The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, August 24, 1871, Image 4
Farming as a Business.
A man who is not smart enough to
ran a store is not smart enough to run
a farm. Farmers are not to be made
out of what is left after lawyers, doctors,
ministers and merchants arc sorted and
picked out. And if a man fails on a
farm it is not likely he will succeed in a
Btore, for it requires more talent to be a
thriving farmer than an average merchant.
The one cause of great failure is the (lis- i
4 proportion between a man's farm and his
capital. A farmer's capital is skill, labor
and his money. If lie has little cash, he
must have no more land than he can
thoroughly manage by his personal labor.
Every acre beyond that is an incumbrance.
One acre well worked is
more profitable than twenty acres skimmed
over. It is this greed of land bv which
l.of linvo not tVir> poiiitsil t<">
1(U LUllO VUUU UWT V (IVV VMV ?v
work it that keeps po many poor. Small
farms are better .than large one, simply
because they are better suited to the
capital of common farmers. Large farmers
with; large capital are better than
Bmall ones. Farming is a good business
.J- for all men who conduct it on proper
principles,, and have capital according to
the size of their farms.
Farmer and Artisan.
Dissolving Bones in Caustic Lye.
To accomplish this it is necessary to
break the bones into fragments and pack
them away in a tight shallow box with an
equal weight of good sound wood' ashes.
Mix with the ashes, before packing,
tfwenty-five pounds of slacked lime and
twenty pounds of sal soda (carbonate of
soda) to every one hundred pounds of
the ashes. The box in which to conduct
- that process may be made of rough
boards, but it must be tight, and it should
not be over eighteen inches deep. It
may be as broad as necessary. The
bones should be paeked in layers; first
upon the bottom a layer of ashes, then a
layer of bones, and so alternately until
the box is filled. About twenty gallons*
of water must be poured upon the heap
(that ig, for every one hundred pounds of
bones) to saturate the mas3, but more may
be adaed from time to time maintain permanent
moisture. In three, four, or six weeks,
the bones will be broken down completely,
and the whole may be beaten up together,
after adding an equal bulk of
good silted soil. This compost is of the
highest efficacy, as it embraces quit? all
' * the great essentials of plant food, namely,
potash, soda, lime, phosphoric acid,
and the nitrogenous element. This is a
very convenient way for farmers who
have ashes, to dispose of their store of
bones. If plenty of ashes can be procured,
it will facilitate the decomposition
of the bones to employ twice as much
ashes as there are bones; the solution
will be effected sooner, and more perfectly.
TP nnirdorfxl hr?nt>s are nmnloved.* a
? - I J ,
barrel of the powder may be mixed with
? ' a barrel of good ashes, and the whole
turned into the half of a molasses cask,
moistened with two bucketfulls of water,
and stirred up well with a hoe. In a week
this will be ready for use, and it forms a
most efficient and convenient fertilizer >
for all the cereal crops. We think it
does more for corn, in giving plump, full
kernels, than any coventrated fertilizer,
We have employed. A handful is enough
for a hill, put in it at the time of planting.
Before dropping the seed, a little
earth should be kicked over the powder,
so that may not come in direct contact
'With it.?-Boston Journal of Chemistry.
.A- TJscfal Reptile. -
Not only are toads harmless, but they
are absolutely and directly useful to us,
perambulating fields and gardens at
night, and devouring vast quantities of
injurious insects wliich could never be
destroyed by the the hand of man. The
mode in which a toad takes its prey is
very curious. Its singularly beautiful
eye is as quick as it is bright, and if
^ within range of its vision an insect or a
gnib happens to move, the toad is sure to
and '-nearly certain to catch it.
|\ J&st, the toad holds its head as high as
^ \ possible- so as. to make sure of its prey,
A and then^wls slowly toward it, .
^B^Jiferrmg to get>tmddr it'if possible.?When
itris nearly within reach it gazes
intently at the insect, its mouth being
brought nearer and nearer. Something
^ pink, then flashes from its mouth, and
the insect vanishes a3 if bv magic. The
i flwh is tho tongue of the toad, which is |
formed in a rather curious way. The
. base of the tongue is fixed close to the
K ' front of tfie lower jaw, and is long and
V tapering, the tip pointing down the throat
II, when it i3 at ftest. mien however it is
Bl used for catching, prey, it is thrown with
fa ^ort of "flick," and the tip, which is
covered with a glutinous secretion, adheres
to the insect and conveys it down
the toad's throat before the* prey lias
time to make an effort to escape. When
the toad shallows its prey, it docs it
with a mighty effort, during which the
eyes almost disappear, the size of the
insect having little to do with the most
p. ?" marvelous vehemence of tho toad's dc'
monstrations. When a large beetle is
swallowed it does struggle but too late,
and sometimes its struggles may be seen
through the thin ribless sides of its captorer;
the toad sitting the while in perfect
composure, not in the least affected
by the scratchings and kickings that arc
going on in its interior. Indeed, the
stomach of the toad seems as devoid of
feeling as if it were iron. Moreover the
toad not only cares nothing for the
scratchings and kickings of tho large
beetle bnt is equally indifferent to sting
of wasps, bees and insects similarly armed
with venomous weapons, and will eat
them with marvellous appetite, as if the
sting acted as a sort of gentle aid to
the digestion, like cayenne pepper with
cucumber?ComcCs Magazine.v
Amateur Editors.?An amateur who
was editing a paper in the absence of
a regular editor says: The last thing I
have any distinct recollection of was
getting off something on the mayor of
the town. He went by old Sykcs, the
editor, one evening without nodding, and
I had no sooner entered the office than I
heard:
"Go for Muggs, give it to him hot;
yank him all to pieces, and leave his
shattered soul hanging to the steeple of
the court house."
"JJut he " t began, when Sykes
came close up to me, breathing hard, and
says he:
Young man, go for Muggs. I hate to
part with you, but Smith offers to fill
your occupation for a dollar less.
So I sat down to do up Muggs.
Sykes was going away, and he left me
to my judgment. I wrote an article
that I thought would please the old man
for positiveness, and it went in under a
triple heading. I was just locking up
the paste pot in the burglar proof safe,
to keep it from the rats, and I heard a
jelling on the streets, and the office door
came in on me. I saw stars, comets,
spots on the sun, new moons, and "came
to" in the next town, when I sent the
following dispatch to the old man :
"If you can pav jour board bill, stay
where you are. The press is ruined, the
long primer is in Hardy's horse pond.
The mailing table, the bank, and that
new job rack went over the dam' last
evening. Tilings ain't as they was.
We made a big hit on Muggs. and he
retaliated powerfully. I have hired out
to a quiet old farmer here, and I think I
shan't pursue the* 'get off business any'
further" In about two months I got a
reply, Here was all that was said:
"Young nran, always be positive in your
assertions.
The Hartford Times tells of a Boston
man lately in that city who ate raw
oysters off the shell till the waiter nearly
dropped from exhaustion; then looked at
his watch and exclaimed:
"Bv Jove! I've only got ten minutes
to get to the car, and must break off
right in the middle of a lunch. It's
too bad?too bad. Just my luck!
Can't never get enough to eat outside of
Boston." He was only charged the
ordinary prick of 25 cts. a dozen for
nice, large, fat bivalves, and yet his
lunch cost five dollars and fifty cents,
lie made away with two hundred and
sixty-four oysters, which only served to
whet his appetite.
An old lady in Binghamton read an
item in a paper, the other day, describing
how a grindstone burst in a saw
factory and killed four men. She just
happened to remember that there was a
small grindstone in the cellar, leaning
up against the^wall. So she went out
and got an accident insurance policy, and
then, summoning the hired girl, and
holding the pie board in front of her, so
if the thing exploded her face would not
be injured, the had the stone taken out
in the alley, where 24 pltils of water were
thrown^ on it, and a stick place in the
hole, bearing a placard marked
''Dangerous." She say3 it's a mercy
the whole house was not blown to pieces
by the thing before this.
A man wrote to Horace Greeley for a
situation, and received the following letter
in" Horace's handwriting: This is
the 2000th application in a week. Go
to the devil. I can't hire every d?d
fool." The document was signed Horace
Greeley, but no one could read it.
The man presented it to the cashier, who
looked it over and handed the man $20,
supposing it to be an ortler for his salary,
and he has been drawing his salary
regularly on that letter for six months.
Just now they are having a joke, out
West, on a compositor who set up the
toast, "Woman?without her, man would
K/x n cneon-n " orwl rrnt tVin ctrtna in f.VlA
U U '.ll O Or * 11 UIIVl ^VU VIA V *IA *a?v
wrong place, and produced: "Woman,
without her man, would be a savage."
They say that his wife, who was helping
read the proof, discovered thcmjstake
right away.
? "Who. dare spit tobacco juice on the
floor of this car r" savagely exclaimed a
powerfully-builf passenger, as he rose
from his seat and .stalked down the aisle,
frowning^ defiantly upon the other
passengers. "I dare!" said a burly
looking fellow, as he ejected a quantity
of the noxious saliva upon the floor of
the aisl. "All right, my friend," said
the first speaker, slapping him on the
shoulder, "give us a chew of tobacco."
A Yankee in England, being anuoyed
by the constant boasting as to tlic
superiority of English girls, finally
silenced laudation by declaring that
"they had a gal in Boston, only eleven
years old, who -could chew gum in seven
different languages with her eyes shut."
"Certainly."?If small girls arc
waifs, arc large ones wafers t "(Jcrtainly,
says sweet sixteen; "at least the boys
have the habit of applying them to their
lips in scaling their vows.'
A parson, reading the funer^ervices
at the grave, forgot the sex of ^e deceased,
and asked one of the mH^ers,
an Emeralder: "Is this a brothef or
a sister?" "Nather," replied Pat, "only
a cousin."
Here we have.a first-rate bull made
by a French preacher, who lately said,
"Admire the prodigious strength of Samson
! "With the jaw-bone of an ass he put
a thousand Philistines to the sword."?
Paddy from Cork may try a while before
he blunders into anything so excellent as
that '
..-J,' . ~ i Aj
" A inan who would maliciously set fife to
a barn," Baid good old Elder Porson, "and
burn up a stable full of horses and cows,
ought to be kicked to death by a jackass,
and. I'd like to be the one to do it."
4
THE V
Camden Journal
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY,
AT
A Tv /T"n U! NT" <=S
WJn I .V-I? I y Ma(w>
.. X -
HAVING PASSED INTO MY
HANDS, I WILL ENDEAVOR TO
MAKE IT A
i
WELCOME VISITOR
JO EVERY FAMILY CIRCLE, AS
WELL AS A VALUABLE
ADVERTISING 5TEDIUM,
AND A REFLEX OF THE
Latest' Mfr and Senirt ?M
, : I
AGITATE THE WORLD.
THE POLITICS OF THE PAPER
WILL BE
CONSERVATIVE;
ITS PROPRIETOR HOPES FOR
. . -c.f.nA': i
AND EXPECTS
*
. . t
THE SUPPORT OP THE PEOPLE.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE,
TH11EE DOLLARS
/per annum.
ADVERTISEMENTS:
FIRST INSERTION, $1.00 PER
SQUARE, AND 75 CENTS FOR
\
EACH SUBSEQUENT.
,
TERMS:
CASH IN ADVANCE.
JOHN EEBSHAW,
Proprietor.
%
I
Jp*
?
DOORS/ ^SHES, BLINDSr 4G.
MANUFACTURER AND DEALER,
i 5o. 20 Hayno-st.. and Ilorlbeck's tfharf,
CHARLESTON, S. C.
jJgrTbis is the largest and most complete Factory
of the kind in the Southern States, and nil
articles in this line can be furnished by Mr.
P. Toalk at prices which defy competition.
figy-A pamphlet with full and detailed list of
all sizes of Doors, Sashes and Blinds, and the
prices of each, will be sent free and post paid,
on application to
P. P. TOALE, Charleston, S. C.
July 13j 12ra.
* SOUTH-CAROLINA
Land & Immigration Association.
The undersigned having accepted the agency
for the above Association for this County, is prepared
to sell tickets and give all information repeating
thesnmo.
jpgjyOffice, on Rutledgo Street, Cnmdcn. S. C.
JOHN KERSIIAW.
June 20. tf
D. L DeSAUSSURE & CO.,
COMMISSION AGENTS,
Will buy and sell COTTON, PltODUCE, and
MERCHANDIZE generally, upon liberal terms,
and solicit consignments, which thev will endca
vor To dispose of to beet advantage, either at
Wholesale or retail.
ON CONSIGNMENT.
Flour. Syrup,
13aeon,- Sugar,
Lard, Coffee, Soiap-,
i Hams, 3iolasse?,
Candles, &c. &c.
Whicb arc offered VERY -LOW, for CASH
ONLY.
They also Offer,
At Costfor Oasli,
The entire of their former stock, purchased by
Messrs. J. I. Middlctou & Co., and sold on their
account.
D. L. DbSAUSSURE & CO.
June 22?tf
Just Received, A
small lot of Choice
Small Size M". Y. Pig Hams,
And White Breakfast Meat
For family use?eqnal to any home curing, and
cheap as the cheapest.
1). L. DbSAUSSURE & CO.,
Aug. 17?tf. Com. Agcntj.
GENERAL FIRE
AND
LIEE INSURANCE AGENCY,
CAMDEN, S. C.
? ?
Piedmont & Arlington
Life Insurance Company,
RICHMOND, Va,
The most Successful and Wealthiest
Insurance ompany in the South.
ASSETS to 10th Sept., 1870, $2,01,1,096.7(
ANNUAL INCOME 1,500,000.0(
NO. POLICIES ISSUED to 13th
Dec., 1870, ' 18.211
Fire Com paniee
Pacific Insurance Company Of Sar
Francisco, Atlantic Branch New
York Capital One Million DolGold.
Policies Issued Payable in Gold 01
Currency,
Richmond Banking and Inrance
Company,
CAPITAL $.500,000.
Por every description of insurance apply to
* W. CLYBUKN, Agent.
? _ t .
Fisk's JPatent
OCTAGON ROSEWOOD MSH
metallic Burial Cases.
AIR-TtGIIT and INDESTRUCTABM
for PROTECTING AND PRESERVING
THE
DEAD.
The subscriber keeps tho above celebratet
CA8ES on hand, which, for durability, neat
ness and finish connot be surpassed. These an
air and watertight, therefore will preserve thi
body for a long time, which have been prove!
by a number of Undertakers North nnd South
They dost hut little, if any more than wellmadi
Walnut or Mahogany Coffins. "
ALSO
Oil band, a completo assortment of
WOODED COFFINS,
Lined and Unlined, Stained and Varnished, o
covered. Handles and Trimmings to suit am
at prices to suit the circumstances of all
It. J. McCREIGIIT,
Undertaker.
March 1C. 12m.
SOUTH CAROLINA RAIL ROAD
CAMDEN BRANCH.
On and after Monday, June 12, 1871, th
.Schedule of the Camden Train will be ns follows
Leave Camden at G 00 A. M.
Arrive at Columbia at 10-10 A. M.
Leave Columbia at 1 23 P. M.
Arrivo at Camden at G 00 P. M.
Running through to Columbia on Mondays
Wednesdays and Saturdays; on Tuesdays, Thurs
days and Fridays, the above schedule will b
observed ns far as Kingsville.
By order of the Vicc-Psesidont.
A. B. DkSAUSSURE, Agent.
Camden March 30, 1871. r
' ' 11
HENRY T. HELMBOLD'S
COMPOUND FLUID
Extract Catawba
GRAPE PILLS.
Componeut 1'arts?Fluid Extract Kliubmb and
Fluid Extract Catawba Grape Juice.
For Liver Complaints, Jaundice, Billions AflFections,
Sick or Nervous Headache, Costivcnes,
etc., Purely Vegetable, containing ni Mercury,
Minerols or Deleterious Drugs.
H
These Tills are tho most delightfully pleasant
pitrgative, superseding castor oil; -salts, magnesia,
otc. There is nothingmore ucccptible to the
stomaeh.- they give tone, and. cause neither
nausea nor griping pains. They are composed of
the finest ingredients. After a few daya' use of
them, such an invigoratibn of the entire system
takes place as to appear miraculous to the weak
and enervated whether arising from imprudence
or disease. H. T. Hclmbold's Compound Extract
Catawba Grape Pills are not sugar-coated, from
the fact that sugar-coated -Pills do not dissolve,
buf pass through the stomach without dissolving,
consequently do not produce the desired effect.
Tim p?f?ufV>a finriA Pills, heinir nleasant in tnste
and odor, do not necessitate their being sugarcoated.
Price Fifty Cents per box.
E : '.n
Henry T. Helmbold's..
HIGHLY CONCENTRATED COMPOUND
Fluid Extract Sarsaparila
Will radically exterminate from the system Scrofula,
Syphilis, Fever Sores, Ulcers, Sore Eyes,
Sore Legs, Sore Mouth; Sore Head, Bronchitis,
Skin Diseases, Salt Rheum, Cankers, Runnings
from the Ear, White SwellingH, Tumors, Cancerous
Affections, Nodes, Rickets, Glandular Swellings,
Night Sweats, Rash, Tetter, Humorsofall
kinds, Chronic Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, and all
diseases that have been established in the system
for years.
Xi .
Being prepared expressly for the above complaints
its Blood-purifying properties are greater
ihnn any other preparation of Sarsnparilla. It
gives the the complexion a clear and healthy color,
and restores the liatient to a state of health
and purity. For purifying the blood, removing
all chronic constitutional diseases arising from
nn impure state of the blood and the onTy reliable
and effectual known remedy"for the cure ofpnins
and the swelling of the bones, ulcerations
of the Throat and Legs, Blotches, Pimples on the
Face, Erysipelas und nil scaly Eruptions of the
skin and beautifying thcComplcxion. Price $150
per bottle. . 1
im:
HENRY T. ^HELMEOLD'S
OOXCESTRATKI) Fluid
Extract Bncliu
THE (3BEAT PIKUETir,
Has cured every case of Diabetes in which it has
been given, Irritation of theNeik oftlic Bladder
and Inflamntion of the Kidneys, Ulceration of the
Kidneys and Bladder, Retention of Urine, Diseases
of the B^ostf^e Gland, Stone in the Bladder,
CalculuS," Gravely- Brickduet Deposit, and
Mucus or Milky Discharges, and for Enfeebled
and Dclitended with the following symptoms:
Indisposition to exertion, loss of power, loss ot
Memory, Difficvlty of-Breathing, wesk Nerves,
Trembling, Horror of Disease, Wakefulness, Dimness
of Vision, Pain in the Back, Hot Hands,
Flushing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin Eruption
on the Face, Pallid Countenance, Universal
Lassitude of the Muscular System, etc.
Used by persons from the hges of eighteen to
twenty-five, and from thirty-five, to fifty-five or
in the dcclino or change os life; after the confinement
or labor pains; bed-wetting in children.
. 33
Ilelnibold's Extract Buchu is Diuretic and
blood-purifying, and Cures all diseases arising
from habits of dissipation, and excesses and imprudences
in life, impurities of the blocd, etc.
superseding Copaiba in affections for which it is
used, and syphilitic affections?in these diseases
used in connection with llelmbold's Rose Wash.
LADIES.
In many affections peculiar to Indies, the
; Extract Buchu is unequalled uny oiher Remedy?as
in Clorosis or Retention, Irregularity,
pninfulncss or suppression of customary evacuations,
ulcerated or Sohirrus state of the uterus,
) Leucorrhoea or whites, Sterility and all complaints
) incident to the si x, whether arising from indiscretion
or dissipation. It. is preseribod; extern*
i sivcly by the most eminent physicians nnd midwives
for enfeebled and delicate constitutions, of
both sexes and all ages (attended with any of (he
above diseases or symptoms.) i. ,
O
H. I. HEI.MBOLD'S EXTRACT BCCHU cures
diseases arising from imprudences, hnbitg of dis.
sipation, etc., in all their stages, at little expense,
little or no change in diet, noinconvenienco and
exposure. It causes a frequent desire to Urinate,
thereby removing Obstructions, preventing nnd
curing Strictures of the Uretha, allaying pain
1 and inflammation, so frequent in this class of
diseases and expelling all Poisnous matter.
L
II. T. TJELMHOLD'S Improved Hose Wash
cannot bo surpassed us a Face Wash, nnd wilbbe
1 found the only spocifio remedy in every species
of Cutaneous Affection. "It speedily eradicates
pimples, spots, scorbutic dryness, Indurations of
' the cut a neons mcnibrune, etc., dispelB redness
and incipient inflammation, litveB, .rash, .moth
patches, dryness offthe 'scalp or smn, irost Mies,
* and all purposes for which salve's or ointments
are used ; restores the skin to. a state of parity
and softness, and insures continued healthy action
to the tissue of its vessels, on whiekdepends
the agreeable' clearness and vivacity of complexion
so much sought and admired. But however
valuable as' a remedy for existing defects of
? the skin, II. T, Hclinbold's Rose Wash harlong
, sustained its principle claim to unbounded pat'
ronage, by possessing qualities which render it
a Toilet Appendage of the most Superlative ond
Congenial character, combining in an elegant
formula those prominent requisites, Safety and
Efficacy?the invariable accompaniments of its
1 use?as a Preservative and Refresher of the
- Complexion. It is an excellent Lotion for Syph8
ilitid Nature, and as an injection for diseases of
8 the Urinary Organs, arising from dissipation,
i used in connection with the Extract Buchu, Sar.
supajilhi nnd Catawba Grape Pills, in such dise
eases as recommended, cannot be surpassed.?
Price $1 00 per bottle.
3D
( Full and explicit directions aocompany the
r medicines.
I Evidence of tho most responsible and reliable
character furnished on application, with hundreds
of tliousunds living witnesses, and upward
of 30,000 unsolicited certificates and recommendnry
letters, many of which are from the highest
- sources, including eminent physicians, Clorgyman,
Statesmen, otc. The proprietor has never
resorted to their publication in the newspapers;
he does not do this from tbe fact that his articles
rank as Standard Preparations, and do not need
to be propped up by certificates.
TInn?v HP TTnlmRnlfPu Cnninna Pro.
liLIll J J JU.V1IUMV1U u vvuuaaav x
paration,
? Delivered to any address. Secure from obser"
ration.
ESTABLISHED UPWARDS OF TWENTY
YEARS. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Address
letters for information, in confidence to H.
* T. II ELM BOLD, Druggist and Chemist,
i, Only Depots: II. T. Helmbold's Drug and
- Chemical Warehouse, No. Gf>4 Broadway, New
e York, err II. T. Helmbold's Medical Depot, 104
South Tenth Street, Philadelphia.
Beware of COUNTERFEITS! Ask for IIENRY
T. HELMBOLD'S. Take no other,
Feb. 23.? 3m.
?* dyer's
Cathartic Pills, V
Vat all the purpose* ibf ? Laxative jH
*'4 * lw?dl> -* I
JN cine la so universally B
X*. -jar' xSSSl, B
foro so universally s
1 ml adopted into use. In B
1A J5&S\ every country and B
wPXV7fcVttSml among all classes,*aa
^ q7 this jJId but efficient a^Kk
Sk obvious7 rauwn^u! B
that Itiso more relia.
bio and tor.iflore efftctual
remedy than any other. Thofio who have V|
tried it, know that itcure&theoti those who have Bi
not, know thatit cures theirnelghbors and friends;
and all know that what it doea once it doesal- Bft
ways?that it ncvcrXails through any fault or neg- ^^B
gleet of its composition. Wc have thousands upon B B
.thousands of certificates of their remarfcablecure*
Of the following-complaints, but such cures are
known In every neighborhood; and we need not
publish them. Adapted to all ages nnd conditions
in all climates; containing neither calomel nor my
deleterious drug, they may be taken with aaftty B
by anybody. Their sugar-coating preserves them
ever fresh, and makes them pieasantto take,Wftfla . B
being purely vegetable, no harm can drtoe ftgp y^B
their use in any quantity." - -B
Internal viaeera^to p^iff ^?bloo^n^^rn ula^w ^
it Into healthy action ? remove the obstruction* A
of the stomach, bowels, liver, and other or^rnk or jl
me D<xiy, restoring mcinnx'^uiuracuuu wuwuwf m
and by correcting, wherever they exist, such to* w
rangementa as are the first origin of dlsean. * -vVfl
Minute directions are given In the wrapper ?t? a
the box, for the following complaints, which these . ,^j
PUU rapidly curec? - 1
J
Should be taken moderately to stimulate the stonv j
ach, and restore its healthy tone and action.. J
Tor JUverCanptatu and tttvartonstyn]* u
tons, Wllsu Headache, Sick nsal f. ^
asM, JTaasdiM or Crew WsIoSS^.MBh n
lou Colic and Billows Veven,theyshpaw V
be Judiciously taken for each case, to correct the
diseased action or remove the ob*mu.UuusjMBMI . 1
cause it. - _ '
For Dyientery or Btarrhsee, but oaflr
mild dose is generally required. '
For nheumatUm, Cont, Gravel, Pal'
SlUtioa of the Heart,.JPata U.il# J'
Ide, Back and JLolns, they should WafbBnf k
nously taken, as required, to change the diseased J
action of the system with such change thoW ;1
^^r^Sropsy and Dropsical Swellings
they should be taken in large and frequent dfUp '
to produce the effect of a drastic purge.
For appresaion a largo dose should be taken
as it produces the desired effect by syat*
^As^a Dinner PiUj take or twoJMZZstof
PIAn occasfonnl dose stimulates the stomachand
bowels into healthy action, restores the appetite,
and invigorates tho system. Hence it Is often a?' ->
vantaneanBtrhereno serious deranirementexisttf *
(fee who feela tolerably well, often finds flutt a . -4
dose of those IHIU makes him ftei decidedly bat-' ,
ter, from their cleansing and renovating effect on
the digestive apparatus.
. 2>r. J. C.A.YER <Z CO., Practical Chemitfrf ^jj
LOWELL. MASS., V. S. A. . \
'fJXl
Sold m C.inidGn Ly ^ ,^ ^ ,
Nov. 3.?ly. HODGSON & DtiNLiT.
. J. Walks*, Pwptl?lo?.. R. H. llct*tuis't C*., DnqMc/
* Bes. A|nl?, a?o rrroeitx>TC>l,W t W?a?eeit? W>?
ffllLLIOlYS Henr Testimony to (heir '
1^; Wonderful CaraUve Effects.
TInccrar Hitter* are not a rile FnnC7
v/ Drlub, Made oTPeer Bam, Wtlakef* '
Proof Spirits nml Jtcfnxc Liquors, doctored,
Rplcfd and sweetened to plena the tastev
called " Tonics," ' Appetizer*." " SestAma,' *ev -
that lead the tippler on to drunkenness end ruin,
hot are a tree Medicine, made fromthe Native ' ' >. .
Boots and Harts of California, free from all * M
Alcoholic Stimulant*, They are the*
GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER and A
LIFE GlVlSO PRINCIPLE, a pe^et .
Kcnorntor and lnvifforntor of the Sjatera, carrjr*^,-.
In* off all poisonous mattor and restoring the-blood '
to alieaithr condition. No person can take < these'1
.. . Bitters according, to directions and tpmaln lonc
nowell^rovlded' tboft bones "are not destroyed
by mineral poison or other ratals, sod Uio:ritel. ...
organs wasted beyond the point of repe'ir; .
They ore n CJcutlo- Pnrsratlve n?*J*r?Sf:'R
.. . . as a Tonic, possessing alio, the. peeullar-raefip
of aetinr as a powsrfktl atreot in rellerMs dontsa^
tlon or Inflammation of the Liter, and of all the ; .
Visceral Orsan*.
1 FOR FBNALC COBr^fXTKwXWMf "
inyonng orold, married or single, at, the dnwn.yf .
womanhood or st the. turn of life, theao Tonio fetters
bare no equal.
Far Inflammatory and Chronic Itlien^
mntlsm nnd . Cent, ilrepepela or laf
'. " digestion, Bilious, Remittent 'aM
i Intermittent Fevers, Ulwski
Illeod, Liver, Kidneys, and Bladder*. *
'" thaw Hitters Puts been most sneeeaftiL^fctW^^
J. Diseases are caused by Vltlnted Blood,
which Is federally produced by derand*ment of
the Digestive Organs.
DYSPEPSIA OR IKDIOBSTIOY, ,
* - Headache, Patn In the Shoulder*;' Congha,.Ttghfr-"" * v-=. nesaof
the Cheat, DliilncsB, Hfiwr Bruotation* oC.. ,
the 8tomac!i, Bel Taste In the Month. Billons ^
Attack*, Palpitation ortbe.lieftrt,.imiuiini*uoua? n
Uie Lane*, Pain in the regions of the Kidney*, and ' N
a hundred other painful symptoms orellhe ofl pringsot
Dytpopel*. Tn i:* f; . .
Thoy invigorate the Stomach and stianUatrUit
torpid Liver andTowel*. which render therfr of :
nucunollt'd i-fBcncy in cloanilngth* blood of al)i|>4 ?
pnrttiea, and imparting new life and vigor to the
whoieijaton.
?OR SKIN DISEASES, Eruption*,Telficr, JWt
Rheum. Blotch**. BpoU.- Plmplta. Piufafla*. "
Boil*, Corbanclr*. King-Worms, Beald Head. Sore
BrcaEryiipelna, Itoh, Scurf*, Olseirioretfcm* ottha Bain,
Humor* and Disco*** of the Skin, of.What- _- ?
ever nam* or nature, are literally dug up and oarlied
out of the evKtem in a short timeby the nee of
'< taeMBwereT One bottle in each caeee wnfaba- ince
the moat incredulous of their oarativefhet. ,
Cleanse the VitiatodBlood whenever you Qnd Its ""
.v.. taimritla* butting through U?ekfc?linPtmplaa, J,
Eruption* or Bore*; clean so it when yon find it
obstructed and elnggiah In the veins; cleanse*:.'!
when it is foul, andycror feclinps will tell yon whoa..
Keep the blood pure, and the health of tbo *y?t?a: c
will follow. ' . v.i jv
PIN, TAPE, and other WORMS, urUnff
in the system of so many thousands, an effoctoittf^
destroyed and removed*
BOLD BY ALT, DRUGGISTS AND DB/tLUMt
J. WALKER. Proprietor. R. II. MCDONALD fcr
CO.. Druggist* and Gen. Agent*; Sen 'tttSStS^ " Cat,
and JO and W Commerce Street, New York.
? ??" '^
llliipti.
^fmTERWHEEE
Mill Gearinf,Shaftin??MeyS ?
t^LSEND FORAClRCUlAfCjSzl /
J. I. MBDLETC? & CO]"
FACTORS
AND
- .i ?k,. Mrfurf
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
BALTIMORE',
Having purchased the entire STOCK ,CPfV.
GOODS of Messrs. D. L. DeSaubsure &
Co., we will sell thesaino at r-:
COST for CASH,'
and for that purpose hereby constitute the
members of that firm our agents to effect such'
sale. , **? *
J. I. MIDDLETON & CO. *
Jnuc.8 tf
1