEPaEE, Chicago,PL 1
HALS. W
Ooatwg /or steep or flet Eoofcu The only riliabi k
TJSKR3 a id R. R. Oa'?. Reedy lor us*. Easily spelled,
nriohneeeof color end beeatycf finish,
he cheapest end most effective non-cnducto t In use.
eating. WILL w*a* Tin timw? asjlowo as any other.
DC Roofs. C'emmtM? for Leaky Roofa, eto. lUof
Loetlofi for fchiaili Roofs, etc. Felt Roofing.
"^"g our go^ds, and ooboms with e'l others. Be tie n^UpofSTble
pertlee. /pec'el prices to oonsumers
fO .INS, 87 Maiden lane, N. Yi
tjrLENN'S
Sulphur Soap
ebadicates
All Local Skin Diseases;
Permanently Beautifies the
Complexion, Prevents and Remedies
Rheumatism and Gout,
Heals Sores and Injuries
of the Cuticle, and ,
is a Reliable Disinfectant.
This popular and inexpensive remedy
accomplishes the same results
as costly Sulphur Baths, since it
permanently removes eruptions
and Irritations of the Skin.
Complexional blemishes are always
obviated by its use, and it renders
the cuticle woudrously fair and
smooth.
Sores, Sprains, Bruises, Scalds, Burns
and Cuts are speedily healed
by it, and it prevents and remedies
Gout and Rheumatism.
It removes Dandruff, strengthens
the roots of the Hatr, and preserves
its youthful color. Ac. a Disinfectant
of Clothing and Lim a used in the sick
room, and as a Protection against
Contagious Diseases it is unequuled. . .
Physicians emphatically endorse it.
Prices, 25 and 50 Cents per Cake,
Per Box, (3 Cakes.) 60c and $1.20.
N. B. There li economy In ouylng the large cakea.
Sold by all Fragglsta.
"Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye,"
Black or Brown, 50c,
6, J. CIWTENTON, Prrp'r, 7 Siith it. U.
IPffMBM TouNanie KlegaattrPrlat*
lau'ltF ed oa If TiuirinxtTiimjo
CiKDS, ft) is Cants. Eaek eardaentaira
mom which la not visibla until held towards the tight
nothing Ilk, them ever before ot'md in America. Big Inducements
to Agents. Notkltt PaiSTtao Co?AjhlaaAMaa?
A BOOK for tlie MILLION. *
MEDICAL ADVICE
Catarrh, Kuptnre. Opium Habit, Ac., SENT FREE on receipt
ot stamp. Addr?t?,
Dr. Butts' Dispensary i fo 12 N. 8th st. St. Lools, mo ^
_A? Everett House,
IfjSEs North side Unloo Square. New Fork Olty.
! 'ICQ IV Coolest and Most Central Location in the
I JWrl City. Kept on tiie European Plan.
KERNER a weaver.
Clarendon Hotel, - Fourth
Aveane, corner East 18th Street, New York
City. TukUfUott. C H KERNER.
SAVE MONEY
By tending 94.75 (or any 84 Mag* sine sad TBS
WSSKLY TRIBUNE (rtenlar price 96). or 95.75
(or tbo MMtnino ud THS HEM1-WSKXLT TBI
itJN (rac Ur price 88). Address
TBR THIBrWfc. Ssaw.Verfc.
Aim trip.
I
within u-o?r?aj>of ersry
reader of thl? paper who possesses suffldenteaSer- t.
prise to spend stow hoursi n raising a small slab ?
of subscribers to Tits iLixsTEATtD Vnttl.
Scud your addree i on post* 1 card tor circulars,
terms, etc. Send a three cent Stamps If spediwi
copy of paper la desired. Address
i CHAS CLUCAS A CO., M urren 8t., Net Tort
"PORTABLE GRINDING IMILLS.Bwl
Frmth Bssrr stiff spin.
die tinder-runners, cock heed
n^Vv"?r*rmrm
/flpSln slue, (iennlneDnldl An*
/AeMMI ker Boltluy Clotta. Hill
/#]BH PH Picks, Corn label lam eed
Cleinera. Gearing, bbaflina,
ZJBNH ItfiM Pullies. Haulers, etc- all kinds
BWoflliilllachuiery and Sillers'
supplies. .Send for Pamphlet*
^thTl Ktrmob Hill CoesssT,
^ Bei 104UMImwM.
Aa overdose of Dinner ofton dwum the ayetorn,
brings on flatul.-Dcti u<l wind col *, and nbjtoti
the patient to great bodily auffti log. A single doao of
Tarrant's Soltzer Aperient
will comet the acidity, relieve the piin, carry of the
offending cause, and save sometimes a long pell of 111o?ev
Iu effects are gen'le and thorough, and its
general use would prevent mac j offering
SOLD BY ALL PRUOOIBT8.
COLLINS'
Voltaic Plasters.
|7LECTRICITT| a? a grand cor. tire and rsetoraEi
tlve agent, la not eqoaled by any eleirent or medicine
io the history of the healing art Unless the vital
spark baa fl-d the body, reatorat on by meana of eleotrieity
is possible. It la the last reaoit of all physician*
and surgeons. and has rescued thooaands. apparently
dead, from an untimely grave when do other human
agency could have auccc sled. The great difficulty haa
been to bring It into a popu ar, efficient, and economical
form, and never until thai invention of the
COLLINS VOLTAIC PLASTER,
which connate <f Voltaic Plaf m of Silver and Zinc carefully
attached together una imbedded In a Medicated
Porous Plaster, haa it appeared possible. In tbii case,
?a In all others where geriloa ta at work, ancceas la complete.
When the fleeter is placed open the affected
oert, which can be done <ia quickly and conveniently aa
with the ordinary porocs plaater, that Is, by mere pressure
of the band, the natural warmth and moisture of
the akin eat sea the plat* i to throw oot a current of electricity
so gee tie that it is scarcely poteible to feel It ,
otherwise than by the soothing and grateful warmth produoed,
yet so penetrating aa to stop almost immediately
the most excruciating piin, remove sore.ieas, lameness,
and draw Inflammation fmm the lunge, liver, kidneys,
ipleen, bowels, bladder, Heart and muscles. A tingle
COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTER,
for local pains, lameness, sorenee-, weakness, numbness,
and lnflamma lon of tha lungs, liver, kidney a, spleen,
bowel-, bladder, heart, a d muscles, la equal to an army
of doctors and acre- or plants and scrubs It Instantly
banfc-hes pain had so re-, ess, gives life and vigor, to the
weakened and paralyxed mnaclee and limbs, sod is so
gratefnl and toothing that once need In the above aliments,
every other extern-1 appl'cation, aooh as salve',
otntmenta, lot ous.-an'i liniment, will at once be discarded.
Even-in paralysis. epUvp-y, or fits, and nervous
muscular affections. thk Plaster .by i allying the nervous
forces, has effected curse when every other known
remedy haa failed.
trice, 25 cents. Sold everywhere. Sent by mail,
carefully wrapped and warranted, on receipt or price,
?b cents for one, 91.2ft for six, or 92.25 for twelve,
by WEEKS A ^QiTEiL Proprietor*, Boston. Mass.
NTW0 >2. 23 __
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