"…- Illinº." º ||||||| *.....,,, "sit- -- - §lulu \"\{ ºut… . ſumn" unautiliſillſ||||||||||||||||||| | immº"vum Illinºiſilliſi “IIIſ...;; in." I/II, II: II numi" -II lin.” - - || "..."uniſh, MW ill"Hill. - | millſ ~. -º mmiſſilſ -, *ſ - || - | | - minutiuhinuillſ 2-ºf-uſ" º N millililulull- III.- Ili-ill ill-ill-ill-11-" - || || illllllllllllllllll | | - 1111111utiliii" in-a- ºil,lºſh. | º | |\")" - . millilultiliiliili II. nuuuuuuuu"untº l | | H ---- E - | | - º | milmmill” ſtullu" ZT / . - . . . . -- ruinºnitºriºniſtiniiwinistiniumsiliiniiiiuuuniinmilliimiulimitilj" - ill'ſ 'll I I I I I, III II, II, I, II, iſ I, II, iſ |Illuliuluuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuununulu | The Art of Making Money. | | INTERESTING TO ALL civilized communities. (AN EXTRACT FROM A LONDON PAPER.) G : d N.ºO||| *gd “WHEN a man makes a great success in busi- ness, everybody is interested to learn about the the business men of London who watched Mr. White's early operations, did make that precise () |LsO |[]C means that he adopted in accomplishing such comment on him. They said, he was a madman. an achievement. The wonderful success that But there was method in his madness, as was has attended the business enterprise of Mr. A. | conclusively shown by the results. The people . J. White during the past four years has at-lin whose hands he placed small lots of Mother tracted the enviable notice of a very large por- Seigel's Syrup, £1 and upwards in value, found tion of the public, and the account of his great that the remedy was really what it claimed to ‘hit’ in the art of money making will be of be; it was quickly sold, and more of it was | interest to many readers. g | eagerly sought for. The agents so confidently | “When Mr. White came to London to estab- trusted by Mr. White did pay for their goods, I i lish himself in business, with the purpose of and the news of the medicine's remarkable | making the Shaker Extract of Roots, or Mother | powers spread from mouth to mouth, from vil- | Seigel's Curative Syrup known to the people |lage to village, from town to town, until it cov- | of Great Britain, he felt at one and the same |ered the whole land. Later on branch houses time a strange diffidence and a strange con- were established in Germany, Austria, Belgium, fidence. His diffidence arose from his being a stranger in a strange land, and his fear that | the people to whom he addressed himself might | imagine that the Shaker Extract was a mere | worthless nostrum, such as so many people | have been deceived by. His confidence sprang from the settlºd lºnowledge he possessed, that the Extract was the most powerful remedial | agent of modern times. Actuated by this com- lave seemed the plan of a stark lunatic. That discovered.” | It is not contended that Seigel's Curative bined diffidence and confidence, Mr. White re- | solved to introduce his medicine upon a plan which, under any other circumstances, would any man should deliberately open a place of busi- | ness in London and send out to every part of | the country parcels of his goods to the value of thousands of pounds sterling, placing them in the hands of utter strangers, and trusting to | Holland, Spain, Portugal, India, Australia, | New Zealand, South Africa and the Levant. “And now he has agents traveling through I South America, establishing wholesale agencies i at every available point. The directions for || using this remedy are printed in upwards of [. twenty languages, and to-day Mr. White is the most successful man in his line of business on the whole earth. “So much for trusting to the honesty of the people, when he knew the medicine he offered them was the best remedy for dyspepsia ever Syrup is a cure-all. But it is an infallible cure for all diseases of a dyspeptic nature, or arising from impurities of the blood. In the wisdom of . divine providence, for every disease that flesh their word of honor alone that they would pay is heir to, a plant has been made to grow, for them, did seem the act of a simple-minded which, when properly dealt with, its essential || idiot. But when to this it was added that he essence properly extracted, will inevitably cure authorized his agents to refund the purchase the disease for which it was by God intended. money to people who, having bought the medi- Seigel's Curative Syrup is an extract of roots : cine, were dissatisfied with it (taking the pur- and plants expressly designed to cure diseases chaser's own word for it that no good had been of the stomach, blood and liver. If you have done by the remedy), people said to each other, any of the symptoms peculiar to these diseases, “Why, this man is mad!” As a matter of fact, this medicine will surely do you good. It will | Oontinued on page 2. 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A ------------" " - ------" , r**** ----> *--------------- ***** *-.. - - - Arı--> - -- -*::::::-2.2::::::..wa.-----. ------- -> - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - T - - - -- - - - - - T - º alº - - - - - - - - - - - - *- - - - - º º T º |- - - - - - |- - - -- - - - º - - - --------------- Nºv.----------- ...---------- -- -- -------------------" ---- -: , -------- -- - - :-- --- - --- rº-N.--ºv - - …--> ***** -- *º----- --- ----- -- *-* -- --- -" -- ------ --~~~~º.'' -------...--> - - - ====-aº - --- - --- - - - -------------- -- - - -º-º: !---~~~~ -- - - --- T---- --- - MRs, LANGTRY, the famous English beauty, said to be the most beautiful lady in England. i | º “I believe are symptoms of consumption, and will cause the liver to secrete healthy bile, and the skin to grow soft and white. It will relieve the cough and expectoration, which so many in time banish the night-sweats, which älso seem to indicate that fatal malady. Your blood will circulate through your veins with greater freedom and warmth, as it becomes purer, and your frame will glow with new life. The food you eat will not distress and torture you, nor pass from your system without strengthening you, but it will be properly digested and taken up into your system to build tip and restore your muscles. ( “It is not what we read that makes us wise, but what we remember.” “It is not what we eat that makes us strong, but what we digest.” { With Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup there is perfect digestion, and consequent strength to the feeble frame, quiet and refreshing sleep at night, and a revival of interest in life. If you say you have tried many kinds of medi- cine, none of which have done you good, so that you have lost faith in all, we reply, that by the Shaker Extract or Curative Syrup your faith will be restored. You will find that it will cure you of your dyspepsia or indigestion, from which all your troubles proceed, and that with the cure of that one disease all the other dis- tressing complications will vanish like chaff | to such a point that it must be dealt with with tions, and would rather dawdle about or sit yawning in an arm chair; your bowels are irre- gular, generally bound up unless opened with physio of some sort, and there is a sense of heaviness in the lower bowel. Your liver is now a little deranged, your blood a little disordered, your stomach a little wrong, but you do not feel yourself exactly a sick man. The truth is, you have already got dyspepsia, though in its milder form as yet. You might have nipped it in the bud by a few doses of || Seigel's Curative Syrup when the disagreeable ! symptoms first began; but now it has gone on | i a firm hand. The Curative Syrup should be taken regularly three times a day, until you are fully recovered. Neglecting to obey these dictates of common wisdom, you pass on, neglecting your disease, till you become that painful object, a confirmed dyspeptic. One by one the symptoms of your serious dis- order appear, not all at the same time, nor all in the order here detailed, but ultimately, in- evitably, they make themselves felt. Your ap- petite is extremely capricious; generally, you do not want to eat, and when you do eat your food distresses you, seeming to lie in the mid- dle of the stomach like a hard lump; or it comes up in the mouth in a sour condition, or is vomited forth undigested. Often there is diffi- before the wind. Your blood has been made impure through the dyspepsia which has afflict- ed you, and your whole system, including your mind, has been poisoned by the noxious fluid which has clogged your veins. Neglect of the means of cure at an early stage of your disease can only lead you to a worse condition of things. Perhaps you have not yet become seriously ill; you still attend to your business as formerly, but you have various symptoms of the disorder that is fastening its fangs upon your vitals. Your appetite is not good; there is a bitter, nasty tastein your mouth on rising in the morning, which you try to rinse out with a glass of water, you have headache and feel dull and spiritless; when you rise sud- denly from sitting your head swims, you feel dizzy, and fear you are going to fall down; you the pit of the stomach, which neither food nor > > ) > oult breathing; you belch up wind from the stomach; a sort of foul gas seems to accumulate there, owing to the fermenting food lying on the stomach, you have a faint sinking sensation in drink will relieve, except for a while. You be- come nervous, peevish, low spirited, cross; you fret at trifles, and are disagreeable to those about you with your bad temper. By-and-by you begin to loose flesh and to get quite feeble. You go to a medical man, who gives you mer- curial pills, or tells you you need a tonio; but as you go on and find his medicine does you no good, you resort to all sorts of medicines for relief, all with little or no benefit. Now your blood is becoming seriously foul and impure; the liver will not do its work; the stomach is irritable and painful, and rebels at every call are disinclined to attend to your daily occupa- [Oontinued " * * ~ **- * : * . . made upon it to digest food. A bottle of the on page 4.] / - * - - - .# CURE OF RHEUMATISM OF LONG STANDING. Chawmcey, Dodge Co., Ga., Oct. 31, 1881. MR. A. J. WHITE-Dear Sir:-My wife has been suffering with Neu- ic Rheumatism ever since she was twelve or fourteen years old, has been treated by several doctors without any good effect, and Since We Were married she has tried all rheumatic remedies that were obtainable and still found no relief, until one of my neighbors persuad- ed me to give your Shaker Medicines a trial. I purchased a bottle and my Wife has used it up to the present time, and has been cured with less than $10.00 worth. I cheerfully recommend it to all sufferers with this terrible disease. Any one doubting this will please write to me and I will try and con- Vince them that this is true and unsolicited. Yours truly, WILLIAM C. COLLINS. FUN. THE boarders of a tavern in Georgia were annoyed by flies in their butter. Judge Dooley took the tavern-keeper aside, and remarked to him, in a private way, that some of his friends thought it would be best for him to put the butter on one plate and the flies on another, and let the people mix them to suit themselves. He merely suggested it for COnSideration. A MAN in the interior of Kentuc neighbor for bruising his shins. If the jury award damages they should order the amount to be paid in shin plasters. A WESTERN editor having published a leader on “Hogs,” a rival paper in the same village upbraids him for obtruding his family matters upon the public. - ky has brought suit against his AIPRI L-1883, N % N | Moon’s Phases. | ill "N" W W #4 WN \\ *: d. A. m. d. M. m. - 7 /WI - 5 § New Moon, 7 836 M. Full Moon, 22 6, 27 M. V ſº >>||First Quar, 14 3 49 M. I. Last Quar., 30 2 3 M. NYNA - 5 | Day of the Sun Risesſ Sun Sets Moon Rises' % Week. h. m. h. m. h. *— | V-T - 1 s: - - - - - 5 44 || 6 24 || 1 33 Wº% 2 jMonday----. 5 43 6 25 2 15 | #|Nº|| 8 |Tuesday ....] 5 41 6 26 2 54 | ſ { |ſy/ 4|Wednesday - || 5 40 || 6 27 3 32 %iléſ. %/ 5 Thursday ...] 5 38 6 28 4 8 ( |\|/.4% 6 |Friday ...... 5 36 6 29 4 46 N % . 7|Saturday....I 535 6 30 SetS. NSs % 8|Sunday..... 5 33 6 31 8 12 ">\\\s 9 Monday - - - - - 6 82 6 32 9 24 rºm 10 |Tuesday..... 5 80 || 6 33 || 10 30 - *j "Bºº 11 Wednesday - || 5 28 6 34 11 29 | ##### 12|Thursday ...] 5 27 6 35 Ill OTIn. III'll † º 13|Friday ------ 6 25 6 36 0 20 14|Saturday....] 5 24 6 87 1 4 # sº - - - - - ; : ; : ; : Broiled Beef Steak. Cold Beef, with Puree of OIl Cl8 W - - - - - Have the Steak cut from Otatoes. 17 Tuesday ....] 5 19 6 40 2 45 three-fourths to an inch thick. P O 18 Wednesday. || 5 18 || 6 41 ; : is redge it with sait and four | Pare, boil and mash twelve 19|Thursday --- 5 16 6 42 § {} | and cool over clear coals for large potatoes. Add to them 20 |Friday ...... ; : | | | | | | | ten minutes this gives it rare salt, pepper and twotablespoon- 21 |Satur By---- 5 14 6 44 4 39 —then place On a Warm dish fulS Of butter; then beatin grad- 22 |Sunday..... 6 12 || 6 45 *; and season with salt, pepper ually one pint of boiling milk. 23|Monday..... 5 11 6 46 § 1 and butter. "Have the vege- || Spread, this preparation on a 24 |Tuesday ... " 6 9 6 47 9 2 tables ready to serve as soon | Warin dish and then place On it 25 Wednesday ... I 5 8 6 48 9 55 as the Steak is cooked, as it handsome slices of cold roast #|Tºday ---| 3 || | | | | | # joi. by standing. 2 beef. Put one tableSpoonful of 27 |Friday - - - - - - 5 5 || 6 50 || 11 30 gravy on each slice. Place the 28 |Saturday....] 5 4 || 6 51 || Imorn. Muffins. dish in the oven for five min- 29 |Sunday..... 6 2 6 52 0 13 One pint sweet milk, two eggs, utes. Garnish the edge of the | 80 |Monday..... 5 1 6 53 9 * three cupfuls of flour, and three | dish with any kind of green, like teaspoonfuls of baking powder. parsley, carrot, or celery. W TESTIMONIAL. w 2 % º º t : - -: % * If a person is obliged to take physic, it is desirable to have something that will operate | thoroughly, and at the same time not to produce sickness, griping or distress. The PAIN KING cures chilblains and sore throat prevailing this month. FAMILY PILLS do this. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - * * * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The SHAKER º Shaker Extract at this time might have averted all the dreadful results inevitably following neglect of your serious condition. You are now in the full power of the awful disease which has fastened upon you, and if you, still persist || Roots or Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup has proved its value in innumerable cases exactly like yours, and the probability is that it will restore you to health; if it will not, nothing can. , If you turn at once to the beneficent remedy | in neglecting the proper means, your end is not far off. The result is inevitable. A little farther on your journey toward the grave, and you are so emaciated that you can scarcely drag one foot after the other. The idea of walking, even for a short distance, is madness; you cannot walk ten rods without resting; you constantly lean forward to ease your sore stomach, which feels as painful as a great boil, so sensitive to the touch that merely the pressure of your clothing is often the most exquisite torture. 4. To add to the tortures of the daytime, your nights are filled with the horror of incessant sleeplessness. “Oh, for an hour of calm, un- broken rest!” you sigh, but the fickle goddess flies your couch, upon which you toss restlessly through the long hours of darkness. In the morning, unable to partake of th morning meal, you feel spiritless, devoid of energy, already half dead. Your head is stop- ped up; you can hardly breathe; your friends say you have “caught cold,” but it is merely one of the phases of the dread disease, dyspep- Blà, vanish like the mountain mist before the rising sun. Your throat is choked with phlegm; you are constantly hawking and spitting; your skin has become sallow, your face a dirty brownish tinge, your eyes lusterless and faded; your hands and feet feel cold and clammy. Finally, you get so low you cannot leave your room, and half your time is spent in bed, you feel so weak and tired all the time. There is very little flesh on your feeble bones; your skin is dry and harsh; you are rapidly wasting away. Your liver and kidneys have almost ceased to act, and the evacuations of nature are perform- ed under such false and unnatural conditions that the very air of your room is offensive, through the constant escape of impurities by way of the skin and lungs. The end is not far off now, unless resort be immediately had to the one remedy which can save you, as it has Baved thousands. The Shaker Extract of | Cure the dyspepsia, and your cold will grave, you will experience immediately some one will begin at once to mend; the disagreeable until at last you are A WELL MAN. great success lay in the intrinsic value of the Shaker Extract. & The people having once used the untarily recommended it to others. stituted a large army of volunteers, advertising, free of cost, the virtues of the remedy. All this gratuitous advertising was like a mine of wealth for Mr. White. During the past four years upwards of fifteen millions of bottles have been sold through the London office of Mr. White, stufficient to de- populate the kingdom were it not harmless, and quite sufficient to enable the British public to learn about its curative qualities. So strong- ly were the people impressed in favor of Seigel's Syrup, that letters of thanks poured in upon Mr. White for placing such a valuable medicine within their reach. Some of these letters we | publish, that other people may profit by their experience. –O—- A short Account of THE Discovery of this wonderful remedy may be of interest, and we append the story of a celebrated New York physician :- . I first saw Mrs. Edith Seigel on my visit to her home, in June, 1868. The gentle old lady had just taken off her spectacles, wiping them [Oontinued on page 6.) which, through Almighty grace, has been in- strumental in saving so many from an untimely or all of the following results, and your com- plete recovery is a mere question of time. You belching of wind will stop; your night-sweats will diminish, your appetite improve, your coun- tenance brighten, and your strength gradually. return. You will soon again be able to breathe the out-door air, and though the road to re- stored health is sometimes tedious and discour- || aging, you will be inspired by the knowledge that you are steadily mending day by day, | So it will be seen that the only secret of this Syrup, vol- º They con- §Sºs § - - - - - º - - - -" ----I-T-Y------ -- - "----- - - - - - - •.-: *:::::::::. ". -- ". 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T- The SHAKER FAMILY PILLs are undoubtedly the safest and most effectual medicine ever in- troduced for sudden colds and biliousness. | - “YOUR behavioris most singular, sir,” said a young lady to a gentleman who had just stolen a kiss. ." If that is all,” said he, “I will soon make it plural.” For pain in the side and back, use the PAIN KING, by laying on a wet cloth covered with cotton flannel to prevent evaporation. * - - - - - - - - - - - - | | | L • P & *-a, with the edge of her apron, while she was gestion or Dyspepsia. I, of course, understood directing her daughter, Agnes, to prepare some the importance of keeping the various passages jelly for one of the peasants upon her estate, of the body open, for if these become clogged, who had just recovered from a dangerous ill- the blood becomes thick, diseased and corrupt- #" ge Ilò88. ed. I knew that health, strength, and beauty The old lady loved to do good. She taught | depend upon the purity and vitality of the | her children to do good. Every feature of her | blood, and that all sickness, pains, and diseases benevolent and healthful face was lit up with |of every name, are caused by stagnant humors | joy, kindness, and love, when I first beheld her. in the blood, which are not properly carried off | She had saved the life of one cºher poor ten-|by the bowels, by the urine, and by the sweat of ants, and was now seeking to show him that the body. I knew that nature needed assistance her acts of kindness did not stop with his recov- in carrying off these impurities by opening the ery. The reader may ask how I came to visit various channels of exit, and letting out the foul this remarkable woman. I will relate the cir- humors. I had always in my practice used cumstances of my visit in as few words as pos- opening medicines for the purpose of purifying sible. the blood, but I found many times that perfect * - harmony was not produced by the action of the The Object of the Visit. |medicines I used; for instead of keeping the I had been a practising physician in the City|bowels regular, and the other channels properly of New York for twenty years. With an exten-|acting, trouble would frequently arise by too sive practice, it was my lot to see very many |frequent movements; after which the bowels severe cases; and although I was presumed to would become costive, the skin dry and Scurfy, know as much of the science of medicine as any and the water passages slow to act. of my profession, still I felt that I lacked skill These Germans told me that Mother Seigel's to meet a very large class of complaints which |Curative Syrup left no constipation of the are familiar to every practising physician, espe-| bowels, nor any clogging of the water and cially those termed Chronic Diseases. The want sweat passages after its use, but kept every of this skill to meet such obstinate cases was lavenue of evacuation from the body free and || felt and confessed by all my medical brethren, open. * and in every town in the country are many liv- I was, therefore, induced to try some of the ing, suffering examples of the ignorance of phy- || “Curative Syrup,” which these honest laborers sicians in curing cases of long standing. |had brought with them, and to my surprise the During my practice within the last few years, jeffect was, indeed, marvelous. I afterwards I fell in with many Germans who came to this submitted some of the Syrup to some of the country to make it their adopted home. From more eminent of my medical friends, who were || them I learned of Mother Seige. They told me also equally satisfied with its astonishing heal- || she was a woman of most wonderful mental and |ing and cleansing properties. physical ability; a woman who had done more The idea, however, of a medical man resorting for the well-being of all classes than any one to the production or discovery of an old nurse who had ever lived, and one whose works would was a little humiliating, but when I came to live after her for centuries. consider that the best remedies now used by the Some of these Germans brought with them a medical profession were the accidental discover- number of packages of what they termed Moth- |ies of poor ignorant people, I felt that it was er Seigel's Curative Syrup, and which they my duty as a public benefactor to seek relief claimed was a positive cure for all diseases |for suffering humanity from any and all sources arising from Impurity of the Blood. Of course within my reach. I was prompted in accepting this would include all diseases, for it is a well- of the remedy discovered by Mother Seigel, by established fact that all diseases of mankind some eminent medical men who suggested that arise from one source, namely, IMPURITY OF THE the Buchu was the discovery of the ignorant BLOOD-and this impurity is caused by Indi- Hottentots, who employed it in various diseases | [Oontinued on page s.ſ wºr- - * * * * Úº MAY-1883. Moon's Phases. 33 d. h. m. § º. 1; ###|#. gº Day of the Sun Rises | Sun Sets Week. h. m. h. m. Tuesday..... 5 0 6 54 1 29 # Wºlay . || 4 59 || 6 55 || 2 5 8-|Thursday 4 57 6 56 2 89 == 4 |Friday....... 4 56 6 57 8 15 - 5 |Saturday 4 55 6 58 3 55 =|E 6 |Sunday 4 54 6 59 SetS. =|É 7 |Monday ..... 4 58 7 0 8 9 == 8 |Tuesday..... 4 52 7 1 9 14 =# 9 Wednesday... 451 7 2 10 10 = 10 Thursday....| 4 50 7 3 10 58 === 11 |Friday....... 4 49 || 7 4 || 11 39 12 Saturday ... . . 4.48 7 5 || morn. 13 Sunday ....| 4 47 7 5 0 14 14 |Monday ..... 4 46 7 6 0 47 15 Tuesday ..... 4; % § } % - #|}}...] ::: | | | | | | | | Mashed Potatoes. ||..º.º.º. 18|Friday....... 4 42 || 7 10 2 41 Pare and boil for thirty min- § †. *: %. . Saturday ....| 4 41 || 7 11 ; : utes. Mash light and fine with |two hoirs in "plenty of water Sunday ....| 440 || 7 13 § 3; a wooden masher. To every | Mash ºi season. With butter. Monday ..... 4:3 || 7 |} | .431 | twelve potatoes add one tea-|siºni pepper --, 22 |Tuesday.....| 4 39 7 14 | rises. Spoonful of butter, half a cup- - 23|Wednesday..| 4 33 || 7 |4 || $ 43 fül of boiling milk, and salt to Baked Potatoes. 24 Thursday....| 488 7 15 9 81 | taste. 25 |Friday....... 4 37 7 16 10 15 Wash, and nip good sized 26 |Saturday ....| 4 36 7 17 10 54 potatoes and bake in a moderate 27 Sunday ... 4 36 || 7 18 || 11 30 Mashed Turnips. oven forty-five minutes. They 28 |Monday ..... 4 85 Y 18 morn. Pare, and cut into slices. If | are spoiled by being Over-cook- 29 |Tuesday..... 4 85 7 19 0 5 the White turnips be used and ed. 80 Wednesday... 4 34 7 20 0 40 - 31 Thursday....] 4 84 7 21 0 18 TESTIMONIALS. CURE OF DYSPEPSIA, Conings, W. Va., Dec. 14, 1881. MR. A. J. WHTTE–Dear Sir:-I have taken $10.00 worth of the dura- tive ºrp that my husband is agent for, and it has cured me of Dys- epsia. I am also getting better of several other chronic diseases. %. o not expect to do without your medicine in our house as long as we can get it. It is curing One of my girls of Scrofula. I feel thankful that there is such a remedy. OurS truly, SARAH F. RYMER. Allentown, Pa. MR. A. J. WHITE–Dear Sir:-I was troubled with Kidney Disease for a considerable time. I purchased two bottles of the Shaker Extract of Roots and have derived more benefit from it than from #. Other medi- Cine. F. ENACK. FUN. A RATHER grand and dramatic style of expression came to a sudden collapse in court the other day. An indignant witness exclaimed, “The first time that I ever did such a dishonorable act I would blow out my brains, sir.”, “Very good,” said the Q. C.; “and what would you do the Second time?” A LADY, who could not conceal even from herself the plainness of her face, boasted that her back was perfect. “That is the reason, I Suppose, that your friends are always glad to see it,” said one of her listeners. THE Washington Union asks whether any party that acts from mere policy can long retain power. Certainly it can, if it acts from a wise #. and most especially if it acts from the best of all policies, OneSty. | SHAKER FAMILY PILLS are the best family physic that has ever been discovered. | cleanse the bowels from all irritating substances and leave them in a healthy condition. | cure costiveness. The PAIN KING cures scalds and burns prevailing at any time. They They - - - - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - - - - Tºº-º-º- --~~~~- - ºr " -- - -T --- - mº - --- ------ - - - --" --- ------ ... I to which the inhabitants of South Africa arel The folly of ignoring the opinions of a clear- subject. |headed, observing woman, who had made nurs- The Cinchona, or Peruvian Bark, was acci-ſing the business of her life will be apparent dently discovered by a Jesuit of Peru, who used] to every one. The reason for her extensive | it upon the wife of the Conde de Chincon, at |knowledge and information concerning a great that time Viceroy of Peru, who was cured by it variety of diseases was plain to me. She had ' ' | of a malignant fever. The Jesuits kept the dis-|remained with the patients day and night, watching l covery to themselves for a long time, but the every symptom and the effect of every remedy used, | fame of the bark as afebrifuge gradually spread, until now it is universally used, and the name| of “Jesuit's Bark” stills clings from the facts | connected with its origin. The medical profes- |result of a mere accident of her tasting what sion opposed the use of the “Jesuit's Bark” for a long time; but in 1659, Sturm, of Antwerp, and Bado, of Genoa, advocated its employment, | | potent but harmless medicines. Mother Seigel herself had been cured of an obstinate disease and wrote so highly in praise of its virtues, that the French Government sent out an expedition in 1843, under M. Weddell, to investigate its medical properties, since which time it has been extensively and successfully used, and acres upon acres of land are now planted with it for export. In fact, nearly all of the best medicines | which are to-day used were discovered by ac- cident, and nearly all by the poor and unen- lightened classes. . * The celebrated French physician, Dr. Brown Sequard, speaks in scathing criticism of this want of enterprise on the part of the medical profession seeking out new remedies for the dis- eases of mankind:—“Medical men of the present day are so fettered and blinded by the rigidity and immensity of the orthodox routine, in which they are encased, that it is in vain to look to them for discoveries of importance! and they will leave diamond truths to be picked up by some simple student in the by-ways of life, with no grand title to herald his name, and no pre- vious prestige to make him an object of interest.” After having fully tested the virtues of this wonderful “Curative Syrup,” I was prompted to sail for Germany, and learn from old Mother Seigel herself the composition of her marvel- ous remedy. In due time I arrived at the home of the old lady, near the great city of Berlin, where I found upon inquiry she possessed a wide and excellent reputation for healing the sick of dis- eases which had baffled the skill of the great physicians, and also forrestoring to health those who had been given up to die as incurable gases, [Oontinued ments every day. This careful and observing lady did not claim any particular merit for making this discovery, saying that it was the had been supposed to be poisonous herbs, but which proved to be on thorough examination that had baffled the skill of the best German | physicians. The cure in her case was purely accidental, but it has proved to be of untold benefit to mankind. * After submitting the plants composing the Curative Syrup to an analysis, I did not much wonder at its curative properties, for they were found to contain five alkaloids. & These alkaloids were as follows: 1. A SOPoRIFIC, which quiets the nerves and allays all pain and excitement of the nervous system, giving rest to the body and to the mind by its soothing, quieting influence. 2. A LAXATIVE, which acts upon the liver, |and carries off through the bowels the impure substances from the blood, which are not passed off by the water, by the sweat, and other out- lets; routing out from the system all foul hu- mors from the blood, and leaving that vital current pure and wholesome. 3. A SUDoRIFIC, which opens the pores of the skin, and allows the corrupt substances near the surface to pass out in the form of sweat, produç- ing always a soft and natural condition of the skin, keeping the oil ducts and sweat glands | always healthy and strong to carry on both sensible and insensible perspiration. 4. A DIURETIC, which acts upon the kidneys, enabling them to carry off in the urine the im- purities which should in health pass off by the water passages, thus drawing off a great amount of impurity from the system. 5. AN ALTERATIVE, which acts upon all the on page 10.] while the doctor stays with the sick but a few mo- " - - - º º .. * - ". - * * - - - - º "… . - *º * º º . - º - sº º T.º -º -- -:::: --------- --- -- --- - --------- "A-" ------ --------------------" --T- T - "… ------------------------- ----------------------- - ----------------~~~~ -- -----------, - N'-- ---------------~~~~ --~~~---------- -- - vººr --- -- --- º- º - * - w - - - S --- | º - - - s - -º - T --º SS-- - . ---- s |-º * * -SS s ºA. Š º• §§ § wº-; s | . Š Š N M SSS : §-% N-:: - -: -ź- R *- s §§ § N -- º§ - w º §| | § NA-N | -- - -- - KHEDIVE OF EGYPT. §º . ----- Graham Bread. Make a stiff batter of half a pint of warm water thickened with graham, and add to it a third of a cupful of yeast. Let it rise over night, and in the morning add a little piece of butter, half a cupful of Sugar, and wheat flour enough to mould. Let the bread rise in pans, and bake an hour. Indian Cake. One pint of Indian meal, a Cupful of flour, half a cupful of Sugar, one-third Of a cupful of butter, a teaspoonful of soda, one Of Cream of tartar, an egg, and some salt. Mix in enough Sweet milk to make a soft batter. -- Crullers. These dainties are easil and quickly made. piece of butter about the Size of an egg, a nutmeg, a cupful of sugar, and three § are to be made Stiff th flour, cut in fancy Ghapes, and fried in boiling lard. Doughnuts. One and a half cupfuls Of milk, the Same quantity of Sugar, two eggs, a Scant teaspoonful of Soda, a tea- Spoonful of Salt, and half a nutmeg. Very tooth- Some doughnuts are made | by this rule. Buns." Half a cupful each of yeast, Sugar and butter, one and a half cupfuls of milk, half a nutmeg, and a little Salt. Mixtogether at night, and in the morn- ing add half a cupful of sugar, and some currants. TESTIMONIAL. DYSPEPSIA AND SALT RHEUM. Lakeport, St. Clair Co., Mich., May 18, 1882. MR. A. J. WHITE–Dear Sir:-The Shaker Extract Of Roots is É. great Satisfaction, it has cured me of Dyspepsia and Salt Rheum, Which had troubled me for eighteen years. I had nearly #º up hope, but hearing of your medicine, I tried it and have used three bottles, and to dº I am a Well Iman. O urs truly, D. A. SMITH. FUN. A YOUNG lady from the country, being invited to a #:". was told by her cousin to dress up and put er best foot foremost, in order to catch a beau, as “she looked so green in her country attire.” . The country lass looked comically into the face of her rather faded relative, and replied, “Detter green than Withered.” AN old revolutionist says that of all the solemn hours he ever saw, that occupied in going home one dark night from the widow Bem's, after being told by her daughter Sally that he “needn’t Come again,” Was the most Solemn. SHAKER FAMILY PILLS move the bowels with more ease than any others. They act mildly but thoroughly. nor cause any pain or distress. - They never gripe, For headache, bathe the head with the PAIN KING, and inhale its vapor from a wet cloth. It is well to take, in addition, a good dose of CURATIVE SYRUF at night on going to bed. w - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A --- *** ----------- " " - wº-ºº-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º-º: ºf a zºº --rºº º "-ºw * NC --- Zºº. -*** - " - - - - --- -a ºrº-ºº-º-º-º-ATIºw- "wº ºr a wººl--- *- . fluids and juices of the body, and prevents an | sume its natural functions, and good health will be the result. The dose should be ten to twenty excess of acid or alkali, always keeping the secretions of the body free from acrid and im- proper accumulations of unhealthy fluids. It also gives strength to the liver, producing | healthy bile, strengthening the gall ducts, pro- | moting nutrition, and building up the flesh of the body. { be so harmoniously blended by Nature in the structure of this valuable plant, that it is the best purifier of blood that ever came under the notice of the medical profession, and will, indeed, cure all diseases by communicating through the blood and other fluids of the body the vigor of life, repairing the wastes of the body with new and sound material. “This wonderful remedy formerly known as Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, is now put up drops instantly after eating, three times a day. Diseases of the Bowels. The bowels in a healthy state carry off all useless matter which can be carried off in solid form. Sometimes the main channel becomes times, which gives rise- to constipation and ir- regularity of the bowels. If the bile is not thrown out from the liver in sufficient quanti- ties the bowels become costive, and the mem- branes of the bowels become weak and irritated. When much irritation exists diarrhoea follows, because the bowels have not the strength to do | what is required of them. Inflammation fol- lows, the fundamental cause of this irregularity is Indigestion. THE ExTRACT of Roots or |CURATIVE SYRUP will remove this Indigestion by the Shaker community at Mount Lebanon, N. Y., and it is called Shaker Extract of Roots, and they affix to each bottle the formula show- ing precisely how the medicine is made and what it is made of; but the old name of Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup still clings to the remedy. Some ask for it by the one name and some by the other. . | Should any one doubt that the Shakers do really make this remedy, let him write to Benjamin Gates, Trustee of Mount Lebanon, N. Y. Shakers, and he will reply to the letter. } | Diseases of the Liver. When the liver becomes disordered and dis- eased, the person so afflicted is indeed miser- able. He suffers with dull pains in the sides, bad tastes in the mouth, spots before the eyes, flashes of heat, irregularity of the bowels, piles, coated tongue, disordered stomach, heartburn, costiveness, and pain in the head. He fre- quently has a dry cough, high-colored urine, yel- ( low skin, and dull sleepy sensations, rendering him unfit for business or for employment. The hands and feet are cold, circulation of the blood is sluggish; the patient suffers with vertigo, ringing in the ears, loss of appetite, nausea and sick headache, heartburn, dry scurfy skin, etc. The origin of this disease is Dyspepsia. The ExTRACT of Roots or CURATIVE SYRUP will and healthy. Piles and costiveness. most value in curing hemorrhoids or piles. able regulator and healer. Costiveness or diar- rhoea cannot exist with this regulator to do its | work, for it promotes exudation of sufficient bile and enough of the natural fluids of the Syrup, and are cured as effectually when high up in the bowels as when at the terminus of the intestines. Nervous or Sick Headache. There are few persons who, at times, are not willing to testify. Diseases of the Stomach. remove the cause, and the liver will then re- (Oontinued on page 12.] These five qualities are found, by analysis, to choked up by slime on the coating of the intes- intestines to regulate the movements and give tone to the bowels. Blind piles, bleeding piles, |itching piles, etc., disappear with the use of the more or less subject to sick headache. Moderate | and occasional use of the Syrup is a sure pre- | ventive, as thousands who have tried it are When the stomach is too weak to properly digest the food, the person so diseased is usually and cause the fresh new blood to become pure The soothing, balsamic and healthy proper- f| ties of the Curative Syrup render it of the ut- The | movements from the bowels are made free, I regular and natural; all irritation is removed, inflammation is subdued, and the piles disappear || as if by magic under the influence of this agree- | { --nammammamma-- JUNE–1883. | Moon’s Phases. #4 d. h.m. d. M. ni. s: | New Moon, 5 1 16 M. Full Moon, 2011 35 M. *: First Quar., 129 45 M. | Last Quar., 27 2 42 A. º Pº: the ISun Rises Sun Sets |Moon Rises eek. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1 | Friday........... 4 33 7 22 1 49 2 | Saturday...... 4 83 7 22 2 30 3 | Sunday......... 4 82 7 23 8 14 4 || Monday........ 4 82 7 24 4 2 5 | Tuesday....... 4 82 7 25 SetS. 6 | Wednesday..] 4 82 7 25 8 47 7 | Thursday..... 4 31 7 26 9 32 8 || Friday.......... 4 81 7 26 10 12 9 || Saturday...... 481 7 27 10 47 10 | Sunday......... 431 || 7 27 | 11 18 11 || Monday........ 4 31 7 28 11 48 12 Tuesday....... 431 || 723 morn. | É Yº: # # # ; § # T - 14 || Thursday..... | | 15 Frida, º ----- 431 || 7 29 1 13 Roast Mutton. ten minutes for every additional 16 || Saturday...... 4 31 || 7 30 1 45 Wipe the mutton with a damp pound. This cooks it rare. If | 17 | Sunday......... 4 31 || 7 30 221 cloth; then dredge with salt, it is to be well done, roast one 18 || Monday........ 4 81 7 31 3 1 a little pepper, and gener- hour and a half, with fifteen 19 |Tuesday....... 4 31 || 7 31 346 ously with flour. Place on a minutes for every pound over 20 | Wednesday... 4 31 7 31 rises. Imeat rack in the baking-pan | six. When the meat is done, 21 | Thursday..... 4 31 || 7 31 8 12 || before dredging, see that the pour all the fat from the gravy 22 | Friday...... ....| 4 32 || 7 32 853 | bottom of... the pan shall be and add a cupful of boiling 23| Saturday...... 4 32 7 32 9 32 | Covered with flour. Place in a water to what remains in the | 24 | Sunday......... 4 32 7 32 10 3 hot oven, and as soon as the pan. Thicken this with a 25 | Monday........ 4.32 7 32 104.3 flour in the pan is brown (which smooth paste made of a table- 26 Tuesday....... 433 || 7 32 | 11 13 || Will be in about five minutes), spoonful of flour and a little cold 27 | Wednesday... 4 33 || 7 32 11.39 pour in hot water enough to water. Stir well, and boil two 28 || Thursday..... 4 34 || 7 33 moſº | Cover the bottom of the pan. or three minutes. Season with 29 | Friday.......... 4 34 || 7 82 ! 2: | Baste every fifteen, minutes. salt and Pº 8train and 30 | Saturday...... 4 35 || 7 82 1 8 || Cook a leg weighing six pounds, serve. the dishes must be One hour and a quarter, and give very warm for a mutton dinner. - —T- - - | TESTIMONIALS. CURED OF LIVER COMPLAINT. | Stonewall #º P. O., Miss., March 7, 1882. | MR. A. J. WHITE-Dear Sir:-I feel it my duty to inform you of the | º I have derived from your good medicines. | O I thin I was down in bed ears with Liver and Heart disease and after taking three bottles I I am permanently cured. Yours truly, MARTH A WILLIAMS. | | cuRED AFTER TWENTY-six YEARs of sufferiNG. | - Live Oak, Fla. MR. A. J. WHITE–Dear Sir:-After my best wishes to you I will in- form you that I am thankful to God for the use of your medicine. I have been a sufferer for twenty-six years With Liver Complaint and Consumption, and I have found more relief from three bottles of your Extract of Roots than all other medicines I have ever used. I Wish you great success in all your sales, and am your thankful friend; NANCY S. CARROLL. FUN. A DISHONEST and malignant critic, by severing passages from their context, may make the best book appear to condemn itself. A book thus unfairly treated may be compared to the laurel—there is honor in the leaves, but poison in the extract. WE think it is an undeniable truth that the Africans, let them go to what part of the world they may, retain more unequivocally than any other people the Odor of nationality. | THE SHAKER FAMILY PILLs, unlike many kinds of cathartic medicines, do not make you I feel worse before you feel better. Their operation is gentle but thorough, and unattended with | disagreeable effects, such as nausea, griping pains, etc., etc. For diphtheria and sore throat, use the PAIN KING, by gargling the throat internally, and bathing the throat externally. - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - afflicted. Dyspepsia shows itself in very many disagreeable forms, but more frequently in dis- tress of the stomach after eating, sourness of the stomach, beating and trembling of the stomach and sides, a sense of fullness, headache, dizziness, bad breath, loss of appetite, difficulty in breathing, restlessness, nervousness, loss of strength, etc. The food remains in the stomach until it be- comes corrupted, which poisons the blood and & produces the most painful and distressing feel- IngS. The stomach loses its tone, becomes inflamed and filled with slime and mucus. This pro- duces giddiness, sick headache, choking Ilp of the circulation, and pressure upon the brain. The Curative Syrup cleans out the corrupt and noxious matters from the stomach, and strength- ens the stomach to dissolve and digest the food, increases the flow and stren gth of the gastric juice, and produces harmonious action between the stomach, liver and intestines. All the or- gans work in concert—no jarring, no overtaxa- pure and uncorrupted state,by occasional use of this strengthening, cleansing and invigorating ) Syrup. tion of one organ above another, which always damages the nervous system and works havoc and decay. Strength to the stomach, invigoration of the liver and tone to the bowels must necessarily follow the use of the Curative Syrup. Mother Seigel assured me, when I was at her home, near Berlin, that a few packages of the Syrup had cured cases of indigestion of twenty years standing, which had baffled the efforts of the best medical talent in Berlin. It corrects acid- ity, and promotes a flow of healthy gastric juice, which dissolves the food, and carries it out of the stomach at the proper time. | | Nervous Debility. | tism depends, removes inflammation, soreness, This is caused by a long-continued state of impurity of the blood, which irritates the nerves. Sleeplessnights, twitching of the muscles, trem- bling of the limbs, poor appetite, easily disturb- ed by noise or excitement, desire to avoid com- pany, peculiar sensations over the entire body, are among the difficulties which attend this night will in a short time so cleanse the blood and soothe the nerves, and restore strength to the body, as to make life enjoyable and happy. [Oontinued Nervous debility vanishes before the quieting, purifying and healthful action of the Curative Syrup. & Fever and Inflammation. When there are free evacuations each day by the water passages, and by the bowels, and by the sweat of the body, and all the corrupt and useless matters are carried off, there can exist no inflammation or feverish system. Dyspepsia is the cause of these derangements. When these diseased particles are retained, they poison the blood, which shows itself in various forms. When good and bad blood are struggling to get the better of each other, the irritation produced gives rise to fever and inflammation. How necessary, then, to keep every outlet of the body free and open, that no clogging or impure blood can exist | By attending to these passages of evacuation, persons can live to old age without One feverish symptom; and when bruised or cut by accident the wound will immediately heal, without inflammation, if the blood be kept in a Rheumatism. Never before has there existed a remedy as unfailingly successful in rheumatic affections as Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup, It lubri- | cates the joints, promotes the secretions of the fluids necessary to remove the stiffness of the muscles, removes hardened deposits in the joints, greases the machinery of nature, and makes it move easily. One or two bottles of the Curative Syrup will do more than a hogshead of lini- ments, for it carries out of the circulation the acrid humors in the blood upon which rheuma- and stiffness of the muscles. A short trial will convince the most dis- couraged that it is all that is claimed for it. pº" The seeds of disease—the worn-out parti- cles of the body which are no longer of any service in carrying on the functions of life— should be carried out of the body as fast as they complaint. A dose of the Curative Syrup at are generated. The occasional use of Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup will clear out all these passages of the body and purify them. The Syrup abstracts the diseased humors on page 14. *º-ººººººººº-ººrºzºrrºr-tº-ºrrºr-rrºr--ºr-º-º-º-º: - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ----- -- - - - ** *~~~~ - - - -- ------, | Rºº-º-º-º: | -- º -7 ----" ---- --~~~~ -------- | N-- Nº. • 'º...".--> - NSSS. •º-º-º- -" - - - SNS M- W.‘. - -" - - N -" Nº." -- *****.*.*.* - --------~~-º-º-º-º- | ------- -- | - 'S | Yºu,…, W3 ------ - -- -- "…-- - ::::: - - Nº-º-º-**-º-º-º-º-º----- - - ---. - W-" -- - º - - T Nº. --~ . N -º-º-º- NS: N NSSNº-º-º-------...- ..."-wºº. - N _ Nº-Nº-º-º-º-º-º-º----------...- . . .Nºw- --N - --- Nº. - - - & ---> .… -º 3. - - § - -- º sº ---- Fº -- -‘... - --- --- --- … -- - - - - :- sº º º' ºriº:::::::::::. . . . . . . . ººº-º-º-º-º-º-º-º/Wºº-º-º: ºn - --------------- - - - - - - - - - - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- * 2:23:32:3:... :) --> --~~~. Wºś. N - - - - &2.322::::--------...-22°222.- ... Wºś - Nº. 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N- &;tº ~ -- - --- --- - Ø Yº...º, º, Z - --~~~~ ------>'' /*. - - *- --- *. - - - -- "--- *- - -- ------- : :::::#;" - - Nº. --- Sºº -- N N %| | % | | IILM T º | M Wilſº | ſ N M.I. § | %| N º # ill Whº'ſ - | - V . -- |L. -- - 22:51H ſ *Hºº-Fºrº. zz Z241% \ % -º The late WILLIAM S. O’BRIEN, of FLOOD & O’BRIEN, California. The most Successful miner of the world. | Sometimes people overload their stomachs fresh butter or linseed oil; and lay a cloth with a good dinner, so as to cause headache wet with this mixture over the part, and cover and great distress. A good dose of SHAKER with cotton batting, so as to exclude the air. FAMILY PILLS will prevent all these disagree-|This is the best dressing known for all sores. able effects. It should be kept in the house ready for use in For burns and scalds and old sores, use the cases of emergency. For sting of bees, wasps, PAIN KING, by mixing it with two-thirds of etc., use the PAIN KING, by bathing freely. - - |- - - * * - - * - - - - - - - - - - - T - - - - - - - - - A. * | . . . from the blood, and makes it flow through the Mothers should give their children occasion- veins freely. No sluggishness can exist when ||ally doses of the Syrup, that worms may not the Syrup is used. breed in corrupt substances of the body. The blood can be invigorated to such an | Foul matter breeds worms; cleanse the system extent that even the symptoms of old age are] of impurities. Worms cannot breed in healthy protracted for years beyond the time when the substances, for they grow and thrive on the filth tottering step and trembling hand are expected. and corruption of the body. The body is renewed, life and vigor return, and w every organ is restored to health. | Diseases of the Skin. 1 All diseases of the skin are blood diseases, for Female Diseases. } when the blood is pure the skin must be free The Curative Syrup has given health and |from all unhealthy eruptions, and, as we have spirits to thousands of females. The hollow stated, all impurity of the blood is caused by cheek, the sunken eye, the sallow countenance, Indigestion. Pimples on the face or body, ery- the dark circles underneath the eyes, are all sipelas, salt rheum, ulcers, boils, carbuncles, indicative of weakness of the female organs of and every disease which shows itself upon the generation, which are speedily overcome by the surface of the skin, are caused by bad blood. use of the Curative Syrup. tº |Scabs in the hair, sore eyes, running from the During pregnancy the Syrup can be taken ears, etc., etc., are caused by the vile humors in with perfect safety in ten to fifteen drop doses the blood, which can be speedily exterminated instantly after eating. If the bowels should be | by the Syrup. * costive, an occasional dose of the Operating Pills will give great relief. Care should be used Scrofula, etc., eto. so as not to produce violent purging. The skin of Old Mother Seigel was marvelous- Its use removes obstructions, brings the hue ly white, and pure and smooth; and, although of health to the countenance, and should be used sixty-five years of age, she told me she attribut- by females suffering from the various diseases|ed the ivory elastic whiteness of her skin to the | to which the sex is subject, such as leucorrhoea, occasional use of the Syrup. The coarsest skin or whites, falling of the womb, bearing-down can be made soft and beautiful by the use of the * sensations, etc. Two or three bottles of the purifying Syrup. Rashes, festers, flesh-worms, Curative Syrup will bring the blush to the pimples, liver spots, blackheads, and all un- | cheek, and vivacity and elasticity to the system. healthy appearance of the skin, must yield to Flagging spirits are restored, and new life and this great cleanser and brightener of the skin; vigor takes the place of the loss of energy, for if the blood be pure the skin will be pure. sickness and decay. Z | • |Gravel, Stone, and other Urinary Difficulties. When the body is in a healthy state, the various salts of the body are carried off by the water passages; but when there is a weakness in the urinary organs these particles do not pass Worms. off, but lodge in the bladder, kidneys and Are produced by corrupted matter in the urethra, and keep growing in size by contin- system, which breeds these uncomfortable com-|ued fresh adhesions until they sometimes form panions. Clear out these scavengers by the use |substances from that of a bean or pea to that of of the Syrup, which so paralyzes them that they an egg. \ cannot cling to the sides of the bowels, and | Persons with gravel frequently pass some por- when the corrupted matter is passed off by the tions of it in their urine, but the main part of use of the Syrup they must go with it. They the sandy substance remains, and gives rise to and their nests are effectually destroyed and inflammation, pain, heat, and intense suffering passed off. | in making water. The accumulation of sand [Oontinued on page 16.] Heart Disease. Many people imagine they have organic dis- ease of the heart, when they have only Dyspep- sia. JULY-1883. | Moon's Phases, ää d. h.m. d. A. m. SE New Moon, 4 10 8 M. Full Moon, 19 10 81 A. > | First Quar, 12 2 49 M. I Last Quar. 26 t 18 A. ºn Day of the Sun Rºses! Sun Sets [Moon Rises w: h. m. h. m. h. m. Sunday......... 4 35 7 82 1 54 Monday........ 4 36 7 82 2 45 Tuesday....... 4 86 7 32 3 42 Wednesday..] 4 37 7 32 gets. Thursday.....] 4 37 7 82 8 7 Friday.......... 4 38 7 81 8 44 Saturday......| 488 7 81 9 18 Sunday......... 4 39 7.30 9 48 Monday........ 4 39 7 30 10 16 Tuesday....... 4 40 7 8Q | 1Q 44 Wednesday..] 4 41 7 29 11 15 Thursday.....| 4 41 7 29 || 11 46 Friday.......... 4 42 7 28 morn. Saturday...... 4 43 7 28 0 19 Sunday......... 4 44 7 27 0. 56 Monday........ 4 45 7 27 1 39 - eClneSC18). Spanish Cream. Water. Beat the yolks of the º: ; ; , ; ; r|. one quart of milk, three eggs, ºggs with the sugarººnſ on: Šaturâay. 4 49 || 7 23 §§§ one cupful of sugar, one-third |fºurth of a teaspoonful.9f salt. 22 |sunday......] 4 43 | 723 § 3; of a box of gelatine, one gener-|Beat the Whites tº a stiff froßh: 23 Monday -------- 4 50 7 22 § 13 ous teaspoonful of vanilla fla: Add the half pint of cold milk 24 Tuesday. 4 51 7 21 § 5; vor. Put the gelatine in a bowl reserved from the quart tº the 25 || Wººd. 3 #3 || || 3 || 153, with half, a cupful of gold|Yºlºd śll in- 26 Thursday..... 3 # | # 13 ii ś water, and when it has stood to the boiling milk, Cook, five à |Éria......] §§ i ſã ii.5i |flºº...] ..ijää...; 28 || Saturday...... 3 #5 || 7 is morn. half of the milk, and then place then add the White; and remove 29 || Sunday......... 4 56 || 7 17 039 || the sauce-pan in which it is to from the fire. Add the Vanilla, 80 || Monday........ 4 57 7 16 i 33 be cooked (it should hold two and pour into moulds. Place 81 | Tuesday........ 4 58 7 15 2 32 | quarts), into another of boiling on ice to harden. | TESTIMONIALS. BEDRIDDEN FOR FOUR YEARS. Holly Springs, Dallas Co., Ark., April 29, 1882. - MR. A. J. WHITE-Dear Sir:-I give great praise to your Curative § After being Bedridden for four years, I commenced taking your ative Syrup, March 27, 1881, and am now able to plow and make a CrOp. Yours truly, J. R. BRAZEAL.E. SAVED THE LIFE OF MY WIFE. Weasel, Ashe Co., N. O., Dec. 25, 1881. | __MR. A. J. WHITE-Dear Sir:-I am happy to inform you that the | Bhaker Extract has saved the life of my wife. She was sick three | months With Abscess and Bronchitis, and had the treatment of two pro- | minent physicians of our county. The doctors could do nothing for her | save to lance the abscess, and they thought her cure doubtful. We | heard of the Shaker Extract and bought one dollar’s worth and it has almost cured her. You Will please send me agent's terms as I think I can sell it very readily. Yours truly, SHEFFLEY MURRAY FUN. a WESTERN editor, not noted for brilliancy, says that he “Would rather put questions than respond to them.” He is perhaps right. He has probably read that fools may ask questions, but that it takes Wise men to answer them. A KENTUCKY editor thinks he is to be pitied because he has been “a Whole Week Without mail intelligence.” Perhaps some are still In Oro ºpe pitied for having been all their lives Without intelligence of any SOTU. - If you take cold and are threatened with a fever, with pains in the head, back and limbs, one or two doses of SHAKER FAMILY PILLS will break up the cold and prevent the fever. º The PAIN KING is an instant cure for Sprains, Lameness, Burns, Scalds, Bruises, etc., etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - wº- *-**-----------------~~I--~~~~~-tº-I-1------------- ~ * - - - - - - - - - covers up the water passage, and the urine can- not find an outlet, and the most intense misery emptied; but frequently the gravelly substance so clogs up the mouth of the water passage that | to be taken instantly after eating so that the an instrument has to be used to push back the gravel and let the water off. ) Language fails to describe the agonies of persons afflicted with stone and gravel. ( Pain in the small of the back, hips and thighs; heat and inflammation; desire to make water, but cannot do so; and burning, smarting, in- describable agonies, which render life a burden|. and death courted. Sometimes the particles of gravel are so sharp and cutting that they tear the sides of the urinary passages, and blood will come, in quantities from the urinary passages. Sometimes the bladder and kidneys are filled with slime and cannot perform their duty. The water passage should always be kept free and open. When there is the least disposition to accumulation of gravel it should be immediately dissolved and made to pass off by its proper channel. •. - The Curative Syrup cleanses the kidneys and bladder and water passages from slime, and gives strength to the organs requiring sufficient power of endurance to perform all the labors | Syrup may become mixed with the food while |being digested. It is essential that the bowels be made to move freely every day, and if the above doses of Syrup be not sufficient to effect this, take one to four of The Shaker Family |Pills at bed-time. It is better to take the Pills than to increase the dose of the Syrup. ... ar! Hann and Eggs.-Fry the ham as directed below, and When it all is cooked, turn the fat into a basin, and Scrape the salt from the frying-pan. Turn back the fat, and add to it half a gupful of lard. When this comes to a boil, break in the eggs, leaving room to turn them, if you prefer them so. ãhey loo; much nicer, however, when they are not turned. ... If they are not fried on both sides, dip up the boiling fat While they are cooking and pour over them. ey Will Cook rare in three minutes, well done in four. Lay them on the Slices of ham, and serve. Fried Ham.—Cut the ham in very thin slices, and cut off the rind. , Have half a spoonful of boiling drippings in the frying-pan. Lay the ham in this, : fry quickly eight utes. It will then be brown, all(si CI 18.p. º Proiled, Ham.-Cut the ham in thin slices, cut off the rind, and broil over clear coals ten malnutes. When the ham is very salt or hard, slice, and let stand in boiling Water ten lininutes before frying or broiling. required of them in carrying off the watery por- tions of the food, after all the nourishment it contained has entered into the blood, and gone to repair the daily waste of the system. Directions. Dose –FIFTEEN TO THIRTY DROPs, two or three times per day, in a wineglass of water, {mmediately after eating. { The quantity may be regulated by the patient, who will bear in mind that sufficient needs to be taken to operate on the bowels two or three times each day. The blood will thus be puri- fied, the sweat-glands of the skin will be opened, and the flesh made soft and healthy as an infant's. The kidneys and liver will do their | duty, and all humors of the blood will be driven out of the system, and the body purified and restored to a sound and healthy condition. The TESTIMONIAL. Giving GENERAL SATISFACTION. MESSRS. BE VIER & HARTz, drug state in their letter of May 31, 1882. “It is one of the | best selling medicines we have on our shelves, §§ | better general satisfaction than any other. One ol lady in particular, who has been troubled with d yS- pepsia for years, and has tried almost sº in the patent medicine line—never found anythin at done her so much good as this Curative Syrup, and it is through her that We have Sold a great Imany bottles.” $ \ FUN. DENTAL.-Being asked to suggest a motto for a dentists’ society, we would recommend this: “We pull together.” A suffering correspondent is in- formed that by holding a certain root in his hand- that of the tooth—he will find relief from the tooth- ache. “A farmer” advises strangers who wish to get teeth inserted gratis, to go and steal his fruit, When they will find his watch-dog on guard. A TIPSY customer, who was seated on the box with the stage-driver, swayed backward till he tumbled off. The mud was deep and he fell soft. “There, medicine must be taken instantly after eating, so that it will become mixed with the food l while in the stomach, now !” he exclaimed, as he crawled out of the sl ?"; **I knew §§ upset if you didn’t take care.”... On that they had not upset—“Not upset !” he being tol £3. own that, I wouldn’t echoed in amazement, “If I’d have gone off.” | Commence by taking ten or fifteen drops three i times a day instantly after eating, in a little cold li | follows. When the bladder is full, it must be sweetened water. If this dose does not give relief increase the dose to thirty drops, always || gists, Aurora, Ill., . CHRISTMAS AT DIFFERENT PERIODS OF LIFE. ſº º § \\ - ºWNSN º º º º N §§ º º º --A y §§ º Wilſº - W º º \ | º -- \\\\\ W N Mº- AW º \ § i º t§§ § - - L^ --" -SS |W | - - - | I LP | !--- ſ//// - SS Alill All º Mr. | IIII L//// - NW - | |||||| / Z/-/. /// \ § - // - - - . -- T Lº- º | - ////// *AL/ º %| Mºſſ || - / / º | - T º/ º - L. | | N W/// º º º // A- º \ º --- º (/ /N -- º/// - Ž % º % - ſ - % & º º _ º / - W. N Nº. - ſ - - º º º | Eº #3: §§ // Z ſº º º º º: Eººl - 2 º - §§Bºž77 Wº SS-2ſ ſº -ſ/ / / xftiſ; ==== J #|| 2% i |}}} - | - \", | | | M | - | §§ º | | - - Nº|| | N Al SS i-º N lN - :N N | SHAKER ExTRACT OF Roots. As Time rolls his ceaseless course, Christmas after Christmas comes round, we find our joys and sorrows left behind, so we build up the being that we are. WHAT MAKES A HAPPY | CHRISTMAS–Health and the things we love and those who love us. For health, use the - TESTIMONIALS. THE BEST MEDICINE IN THE WORLD. MRS. ARMILDA FRAZER, of Irvine, Estill Co., Ky., reports as follows, September 23, 1882: ld Mr. Jonas Smith bought a bottle of Shaker Extract for his boy, who was suffering from rheuma- tism in the knee. The knee Was drawn Crooked. I asked him afterward what he thought of the Shaker Extract, and he replied, “It is the best medicine in the world. My º's knee is perfectly straight, and he can walk well. Everything, was obtained for #: but nothing helped him until he got the Shaker Xtract.” MR. JAMES C. LowRY, of Irvine, Ky., says: “Your syrup does him more good than anything he can get. #. bought several bottles of me for liver troubles, and he recommends it very much to the people.” MR. ELIHU Rogers, of Irvine, Ky., told me that your extract had cured him of sick headache, from which he suffered a great deal. MESSRs. KIDDER & HUNTER, Odell, Ill., write un- | der date of September 26, 1882: “We have a big trade on your remedy, and hear of many good results arising from its use—hope you may continue to have increased Sales.” MR. W. C. WATERs, of Tres Pinos, Cal., writes Sep- tember 8, 1882: “I can bear personal testimony to the Value (very great) of }. Syrup, having former- ly taken it in England, Where it is known as Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup.” FUN. PEANUT FLIRTATION.—Breaking the shell gently—I am mashed on you. Crushing it savagely—Why will you break my heart? Slipping the shell into the pocket —We must be secret. Throwing it away—You are fired out. Swallowing the peamwt-I am yours alone. Eat- ing it mincingly—GO slow. Tossing it w/p and catching it deacterously in the mouth–Some other evening. A LIVELY Hibernian exclaimed at a party, where Theodore Hook shone as the star of the evening, “Oh, º Theodore, but you’re the hook that nobody Can bate.” The SHAKER FAMILY PILLS are undoubtedly the safest and most effectual medicine ever in- troduced for sudden colds and biliousness. For Quinsy Sore Throat, use the PAIN KING, - by gargling the throat and applying a wet cloth externally, covered with cotton flannel. REMOVE THE CAUSE. WHEN a person has a foreign substance in the eye, it causes inflammation. As long as this mote is in the eye, remedies will not subdue the in- flammation—their application is useless: But after removing the mote, the cause, the remedies produce a decided result, and a cure is effected. We run a splinter into one of our fingers and it causes pain and inflammation, followed by a festering sore. No remedies do any good until the splinter is removed. This is the case with all the diseases with which we are afflicted. We have pain in the head, we become dizzy. We have nausea. The food we eat causes dis- tress. We have pains in the back over the re- gion of the kidneys, the discharges of nature becoming scanty, attended with pain and dis- tress. The skin becomes cold and sticky, and, in fact, we have all kinds of bad feelings with- out realizing the cause. We take medicines for one symptom, then for another, but without obtaining relief. The “splinter,” which in this case is Dyspepsia or Indigestion, has not been removed. It is useless to doctor the symptoms. We must remove the cause, then the symptoms (the result of the real disease) vanish. This is the principle upon which the Shaker Extract acts. . It cures the indigestion, then the pain in the head stops, the dizziness disappears, the food ceases to distress, and begins to give nourish- ment to the system. The pain about the kid- | neys, which alarms us so much, ceases, and the discharges become natural, and before we hard- | lyrealize the fact we find ourselves well, because we have removed the cause. CATHARTIC PILLS. | and, as a matter of course, stops the pain. In this Almost every family makes use of some kind of family pills to move the bowels when necessary. Some families recommend one kind, some another. Some pills agree with one person better than another. | The Shakers, from long experience, have found out | how to make a pill that Will Operate thoroughly yet | tissue. This great PAIN KING stops inflammation; mildly, without causing sickness, pain or distress. This is a great point gained, because. Imost all | kinds of Cathartic Pills make the patient sick and miserable while under the operation, but the Shaker Family Pills operate without causing sickness or | distress. They break up colds, cure billous disorders, and break up fevers. A single trial will convince any one of their excellent virtues. C º ºf Potato Salad.—Slice thin six or eight medium- sized boiled potatoes; mince fine two silver-skin onions, so as to get the flavor and not detect the onions in pieces; mix parsley and the potatoes with |Moisten one-third of a teaspoonful of dry mustard With a teaspoonful of hot water; put the yolks of two until well mixed, then :#. Sweet oil, beating it all tlue time until it thickens like a custard, add one and a half tableSpoonfuls of vinegar. Put this dressing over the potatoes and mix alltogether. The dish can | be garnished with celery tops and made very pretty. TESTIMONIALS. Susan Blair (Hamilton, St. Lawrence Co., N. Y.) dull ache all through my system, with scrofula humor. The doctor said I could not live but a short time. Six bottles cured me.” t Extract has done him so much good that his neigh- bors are astonished. O Oolwºmbus, Ohio, Aug. 6, 1881. A. J. WHITE, Esq., 54 Warren Street, N. Y. Dear Sir:-I bought of your agents, Fisler & | Chance, Urbana, Ohio, a bottle of Sºaker Curative Syrup, and my wife seemed benefited by it. After- Wards I met an old farmer friend of mine near this with dyspepsia and despaired of benefit or cure. I told him of your Syrup and he got it, and claims one and has been troubled for several years with dys- epsia, and I want to have him obtain and try the | Syrup. Have you agents at Napa City or 8t. Helena, and if so, send me the names and I will Write him. I enclose postal for return reply. Yours truly, D. W. C. SAWYDER. … * zº-_^-_^_^_^_^_^_^_^. … º. … *_^_^. z º._^*... .º._^_^_^_^. … "._^_^_^_^. … º. zº- º Y. M. A-_^- A-A- *—&_&_&E”. *—A-. *—é. … * FUN. “THAT is shear nonsense,” as the conviot remarked when he saw his wavy locks fall off under the in- | fluence of the penitentiary barber. “THOUGH lost to sight, to memory dear,” as the maiden said to her lover, when his face was burled in Ueard and Whiskers. IT is wonderful to think how near conceit is to insanity; and yet how many folks are suffered to go free, and foaming With it. “ANYTHING to please the child,” as the nurse sadd | when she let the baby crawl out of the nursery WindoW. All pain is caused by an inflammation of the nerves or muscles. The throbbing and beating is caused by the increased flow of blood through the diseased way pains and cramps in the stomach and bowels are cured at once. So is pain in the side, chest and back. Bathing the temples stops severe headache, ſ Bruises and sprains are also cured in the game manner. These are some of the effects produced by this great PAIN KING. C --> the Onions, and Season with salt and cayenne pepper. eggs in same dish, beat together with an egg-beater | Writes: “The Extract has done wonders in my own case. I was all, run down, with no appetite, and a | Samuel Joslyn, of otter Lake, Mich., says the li city, who was doctored and suffered fourteen years bottle has effected a cure; says he can now eat any- thing, and is a happy man on account of it. I have a son in St. Helena, Napa Co., California, and he is |*| i ſ{| | 2 AUGUST-1883. Moon's Phases. #3 d. A. m. d. M. m. *5 § New Moon, 2 826 A. | Full Moon, 18 7 54 M. F: First Quar., 10 829 A. | Last Quar, 25 0 82 M. § Dr. of the Sun Rises Sun Sets Moon Rises eek. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1| Wednesday. 458 7 14 3 38 2 | Thursday.....| 4 59 7-13 4 35 8-| Friday.......... 5 § iá sets. 4 | Saturday...... 5 1 7 11 7 48 5|Sunday......... 5 2 7 10 8 18 6 || Monday........ 5 3 7 8 8 47 7 | Tuesday....... 5 4 7 7 9 16 8 || Wednesday..] 5 5 7 6 9 46 9 || Thursday.....] 5 6 7 5 10 18 10 | Friday.......... 5 7 7 4 10 54 11 | Saturday...... 5 8 7 2 11 34 12 | Sunday......... 5 9 7 1 || morn. 13 || MOnday........ 5 10 7 0 0 18 14 | Tuesday....... 5 11 6 59 1 9 # Wºº. ## | }. ; ; Boiled Rice. Steamed Pudding. 17 | Friday.......... 5 13 6 54 4 12 Wash in two waters one cup- || One cupful of molasses, one of 18 Saturday...... 5 14 6 53 rises. ful of rice. Put it to boil in two sweet milk, one of raisins, half 19 | Sunday......... 5 15 6 52 7|18 || quarts of boiling water and one a cupful of butter or two- 20 || Monday........ 5 16 6 50 7 54 |tableSpoonful of salt. Boil thirds of a cupful of chopped 21 | Tuesday....... 5 17 6 49 8 30 rapidly, With the cover off the suet, one teaspoonful of mixed 22 || Wednesday..] 5 18 6 47 9 10 | Sauce-pan, for twenty-five min- || Spice, one of soda, half a tea- 23| Thursday..... 5 19 6 46 9 52 |utes. Turn into a golander to spoonful of salt, four cupfuls of 24 || Friday..........] 5 20 6 45 10 39 drain, and place where it will | flour. Dissolve the soda in the 25 | Saturday......] 5 21 6 43 1130 keep. warm, while the steak is milk. Mix all the ingredients 26 | Sunday......... 5 22 6 42 morn. broiling. The water in which thoroughly and steam three 27 | Monday........ 5 23 6 40 0 26 it was boiled may be used to hours in a buttered mould. To § º;i ------ ; § ; ; # ; Starch prints. be eaten with lemon Sauce. ednesday. * Boiled Cider Roast Beef. 30 | Thursday..... 5 26 6 36 3 28 Take four - gallons of cider and | Prepare and roast the same as 81 | Friday..........] 5 27 | 684 * 29 | boil it to oné gaiſon. the leg of mutton TESTIMONIALS. SPLENDID SATISFACTION. JDR. J. A. TrNSMAN, of Kirksville, Mo., writes May 1, 1882. ~ The medicine is giving splendid satisfaction, and only one bottle has been returned in two years. I can truly say that it is the best internal reme- dy for all common diseases now before the American public.” GAINED IN WEIGHT TWENTY-TWO POUNDS. Mowmtain Spring, Teacas, April 25, 1882. A. J. WHITE–Sir:-Having been afflicted with a Disordered Liver for So long, I had almost persuaded myself that I Was taking Consumption. I Was pale, emaciated, and feverish, and my physical power had so failed me that I was compelled to relinquish business. I tried various kinds of patent medicines, but to no effect. Accidently I came in pos- Session of your circular, and sent directly to you for a supply of “Shak- er Extract,” and after taking four sixty cent bottles I have gained in Weight twenty-two pounds and feel like a new man, for Which I Will ever feel grateful towards you. Respectfully yours, J. N. RAYZOR. - FUN. A RICHMOND paper says that “the moon has been rising for some nights with a face as red as a toper's,” No imputation Ought to be cast upon Cynthia's sobriety. She fills her horn Only Once a month. Mr. THOMAS POTT, a citizen of Western Texas, publishes a violent communication against his neighbors in general because he has had an axe stolen. His rage is evidently a tempest in a T. Pott. Oftentimes, diseased or partially decayed food causes sickness, nausea and diarrhoea. If the bowels are cleansed from this impurity with a dose of SHAKER FAMILY PILLs, these disagreeable effects will vanish and good health will result. The PAIN KING is an instant cure for Soreness, rheumatic pains, boils, ulcers, old sores, Wounds, etc. Also for toothache, headache, etc. - *-* * * * * - - - - - - |- --~~~~ - - Sºº- - - * ~~~~~~~~~~~ - - - - ------ - - --~~ - - - - ** ---- - -- LAY THE AxE AT THE Root of THE IT is now very generally admitted as a re- | cognised fact in therapeutics, that most cases of so-called malaria, liver complaint, kidney | diseases, etc., etc., are simply aggravated cases of dyspepsia. No one of any pretensions to scientific knowledge has any longer a doubt that these ills have their origin in a defective digestion. The reason why the remedies pre- scribed for these so-named diseases fail to effect | their cure, is because the medicines are given for the symptoms of the real disease, and not for the disease itself. A woodman does not undertake to fell a giant of the forest by lop- ping off the branches; he lays his axe at the root - So in disease; you cannot cure a gigantic abnormal growth by a feeble attack upon its mere symptoms—you Imust lay your that some doctors called Dyspepsia and others axe at the root, that is to say, the cause of the disease, and destroy it root and branch. The disease is dyspepsia; the remedy which will remove its root or cause, is Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup or the Shaker Extract of Roots. |};"; ºn; ; my left Side Without pain or The disease being cured, the symptoms will disappear—the so-called diseases being merely symptoms of the real disease. Seigel's Curative Syru p is a medicine made expressly to cure Dys- pepsia, or Indigestion, and it is admitted on all hands to be the most successful remedy for In- digestion ever introduced into this country. Its large sale would seem to prove this, for with- out a large amount of advertising, 15,000,000 |. bottles have beçn sold within the four years last past in England alone. If it were not an excel- lent remedy, the discerning people would have discovered the fact long before they had taken such an enormous quantity of the syrup—a quan. | that he leaned over backward, was defending his | doctrines against a man as ignorant as he was tity sufficient to float an iron-clad. Sick Headache is the result of Dyspepsia. º Restore the digestion, and the sick headache | turn off the water, and tº. browned on both sides. In those places in the coun- fuls o other respects. How to Cook Salt Pork—If only a little extra oare be given to preparing it for the table, salt pork may be made very palatable. The proper way to fry it is to cut it into slices a quarter of an inch thick, and after removing the rind, pour on boiling water, in which let the slices remain for ten minutes; then them till they are nicely try where fresh meat cannot at all times be easily obtained, it is well to study various modes of serving pork. If it is liked broiled, prepare it the same as for frying, and keep it ten minutes over a fire of clear goals. Another mode that gives a most satisfactory | dish, is to fry it, then dip it in a batter, and fry again ork fat, to which should be added two spoon. lard or drippings. . The batter mentioned is made by mixing gradually together a cupful of milk #. ºt flour, and adding a Well-beaten egg and a &llº, o in the TESTIMONIAL. DYSPEPSAs Greenwood P. O., Moore Co., N. O., Aug. 25, 1880. MR. A. J. WHITE, New York—Dear Sir :—I have’ º been afflicted for the last thirty years with a disease || called it heart disease, but whatever it was I suffered a great deal With pain about my heart and stomach | and kidneys and urinary organs, and could not lie on my left side for the last t years On account of causing pain at Imy heart and a smothering or shortness of breath. I wasPºlº, by your agent, Mr. Spivy, to try a bottle of your Shaker Extract, or Curative Syrup. I did so, and before I had used one difficulty of breathing, and was benefited in many I then purchased another bottle, the last one your agent had on hand, and have used the most of that and feel greatly benefited by its use... I am about sixty **. of age and attending to a mill, and can tote and handle a three bushel sack of corn or meal with more ease now, than I could a bushel sack loefore jà the medicine. I can recom- (3 mend it as a good medicine, and hope that you will soon Supply your agent with more, SO that all who need may obtain it and be cured. Respectfully yours, . EENJAMIN BARBER. FUN. THE littler folks be, the bigger they talk. You never seed a small man that didn’t wear high-heeled boots and a high-crowned hat, and that warn’t ready to fight almost any one, to show he was a man every inch of him. AN old Baptist preacher, so straight a Calvinist tº length the preacher said to his op- Ou be- all. I obstinate. onent, “NOW look here, my friend; don’t eve what is to be, wiiſ be tº ºn of don't a believe what is to be, Won’t be.” will vanish to return no more. The SHAKER | – wº- tº-mºmºmºmºmu a ExTRACT is made for just such cases. | Nervous debility vanishes before the quiet- Heart Burn is caused by undigested food in |ing, purifying and healthful action of the CURA- the stomach. A few doses of the SHAKER EX- |TIVE SYRUP. t TRACT or Roots will remove the trouble by | For wounds, bruises, sprains, lameness and causing the food to be properly digested. soreness, use the PAIN KING, by bathing the Use the SHAKER Sooth.ING PLASTER for pain parts freely and covering with a cloth to pre- I, , in the back, chest or side. | vent evaporation. | | | | |-2.% -&-- - . POINTING OUT THE DANGER. WHEN any person is seen to be approaching danger, the first impulse of a humane observer is to give that person warning, so that the impend- ing calamity may be averted. The warning should be given in season, so that there may be time to shun the danger: it is easy for a single man to change the course of the rippling moun- tain brook, but when that brook has grown to a river, the work becomes one to tax the powers of skilled engineers controlling an army of strong-armed laborers. When the first symp- toms of disease steal in upon us, they are like the mountain brook; we should take warning then, in order to avoid the danger before us, when the disease shall have become as a rolling river, against which we may struggle in vain. A timely remedy, taken when the first derange- ment of the stomach comes upon us, will always arrest the progress of disease, and prevent its grasp being fastened upon our vitals. When food begins to distress us, causing headache, dizziness, etc., followed by loss of appetite, we should, without an instant's delay, take a - few doses of the Shaker Extract of Roots when relief will at once be felt, and a dangerous disease be averted. Nearly all of the most serious and fatal diseases known to humanity, commence precisely in this way, and it is of the utmost importance that we should regard the warning. There is danger ahead, and he who points out the danger and suggests the remedy, is a friend whose voice should be heeded. Nº wº - "tº | ||| W! | I §|| §§§ W º Excellent Gold Cake. A cupful of Sugar, half as much butter, half a cupful of milk, one and three-fourths cup- ful of flour, the yolks of three eggs and One Whole egg, one- fourth of a teaspoonful each of SOda and cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful of lemon flavor. Mix together the sugar and but- ter, and add the eggs, milk, lemon extract and flour, in this Order. Bake for half an hour in a moderate oven. Lemon Cake. The rind and juice of a lemon, a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half as much saleratus, a tea- Cupful of butter, one of Sweet milk, three of sugar, four and a half of flour, and five eggs—the yolks and Whites beaten sepa- rately. Bake in two loaves for forty-five minutes in a rather Quick OVen. Fried Chicken.-Cut the chicken into Six or eight pieces, and season Well with Salt and pepper. ip into beaten egg, and then into fine bread crumbs, in which there is a teaspoonful of chopped parsley for every cupful of crumbs. Dip once more in the egg and crumbs, and fry ten minutes in boiling fat. Plain Fruit Cake.—Half a cupful each of milk and butter, one and a half cupfuls of Sugar, two and a half cupfuls of flour, two eggs, half a teaspoonful of soda, spices and fruit. |||||||||| | | | IIIM | I | |||||||| | TESTIMONIAL. Joppa, Ind., May 13, 1882. MR. A. J. WHITE, New York—Dear Sir:—My hus- band suffered with Chronic Liver Complaint for eight years, he was so bad that he was entirely unfit for Work. Every. Other medicine had failed, So We thought we would try the Shaker Extract and did so, and since he has taken your medicine he has been able to Work all the time. Yours truly, MRS. HATTIE GIBBONS. - FUN. A CELEBRATED Oxford scholar, who professes an indifference to music. Was once asked what he thought of an orchestra which had been performing a grand overture. He replied that he was only impressed “by the WOnderful Coincidence of the fiddlers’ elbows.” “PUT out your tongue a little further,” said a physi- cian to a female #". little further, madame, if you please—a little further still.” “Why, doctor, do you think there is no end to a Woman's tongue?” cried the fair invalid. HEALTH AND HAPPINESS:—How few enjoy these blessings.—The reason in nine cases out of ten is the want, not of riches, but of good health. Indigestion is the cause of more unhap- piness than any other disease. The SHAKER ExTRACT OF ROOTS will remove indigestion and give health and happiness in its place. Use the SHAKER SOOTHING PLASTER for pains | in the back, chest or side. | SEPTEMBER—1883. uire Six hours to cook. When one, take from the fire and let it stand one hour in the Water in Which it was boiled; then take out the bones, place the meat on a platter Or cake pan put a tin sheet on top of it, an on the sheet a Weight, and set in a cool place. In the morning trim the edges; use the trim- mings for hash. If the beef be boiled rapidly it Will be dry and , but if it is allowed only to bubble it Will be tender and juicy. This is true of all kinds Moon’s Phases. #4 d. h.m. d. A. m. * 3 New Moon, 1 9 14 M. | Full Moon, 16 4 41 A. º First Quar., 9 138 A. | Last Quar., 23 7 51 M. º Pº: the ISun Rises! Sun Sets | Moon Sets - eek. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1 | Saturday...... 5 28 6 33 SetS. 2 | Sunday......... 5 29 6 81 6.49 8 || Monday........ 5 30 6 29 || 7 18 4 | Tuesday....... 5 31 6 28 7 48 5 | Wednesday..] 5 31 6 26 8 20 6 || Thursday..... 5 32 6 25 8 54 7 | Friday.......... 5 33 6 23 9 30 8 || Saturday...... 5 34 6 21 10 12 9 | Sunday......... 5 35 6 20 10 59 10 || Monday........ 536 618 11 52 11 | Tuesday....... 5-37 6 17 | morn. 12 | Wednesday..] 5 38 6 15 0. 50 13 || Thursday..... 539 6 13 1 53 14 | Friday.......... 540 6 11 2 58 15 | Saturday...... 5 41 6 10 4 7 16 º --------- 5 # § § #: Pressed Corned Beef. #|#. ## | } } | *; , The thin part of the ribs, the 19 Wednesday. 5 45 6 3 7 49 brisket and the flank, are the 20 | Thursday -- 5.45 6 1 8 35 best, parts to press. Wash the Ží | Friday..... 546 6 0 9 26 meat, and if it is very salt, 22 Šaturâay. 5 47 5 58 10 21 cover With cold water; but if 23|sºnia...] § 43 || 5 §§ ii ži nº, hººghly, salted, cover 24 || Monday........ § 35 | 5 § morn. With boiling Water. Letit come 25 | Tuesday....... 5 50 5 53 0 22 to a boil, and skim; then cover 26 | Wednesday..] 5 51 5 52 1 23 and simmer six hours unless the 27 | Thursday..... 5 52 5 50 2 23 piece Weighs more than ten or 28 || Friday.......... 5 53 5 48 323 twelve pounds; in which case stringy 29 ( Saturday...... 5 54 546 4 21 allow fifteen minutes for every 80 | Sunday......... 5 55 545 || 5 18 : additional pound. No matter - l how Small the piece, it will re- | of meat. "- TESTIMONIALS. ( , * \_/ “THE MEDICINE HAs REAL MERIT." Jefferson, Iowa, Feb. 7, 1882. “Your medicine is giving first rate satisfaction here, and we sell lots of it. Yours truly, ROBERT ELLIS, From L. W. Faulkner & Co., Champaign, Ill., Jan. 16, 1882: “The oods are giving good and general satisfaction, where once introduced n a family We get the second call for the medicine.” MR. JAMES ROBERTS, ºß Dodgeville, Wis., would not risk his reputation by writing the following, if he had not good evidence as to the value of this medicine. “I shall endeavor to circulate any advertis- ing matter you may see fit to send. I think the medicine has real merit, and I do not hesitate to recommend it to my customers. I shall do What I can to increase the sale of the medicine.”–Jan. 9, 1882. FUN. WHEN a soldier once fell into the Thames, and was drowned, one per- son asked another what regiment he belonged to, and was answered, “The Life-guards.” “Nay, my good sir,” said he, “there I think you must be mistaken, for he is certainly in the Cold-stream.” A MISS BUCHANAN once rallying her cousin, an officer, on his courage, said, “Now, Mr. Harry, do you really mean to tell me you can walk to a cannon's mouth without fear?” “Yes,” was the prompt reply, “ or a Buchanan’s either.” And he did it. A PAPER, calling itself literary and miscellaneous, advertises that it intends to swallow up everything around it “like a great maelstrom.” We have but little doubt that it will prove a great “take-in.” There never has been a family Pill introduced that operates so gently and yet so thoroughly as the SHAKER FAMILY PILL. They cause no sickness or unpleasant feeling. The PAIN KING is the king of all the great “Pain Killers.” - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ------ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Okra Soup—Equal to Turtle Soup. One leg of beef, quarter of a package of okra, two carrots eight tomatoes, two onions, cu fine, nine quarts of Water. Boil six and a half hours. Cut the meat off the bone in Small pieces. Take the most gluti- nous parts of the leg and a little of the flesh, and mix with the soup when it is made. Cut the okra in small pieces round- *:::: Boil steadily but not 8.I’Ol. Steamed Brown Bread. Two cupfuls of new milk, two of Indian meal, one and a half of flour, one of molas SeS, One ||: - - * * * - *- - - - - - - - * - - - - - - - - - - --> -- ~~ - " - * * teaspoonful of Soda. Steam LIKE THE GENTLE RAIN FROM ABOVE. LIFE's vexations and troubles do not gener- ally come on like a storm descending the moun- tain or like a whirlwind sweeping over an arid | plain; they come as the rain does in some sec- tions of the world, gently but every day. This is true with disease. It steals in upon us un- awares, and before we realize the fact, its deadly grasp is fastened upon our vitals. How important then that we should meet the enemy of our race at the threshold, and drive him forth before he has had time to intrench himself upon our mortal tenement. Disease, as a rule, com- mences with a dull heavy pain in the head, back, and legs. Sometimes these distressing forerunners of illness are ushered in with a slight chill. If at this time a dose of the Shaker Family Pills be taken at bed-time, with a bottle of hot water placed at the feet when tucked up in bed, the disease will depart not to trouble you any more. But if the warning is neglected, a high fever follows the foregoing symptoms, the mouth becoming parched and dry, the eyes red and bloodshot. A brisk cathartic dose of the Shaker Pills should be taken. All solid food should be abstained from. It would be well to take a warm bath so as to open the pores of the skin and equalize the circulation. Apply cold Water to the head, and keep the feet warm with bottles of warm water. This course of treat- ment will, as a rule, relieve the sufferer of the severe attack, and a few days rest, with careful jieting, will restore him to health. - three hours. Rhubarb Pies.—Do not cut the rhubarb until | the morning it is to be used; or, if you have to buy it, keep it in a cool place. Strip off the skin and cut the stalk into pieces about an inch long, and steW in just water enough to prevent burning. When gold, sweeten to taste. Cover the pie plates and roll the upper crust about half an inch thick; Cut into º: o - an inch wide, and after filling the plate With t rhubarb put on four cross pieces and the rim. Bake half an hour, TESTIMONIAL. A CASE OF DYSPEPSHA MISTAKEN FOR CONSUMPTION. Crofton, Christian Co., Ky., Jan. 5, 1880. MR. A. J. WHITE–Dear Sir:-My daughter, Sarah F. Walker, last January, was confined to her be and had been for twelve months under treatment o three eminent physicians, who said she had con- sumption and heart disease. The doctors, and all that saw her, said she was bound to die. . But I persuaded her to take your Shaker Extract of Roots, and after having used two and a half bottles, she was restored to perfect health, and said she felt bet- ter than she had for five years. My daughter is now living and e º ood health, but had it not been for your medicine, she would have now been dead. Yours truly, REV. M. MELTON. NOTE.-Many persons who suppose they have consumption really have nothing but dyspepsia. The above case is an instance. FUN. A COURTESY DECLINED.—Farmer B. informs us that, although very tired on his way home, he would not accept a bull’s offer of a lift on the road. “I’M lost in grief,” as the fly said when he tumbled into a lady’s tear. _ _ The SHAKER EXTRACT OF ROOTS OR CURA- ||- | TIVE SYRUP will remove indigestion and cause the new blood to become pure and healthy. For headache, use the PAIN KING, by bath- ing the temples freely and moving the bowels with SHAKER EXTRACT. - - -- - - - - - * - - - --~~~~ ----------------------tº-2 ... UUTO BER–1888, Moon's Phases. " * . d. h. m. d. M. m. 3.5 | New Moon, 1 054 M. | Last Quar., 22 6 18 A. ‘83 || First Quar., 9 5 19 M. |New Moon, 30 6 57 A. > | Pull Moon, 16 1 45 M. ſº Pº: the ISun Rises! Sun Sets | Moon Sets eek. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1 || Monday........ 5 56 5 43 SetS. 2|Tuesday....... 5 57 541 6 20 3| Wednesday..] 5 58 540 6 53 4| Thursday.....] 5 59 5 38 7 30 5|| Friday..........| 6-0 5 37 8 10 6 Saturday......| 6 1 5 85 8 54 7| Sunday......... 6-2 534 944 8 || Monday........ 6 3 532 10 89 9 |Tuesday....... 6 4 5 31 11 37 10|| Wednesday..] 6-5 5 29 || In Orn. 11 || Thursday..... 6 6 5 28 0 89 12 | Friday.......... 6 7 5 26 1 45 13| Saturday...... 6 8 5 24 2 52 14|Sunday......... 6-9 5 23 4 3 15 || Monday........ 6 11 5 21 5 16 Baked Fish. 16 |Tuesday....... 6 12 520 rises. Take a fish weighing from 17 | Wednesday. 6 13 || 5 18 § 3; four to six pounds, Scrape and 18|Thursday..... 6 14 || 517 £ 4% wash clean, and season well 19 Frida, ---------- 6 15 5 15 8 12 With Salt. Make a dressin With 20 | Saturday...... 6 16 || 5 14 § 12 | five smail crackers, roiled fine, 21 | Sunday......... 6 17 5 # }}}} one tablespoonful of butter, one § *. -------- 6 ; ; 10 teaspoonful of salt, a little #|Wiśāāy. § ; ; ; * | per half a tâbléspoºnfu 25 | Thursda W. 6 22 || 5 7 # * | chopped, parsley, and Water 26 Frida, y ..... 6 23 || 5 5 ; 15 enough tº make Very moist. 27 | Sat { ---------- 6 24 || 5 4 § 3 ||Stuff the fish with this prepara- 28 sº ay...... 6 25 5 3 4 10 tion, Which fasten in With a 29 R. --------- 6 % 5 2 5 § skewer. Cut slits in the fish and 30 #. ------- 6 27 5 0 6 01 }. intº i. *; pork * ------ r them. aCe UIle T1SD1 OIl 8, Ulll ãi | Wednesday.] § 28 || 4 55 sets. sheet in a baking pan, and dredge well With flour. Bake one hour, basting often. Serve with a . tomato sauce poured around it. Apple Pudding. . . Pare and chop fine six large apples. Put in a pudding dish a layer of grated bread crumbs One inch deep, then a layer of apple. On this put bits of but- ter, Sugar and a slight grating of nutmeg. Continue as before, and finally pour on a teacupful of Cold Water. Bake half an hour. Use in all two table- Spoonfuls of butter and a small Cupful of Sugar. TESTIMONIALS. MORE THAN $500 WORTH OF GOOD. Silver City, New Mearico, March 12, 1882. MESSRS. HESS & CROUTER, Trinidad, Col. Gentlemen:-I sent to you last November for a bottle of the Shaker Extract for my wife, and am happy to say it is the best medicine I ever Saw, and that one bottle done more good for her than $500 worth of doc- toring has done. Enclosed I send $2.00, please send me three bottles by Adams Express. Respectfully yours, WILLIAM B. FENDERSON. ſº. We enclose you this letter as it probably may be useful to you. As it is unsolicited, we consider it the more valuable. Yours, HESS & CROUTER. C. C. SEYMOUR, Naye Hill, Tenn., says: “I have been troubled with Bevere pain in my side and shoulder for some time, and concluded to #y a bottle of Shaker Extract of Roofs; I found relieſ in a short time by the use of your valuable medicine. I believe it to be a great medicine.” FUN. A BITTER writer in a sectarian newspaper, calls his opponent, “a hypocrite and a hyena.” There is some similarity between the two B. als. One prays, and both prey. “SURELY,” Says young Jones, “any one who knows how to go round a corner could also square the circle !” WE have heard of men celebrating their country’s battles, who in War Were celebrated for keeping out of them. The efficacy of the SHAKER ExTRACT OF Roots in removing dyspepsia in all its varied forms is beyond all question. The PAIN KING is a great blessing to those suffering from pain. case. For cramps it operates like magic. - - - - - - ------ - --- ºr - - - - - - - - --- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - It gives relief in every LET US REASON TOGETHER. MANY have wondered—and still the wonder grew—how a remedy which was confessedly a cure for but one single disease should attain to such enormous sales as Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup has done; but when it is borne in mind that to Dyspepsia we owe almost all the ills which afflict us, it will be seen that a medicine which can cure that Main-spring of Disease must reach the cases of innumerable multitudes. Such is, indeed, the simple fact. Physicians are apt to give a variety of names to diseases which all come under the one category of Dys- peptic complaints—such as Malaria, Liver Com- plaint, Kidney Disease, and the like, all of which are simply due to obstructions of the system of waste and repair, to which we owe our very existence. It is far too common for our medical men to devote their attention and treatment to mere symptoms, when they should instead of this strike at the root of the evil, and thus eradicate symptoms and disease together. It is also a common error of doctors to make a faulty diagnosis of a case, and proceed delib- erately to treat the patient for a disease which he is not suffering from. Far too many cases of so-called Consumption are nothing more nor less than bad cases of Dyspepsia, the symptoms of which are of the most painful character, but which readily yield to the soothing and healing influence of Mother Seigel's Curative Syrup or Shaker Extract of Roots. | The Shakers do not make a secret of the mode of making their medicines. They affix | the formula on every bottle sent out. They | are willing that any should make them if they | think they can excel. | It is estimated that fully one-third of the iſ human race suffer from the effects of indiges- |tion, caused in most cases by improper diet. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - * - * * º Boiled Flank of Beef.-Wash the flank, and make a dressing as for turkey, which spread over it first having Salted and peppered it º then roll uſ and tie. ind the twine around it several times, to keep it in place; then Sew into a cloth kept for that purpose. Put a small plate in the pot, and put in the meat; then pour on it boiling water enough to cover, and boil gently six hours. en done, remove the cloth, but not the twine until stone cold; then cut in thin slices, and you will have alternate layers ; º: and dressing. This is a nice dish for break- 8,815 OIT Uea. Meat Hash.--Dredge with salt and pepper any kind of cold meat, and chop it fine. This is always the best manner of Seasoning hash, as all parts will be seasoned alike. If you have cold potatoes, chop fine and mix with the meat; if they are hot, mash. Allow one pint of meat to two of potato. Put this mixture in the frying-pan with a little water or Boup stock to moisten it, and stir in a spoonful of butter; or if you have nice, beef dripping, use that instead of butter. Heat slowly, stirring often, and when warmed through, cover and let it stand on a moder- ately hot part of the Stove or range twenty minutes. When ready to serve, fold as you would an omelet. TESTIMONIAL. Lowell, Mass., June 1, 1882. last year and the early part of this year I suffere from a disease, which I supposed to be consumption. had continual dry cough, Soreness of the lungs, short- ness of breath, and profuse night SWeats. I was so bad during 1881, that I was unable to work for over six months, and was reduced from my usual weight of 150 lbs. to 110 lbs. I consulted the best physicians in the locality Where I reside, Who informed me that my lungs were very Weak, and much diseased, and that it would take a long time before I got well. During the month of February of this year, a friend told me that your Syrup was very good, so I went to Butler's, the apothecary, and bought a bottle and commenced taking it according to the printed di- rections; it gave me so much relief that I was encour- aged to continue its use, and now I feel my health ten times better and am entirely cured. I hope that I shall see this in print so that other sufferers may be induced to try the Curative Syrup and receive the benefits that I did. If any One should doubt the genuineness of this certificate let them address me. - Yours truly, CHAS. H. MCCULLOUGEI. _ MR. A. J. WHITE, New York—Dear Sir ãº: º I FUN. A LADY was traveling with a troublesome barking dog in her lap. A gentleman, a fellow passenger, complained of the annoyance. ... “Dear me, sir!” exclaimed the lady, with an air of astonishment, “I wonder you complain of my dog; everybody admires it; it is a real Peruvian.” “I don’t complain of your Peruvian dog, ma'am,” replied he; “but I Wish he would give us less of his Peruvian bark.” A TURK asked an Armenian to lend him a rope. “My rope,” said the Armenian, “is being used to tie up flour.” “How,” demanded the would-be bor- rower, “can you tie up flour with a rope?” “Be- cause,” said the Armenian, “I can apply a rope to any use when I do not wish to lend it.’ For ague in the breast and broken breast, use the PAIN KING, by laying on a cloth wet with the remedy, and covering it with dry cot- | ton to prevent evaporation. - - NOWEMBER—1883. Moon’s Phases. - - #4 - d. A. m. d. M. m. ‘Sº | First Quar., 7 7 4A. | Last Quar., 21 843 M. > | Full Moon, 14 11 87 M. |New Moon, 29 1 54 A. Q Pº: the Sun Rises! Sun Sets | Moon Sets Week. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1 || Thursday..... 6 29 4 58 || 6 9 2 | Friday.......... 6 30 4 57 652 3 | Saturday...... 6 31 4 56 7 89 4 || Sunday......... 6.33 4.54 8 32 5 || Monday........ 6 34 4 53 9 28 6|Tuesday....... 6 35 4.52 10 27 7| Wednesday..|| 6 36 4 51 11 29 | 8|Thursday.....| 6 37 4 50 | Inorn. 9 | Friday.......... 6 39 449 0.34 10 | Saturday...... 6 40 4 48 1 41 11 | Sunday......... 6 41 447 250 12 || Monday........ 6 42 4 46 4 2 - 13 | Tuesday.......| 643 4 45 5 15 - 14 || Wednesday... 645 445 riseS. 15 || Thursday..... 6 46 4 44 554 16 || Friday.......... 6 47 || 4 43 6 55 Fish C - º 17 | Saturday......| 6 48 || 4 42 7 58 S howder. and flour. Continue this wintil 18 Sunday......... 6 49 4 41 9 2 Cut half a pound of salt pork all the fish and potato are used; 19 || Monday........ 6 51 4 41 10 6 into slices and put into the stew- then cover with boiling water, 20 | Tuesday....... 6 52 440 11 8 pan. , Fry, slowly for twelve and simmer gently for fifteen 21 | Wednesday...| 6 53 439 morn. minutes; then add two onions, minutes. Mix one pint of milk 22 || Thursday.....| 6 54 4 39 0 8 Cut Jime, and fry ten minutes with two tablespoonfuls of flour 23 | Friday.......... 6 55 4 38 1 6 longer. Have about four |and add this to the chowder, 24 | Saturday...... 6 56 4 38 2 3 | pounds of fresh fish, freed of together with six Boston crack. 25 | Sunday......... 6 57 4 37 2 59 skin and bone and cut into ers, split. Cook ten minutes 26 || Monday....... 6, 58 4 37 3 55 pieces; have, also, one quart of longer, and serve. The milk 27 | Tuesday........ 6 59 487 451 | potatoes pared and cut in thin may be omitted if not liked. 28 | Wednesday..] 7 0 4 36 5.48 slices. Put a layer of the fish | In that case, however, be a 29 |Thursday.....| 7 || || 4:3 || Bet; and then a layer of the potatoes |little generous with the boiling 80 | Friday......... | 7 2 || 485 || 5 86 on top of the pork and onions. water when you begin the Dredge Well with salt, pepper | chowder. - TESTIMONIALS. A GOOD REMEDY FOR ALL IT IS RECOMMENDED. MR. W. S. BROCK, Nave Hill, Tenn., Writes May 10, 1882, enclosing the testimonials printed below and states: “The Sale and demand for the Shaker Extract of Roots becomes greater, and is proving to be a noble remedy and giving universal, Satisfaction. I have sold about twelve * and all except two or three bottles have given perfect satisfac- OIl. “I could send you a good many certificates but it is not necessary, as the medicine is so Well known.” J. A. MAPLES, Nave Hill, Tenn., says: “I have been using the Shaker Extract of Roots, which was insured to me, and I can freely say it gave entire satisfaction in every particular, and I believe it to be a good remedy for all it is recommended.” T. B. WALTERS, of Nave Hill, Tenn., says: “I believe the Shaker Ex- tract of Roots to be one of the best medicines, and can recommend it to all. I do not Want to be Without it.” FUN. A WESTERN editor talks of giving in one of his columns the fibs of his neighbor. It is presumed that the other thirty-five are to be filled With his own—as usual. THE question is discussed in Some of the Missouri papers whether raising hemp is a good business. A much better business certainly than being raised by it. Never before has there existed a remedy so unfailingly successful in rheumatic affections as the SHAKER ExTRACT OF Roots. For vomiting and purging, use the PAIN KING, by taking doses every half hour internally, and rubbing the bowels (externally) and applying a cloth wet with it, and covering with cotton batting, to prevent evaporation. - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - ----- ----- - --- - - --- -- - --- -- - -- - - - - - - - - --- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Veal Loaf, THE DANGER OF DELAY, THE spread of disease is the result, in most cases, of neglecting to take prompt measures for its arrest in its incipient stages. There are many unfortunate people now confined to their | couches, which they can have no hope (poor souls') of ever leaving alive, who, had they taken warning by the first symptoms of disease, i and applied the proper remedy, might have been now enjoying the pleasures of life, and filling | useful places in society; but when the appetite | first began to fail, and the food to cause distress, | lying in the stomach like a hard lump, causing | headache, dizziness, etc., they made light of | these serious symptoms, and, by neglecting to | take a few doses of Seigel's Curative Syrup, laid | themselves open to a long train of suffering. It | would have been easy to avert the evil in its | first stages; to crush out the full-grown disease | is hard indeed, and sometimes, alas! impossible, | as we are being constantly reminded by the untimely deaths of friends and dear ones who might have been saved. Few of us realize the | importance of checking disease when it first | attempts to fasten its deadly fangs upon us. | Nearly all diseases commence with a slight de- | rangement of the digestive organs, and it will | only require a few doses of Seigel's Curative Syrup or the Shaker Extract of Roots to correct this derangement, thus preventing a serious | growth of disorder in the system, with its ensu- ing pain, trouble, and possibly fatal end. - - - - tº- - - - | Three pounds of veal 01' fresh beef, half a pound of Salt pork chopped fine, tWO beaten eggs, One teacupful Of Cracker crumbs, three tablespoonfuls of Salt, tWO teaspoonfuls of pep- per. Mix and press hard into a tin. Bake One and a half hours. Steamed Beef Steak Pudding. One quart of flour, one large teaspoonful of lard, two tea- Spoonfuls of Cream Oftartar, One teaSp00nful Of Soda, tWO Cu fuls of milk or water, a little Salt, one and a half pounds of beef Steak. Roll out the crust and line a deep earthern dish; then lay in part of the Steak, With a few pieces of butter, a little salt, and a few whole cloves; then lay on the rest of the Steak, with Seasoning as be- fore. Turn the crust up over the Whole. Steam two hours. Stewed Lobster.—Open a lobster weighing two and a half pounds and cut the Imeat into little dice. Heat two tablespoonfuls of butter, and add the dry flour, stirring until perfectly Smooth; then gradually add the Water, stirring all the While. Season to taste. Add the lobster, and beat thoroughly. TESTIMONIALS. LIVER complaiNT. Pollock, Fla., Aug. 24, 1882. MR. A. J. WHITE–Dear Sir :—I lua Ve used three bottles Of the Shaker Extract Of Roots for Liver Complaint, and have derived great benefit from its U180. Yours truly, JOHN JACKSON. GIVEN UP BY SEVEN DOCTORS. Rirkmansville, Todd Co., Ky. MR. A. J. WHITE—Dear Sir :—Your Shaker medicine has raised me to good health after Seven doctors had given me up to die With consumption. Yours truly, R. F. GRACE. FUN. A LEICESTERSHIRE lass, With a wooden leg, and another With a Wry neck, have recently, to the Sur- prise of a local journalist, been led to the altar. The bridegrooms were no doubt sensible men, and thought a Wooden leg a less drawback than a Wooden head or a Wry neck than a wry temper. A WELL-KNOWN city baker advertises: “that as all men need bread, he wishes the public to know that he kneady it. He is desirous of feeding all Who are hungry, and hopes his good Works may be in the mouth of every one. He is well disposed to Ward all men, and the best bred people *...; uS Will find him, he hopes, one of the best bread men in the city. The SHAKER FAMILY PILLS, cure bilious dis- orders, break up colds and fevers. For toothache, use the PAIN KING, holding half a teaspoonful in the mouth. -** - - - - - - - - - - - - * - - - || tº | DECEMBER–1888. | NEVER SOLD A MEDICINE THAT GAVE AS GOOD SATIS- FACTION. Indianola, Iowa, Dec. 29, 1881. A. J. WHITE, New York—Dear Sir:—Please send me three or six dozen Shaker Extract of Roots. I am working up a good trade on them. I never Sold a medicine that gave as good satisfaction. Yours truly, C. A. BUFFINGTON, Druggist. From Mr. James Ellwood, P. M., Deepwater, Fayette Co., W. Va. “I consider it a good medicine and would not be without it in my house, it gives entire satisfaction to all who use it, and will stop a cough in one minute—that I have experienced myself.” From C. H. Hammond, Druggist, Friendship, N.Y., May 1, 1882. “The Shaker Extract is giving good satisfaction, and has accomplished Several remarkable cures in this section.” FUN. A TANNER having married the daughter of an eminent butcher, the bells were rung on the occasion. A gentleman asked another What the peal Was for. “Only a union,” said he, “between skin and bone.” FAME is like a shaved pig with a greased tail; and it is only after it has slipped through the hands of a few thousands that Some fellow, by good luck, holds on to it. º Moon’s Phases, 33 d. A. m. d. h.m. $f | First Quar., 7 6 46 M. | Last Quar., ii º "3M. Fº Full Moon, 13 10 28 A. | New Moon, 29 8 0M. 3. Pº: the Sun Rises| Sun Sets | Moon Sets __ eek. h. m. h. m. h. m. | 1 | Saturday......| 7 8 4 85 627 2 | Sunday......... 7 4 4 85 7.21 3 || Monday........] 7 5 4 35 8 20 4|Tuesday....... 7 6 4 34 9 21 5 | Wednesday..] 7 7 4 34 10 23 5 | Thursday.....] I 8 || 4 34 || 11 28 || 7 | Friday.......... 7. 9 4 34 morn. 8 || Saturday......] 7 10 4 34 0 34 9 |Sunday......... 7 10 4 34 1 42 10 || Monday........ 7 11 4 34 2 53 11 | Tuesday....... 7-12 4 34 || > 4 4 12 || Wednesday..] 7 13 4 34 5 14 13 Thursday.....| 7 14 4 34 6 23 14 || Friday..........| 7 14 435 rises. #|Š. ## | ## | }; Macaroni. Boiled Rice Pudding. 17 5. 7 17 4 35 8 52 Break up a quarter of a pound | Pick and wash one cupful of 18 Tuesday....... 7 17 4 86 § 55 of macaroni. T. Wash quickly in rice, and boil in one quart of 19 || Wednesday..] 7 18 || 4 36 10 55 | cold Water and put into a sauce- lº water for, fifteen min- 20 | Thursday..... 7 18 4 87 Ii 54 pan with two quarts of boiling |utes; then drain dry. . Wring a 21 | Friday..........| 7 19 4 37 morn. Water and a teaspoonful of salt. pudding-cloth out of boiling 22 || Saturday...... 7 19 || 4 38 0. 51 | Boil rapidly for twenty minutes. water, and spreadin a deep dish, 23| Sunday......... 7 20 4 38 1 48 || The Saucepan must not be cov- and turn the rice into it. 24 || Monday....... 7:20 4 39 243 |ered. Serve with butter and Sprinklein one cupful of raisins, 25 | Tuesday........ 7 21 4 39 3 38 || Salt or With tomato Sauce. and a tablespoonful of Salt ; tie 26 | Wednesday..| 7 21 4 40 4 34 ... Another way would be to the cloth loosely, that the rice 27 | Thursday.....| 7 21 4 41 5 27 it in a dish as soon as boiled, may have room to swell, and 28 Friday......... 7 21 4 42 6 17 and pour Over it one cupful of boil two hours. Serve with 29 || Saturday......] 7 22 4 42 sets. milk and a tablespoonful of but-|lemon sauce, or sugar and 30 | Sunday......... 7 22 4 43 6 13 |ter, and then cover with grated cream. Or, apples may be used 81 | Monday........| 7 22 4 44 7 15 cheese and brown in the oven. in place of the raisins. TESTIMONIALS. A coated tongue, with a brackish taste, is caused by foul matter in the stomach. A few doses of SHAKER FAMILY PILLs will cleanse the stomach, remove the bad taste, and restore the appetite, and with it bring good health. The PAIN KING is an instant cure for neuralgia, sore throat, hoarseness, cholic, diarrhoea, etc. - - IF WE DID NOT EAT WE COULD NOT LIVE. YET it is not what we eat, but what we digest, which sustains life. If there is a fainting, sink- ing sensation at the pit of the stomach, which is not relieved by food; if a painful fullness of the stomach is felt after eating, with a spitting up of the food, a bitter taste in the mouth, heart- burn, acidity, belching of gas, a sickish-sweet gathering of water in the mouth, a want of appetite—these are Nature's warnings that the digestive apparatus is out of order, and must be restored to a healthful condition before food is thrust into it to create further disorder. Yet if we do not eat at all, starvation and death must ensue. To many people the distress caused by eating is so great that they almost feel they would rather die than incur the agonies of indi- gestion. We naturally cling to life, even when our sufferings are great; and when the functions whereby the food is converted into blood are not properly performed, it is necessary that some means should be employed to restore harmony in the overworked and jaded organs. Unless the stomach can be made to receive with healthful effect such food as is pleasant to the palate, eat- ing becomes a pain rather than a gratification. The means of restoring the needed harmonious action of the digestive organs are simple: take fifteen drops of Seigel's Curative Syrup or Shak- | er Extract immediately after each meal, and | the desired result will speedily ensue. If the | bowels are very costive a couple of the “Shaker Family Pills” should be taken at bed-time. - - - - - - * * * * - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -------- - - * - - - Nice Griddle Cakes. TWO quarts of flour, a hand- ful of Indian meal, two § 8, teaspoonful of salt, one of soda, One quart Of milk. Cottage Pudding. One cupful of sugar, two of flour, one of milk, one egg, but- ter the size of an egg, one tea- Spoonful of Soda, two of cream of tartar. Beat the sugar and butter together: then add the egg, Well beaten, then the milk, and finally the flour, in which the Soda and cream of tartar have first been well mixed. Bake in a pudding dish for half an hour in a moderate oven. To be eaten with sauce. The lemon Sauce is good With it. Griddle and Indian Cakes.—For the griddle cakes use two coffee cupfuls of Sour milk or butter- milk, one teaspoonful of Saleratus dissolved in a little hot Water, and flour enough to pour. Grease the griddle With a piece of fat Salt pork, and fry the cakes a light brown. Indian cakes are made in much the Same Way, save that half flour and half Indian meal - is used, and also a teaspoonful of Salt. They require a Somewhat longer time to fry _ TESTIMONIALS. CURES OF CHIL.L.S AND FEVER. W. Middleberg, O. MR. A. J. WHITE–Dear Sir:-I have had the Chills for, eighteen months, and have tried, a number of skillful physicians, but could not obtain relief I thought I would try the Shaker Extract, and did so, I and it has cured me. I have now no symptoms of | the chills. Yours truly, J. B. WIRICE. 17 Cottºml y Street, New Haven, Comm. MR. A. J. WHITE, New York—Dear Sir:-Police- man Smith came to my house the other eyening saying that two bottles, cured him of Chills an | | : Fever, and he wanted a bottle for his son, who had the same complaint. Yours truly, - J. E. DAVIS. FUN. DECISION IN BANKRUPTCY.—As the entire assets of a recent bankrupt Were nine children, the creditors determined on acting magnanimously, and they let | him keep them. A MAN, boasting of the smartness of his children, said, the youngest was so smart, it would take its hand off a hot stove twice Without being told. The SHAKER EXTRACT OF ROOTS will remove | dyspepsia in all its varied forms. We have placed it in the market believing it will be . . . appreciated by a deserving public. For cramps and pain in the bowels, use the PAIN KING, by taking small doses internally every hour till cured. -- ~~~~ *-* * * * * - - - - * *- * * * * - - - - - a - - - - - -- - - - * - - - JANUARY-1884. AFTER USING IT FIVE YEARS. MR. John F. NIEwBDDE, of Tampico, Ind., writes April 20, 1882. “About five years º: I used and sold some of your medicine. The Curative Syrup cured my wife of Dyspepsia in its worst form. I Would like to have a box of about two dozen for our own and one of my neigh- bor's use,” DRUGGISTS RECOMMENDING IT. North Tarrytown, N. Y., March 17, 1882. Having tried the Shaker Extract of Roots in my own family, I feeia pleasure and confidence in recommending it. A. M. HOFFMAN, Druggist. From W. Horn, Horn's Pier, Wis., Jan. 24, 1882. “Those who have used your Shaker Extract pronounce it an excellent medicine. MR. E.W.TAYLOR, wholesale druggist, Jefferson, Texas, writes Jan. 18, 1882. “Your medicine is highly spoken of by those who have used it.” FUN ELWES, the noted miser, used to say, “If you keep one servant, your WOTk is done: if you keep two, it is half done; and if you keep three, you may do it yourself.” A CANADA editor says he has “a keen rapier to prick all fools and knaves.” His friends, if they are prudent, will take it from him. He Imight commit suicide. - mixed with one cupful of cold water. Add more salt and pep- per if needed; simmer thirty Dumplings served With the stew are an im- Cauliflower. Remove the green leaves and wash the cauliflower clean: Place in a deep saucepan, head downward, and cover with boiling water. Simmer gently one hour. Serve With a cream Moon's Phases. #4 d. h.m. d. h.m. § #3: 131###|{:}. § {{:}; gº Day of the Sun Rises | Sun Sets Moon Sets %. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1 |Tuesday..... 7 19 4 48 819 2 Wednesday..] 7 19 || 4 49 || 9 22 8 Thursday....| 7 19 4 50 10 26 4 |Friday....... 7 19 || 4 51 || 11 82 5 |Saturday....| 719 4 52 morn. 6 |Sunday ....| 7 19 4 53 0.39 7 |Monday ..... 719 || 4 54 || 1 47 8 Tuesday..... 7 19 4 55 2 54 9 Wednesday... 7 19 4 56 4 1 10 Thursday....| 719 || 4 57 5 4 11 |Friday....... 7 19 || 4 58 || 6 3 12|Saturday....| 7 18 4 59 rises. 18|Sunday....| 718 5 0 6 33 14 |Monday..... 7-18 5 1 7 88 15 Tuesday..... 7 18 5 2 8 40 #|}|...] }}} | { } | 13: Beef Stew. ursday.... Three pounds of beef-the 18 |Friday....... 7 16 || 5 5 || 11 87 | navel piece is the best—cut in- 19 |Saturday....] 7 16 5 6 || morn. to - inch-Square pieces. Peel | minutes longer. 20 Sunday.... 7 15 || 5 7 0.83 l and slice four or five onions. 21 |Monday ..... 7 15 5 8 | 3 | Put a layer of meat in the bot-| provement. 23 Tuesday.....| 7 14 || 5 10 3 & tom of the stew-pan, then a 23 Wednesday... 7 14 || 5 11 § 14 | layer of onions, and drédge well 24 Thursday....| 7 13 || 5 12 4.5 with salt, pepper and flour. 25 |Friday....... 7 13 || 5 13 454 | Continue this until all the meat 26 Saturday ....| 7 12 || 5 14 541 and onions have been used. | 27 Sunday ... 7 11 || 5 15 6.84 || Pour into the pan two quarts of 28 Monday - - - - - 7 10 5 16 SetS. boilin Water, and Sim?mer §§. 3, 19 || 3 || || || 3 | three hours; then add one quart 81 ednesday... 7 9 || 5 19 8 18 of {}. eeled and sliced, Thursday....| 7 8 || 5 20 924 | and three tablespoonfuls of flour or butter sauce. TESTIMONIALS. SHAKER FAMILY PILLS prevent fevers and all kinds of sickness, by removing all poisonous matter from the bowels. They operate briskly, yet mildly, without any pain. Use the SHAKER SOOTHING PLASTER for pain in the back, chest or side. FEBRUARY-1884. MR. W. M. ELDRBDGE, druggist, Janesville, Wis., Writes June 20, 1882. “The Shaker Extract has had a steady sale ever since the town was billed the first time. I sell more of it than any other medicine on my shelves and it gives almost universal satis- | faction.” MR. JOHN S. CRAFT, Purchase, N. Y., writes June 21, 1882. “I am again out of your medicine, you can judge Something from my sales in what esteem it is held here.” MESSRS. JACOB TELLENSTEIN & Co., of New Grand Chain, Ill., write: “Send us more Extract. Our customers state that they cannot do without it. They say it is the best medicine ever used for dyspepsia.” - FUN. HERE is a gem, alleged to have been found in the letter of a young lover:—“Dearest love: I have swallowed the Pºiº Stamp . º,on your letter, because I knew that your lips had Ouched it. - A YOUNG gentleman, who had just married an undersized beauty, says she would have been taller, but she is made of Such precious materials that nature could not afford it.” A LADY having spoken sharply to Dr. Parr, apologized by say- ing, “It is the privilege of women to talk nonsense.” “No, madame, it is not their privilege, but their infirmity. Ducks would walk if they could, but nature suffers them only to waddle.” . . . SURELY some people must know themselves—they never think about anything else. - - * - A --> - - - - - _ Moon's Phases. #3 d. h.m. d. h. m. $ 3 || First Quar., 4 049 M. Last Quar., 18 10 4 A. # Full Moon, 10 11 40 A. | New Moon, 26 - 1 27 A. Pº of the Sun Rises | Sun Sets. | Moon Sets eek. h. m. h. m. h. m. - | – | 1 |Friday....... 7 7 5 21 10 81 | 2 |Saturday .... 7, 6 5 22 11 88 | 8 |Sunday....| 7 5 5 23 morn. | 4 |Monday..... 7 5 5 24 || 0 44 | 5 |Tuesday..... 7 4 5 26 1 50 | 6 ||Wednesday...| 7 3 5 27 2 53 | 7 |Thursday....| 7 2 5 28 8 52 | 8 |Friday...... 7 1 5 29 4 45 | 9 |Saturday ... 6 59 5 30 5 32 i 10 |Sunday . . . . 6 58 5 81 6 15 | 11 |Monday..... 6 57 5 82 rises. | 12 Tuesday..... 6 56 5 34 7 24 ; 18 Wednesday...| 6 55 5 35 8 24 8 W. . . . . . . - ; śay . . . . . 6 51 5 38 11 16 Escaloped Mutton. Mock Oyster Soup. 17 Sunday ..., || 6 50 || 5 39 morn. Chop some cold mutton rather | Peel twelve good sized toma- | 3 |\ºy..... . . 49 || 3 || 911 | coarsé and season with salt and toes, and boil in a little water | 19 |Tuesday,.....] § 47 5 43 ! .4 pepper. For one pint of meat untii quite soft. Lettwo quarts ;| 20 Wednesday...| 6 46 || 5 43 | 3 || use half a cupful of gravy and of milk come to a boiſ, and 21 Thursday....] § 45 544 § § a heaping cupful of grated bread thicken with two large crackers | 3 |Friday... . . . . 6 43 ; 45 ; : ||..}}. Put, a layer, ºf the that have been rolled ºne. Add | 23 Saturday.... ; ; 5 ; : ; nºt intº an ºgalop lish, then 9me teaspoonful of soda to the | : Sunday ... . 5 ; : | Sºmºy, then, a thin layºr |tomatoes. When these are well | : Mºnjºy...... § ; 5 ; j ºf, ºriºs, Cºlºniº, in his broken up, season, with salt, | 3 |Tºday.... 6 87 || 5 50 º j, |May, intil the lish is full, pepper and three tableSpoonfuls | ? Yºy | 6 35 | 5 51 § # lºst layer must be *...thick one of butter. Add to thºmilk and 28 jº y . . . . 6 84 5 52 ; ; ºf crumbs. Cook fifteen min-|serve immediately;. The toma- | 29 |Friday. . . . . . . utes in a hot Oven. to may be strained if you prefer. TESTIMONIALS. ALMOST UNIVERSAL SATISFACTION. A VICTIM of one of THE HAIR RESTORERs. The SHAKER EXTRACT OF ROOTS, if taken instantly after eating, in small doses, never fails to cure the most obstinate case of liver complaint. Diarrhoea and bowel complaint will be cured by a few doses of PAIN KING. MARCH-1884. Weasel, N. C., Oct. 20, 1881. MR. A. J. WHITE-Dear Sir:-I beg to inform you that I have been testing the merits of your medicine. I Was confined to my room last spring with asthma. I was influenced by one of your agents to try a bottle of your Curative Syrup, which I found to my Surprise to be of great benefit. I even found the first dose beneficial, and in two or three days I was able to go about my Work as usual. I recommend your Shaker Extract Of ROOtS to all the afflicted in Iny neighborhood. - Yours truly, REV. PATTERSON GRAHAM. SOME PEOPLE THINK that mostly all recommenda- tions like the above are forgeries. Will those inter- ested please write to one or all of them and test their genuineness. Writers should enclose stamp for the reply. These parties will not make false Statements to please us. Comparative Strangers- as far as we have known them—they have proved themselves to be upright and honorable. FUN. MEN AND WOMEN.—Poor Frederick declared that he only wished his dear Amelia was locked in his | arms, and that the key Inight never be found. A Sauce.” Moon's Phases. 34 d. h.m. d. h.m. $H | First 9nar. , .4, 8 25 M. Last Quar., 19 6 5 A. ×3 Full Moon, 11 2 32 A. | New Moon, 27 0 8.9 M. & Day of the Sun Rises | Sun Sets. | Moon Sets. Week. h. m. h. m. h. m. 1 |Saturday ....| 6 32 5 53 1085 2 |Sunday....| 6 31 5 54 11 43 8 |Monday..... 6 29 5 55 morn. 4 Tuesday ..... 628 556 0 47 5 Wednesday...| 6 27 5 57 1 47 6 Thursday....| 6 25 5 58 2 41 7 |Friday....... 624 5-59 8 29 8 Saturday....|- 6 22 6 1 4 11 9 |Sunday.... 6.21 6 2 4 50 10 |Monday..... 6 19 6-8 5 24 11 Tuesday..... 6 17 6 4 rises. 12 Wednesday..] § 16 6 5 7 11 13 Thursday.... 6 14 6 6 8 9 # jºy....] }}} | | | | | | 15 urday .... 16 Sunday ....| 6 10 || 6 9 || 10 56 Baked Chicken. 17 |Monday..... § 3 | }}} | ..." | ºpiº. Tomato Sauce. 18 Tuesday..... 6 1 In Orn. Ing. reqge witn salt and Ilour 19 Wednesday...| 6 5 6, 11 0 36 on both sides, and place, in a oº ...tº. 20 Thursday.... 6 3 6 12 1 24 baking pan with the split side of flour, four cloves, a tiny bit 21 |Friday... ....| 6 2 6 13 2 9 down. Rub two tablespoonfuls of onion. Cook the tomato. 23|Sunday....] 5 58 6 15 8 31 again dredgethickly With flour. minutes. Heat the 5utter in a 24 |Monday ..... 5 57. 6-16 4 7 Put hot Water enough in the small pan and stir the flour into 25 Tuesday..... 5 55 6 17 4 44 }. to just cºver the bottom. it. Göök stirrin g all the time 26 Wednesday..] 5 54 6 18 5 21 ake in a quick oven for half an untiismooth and a light brown: 27 Thursday.... 552 6 19 SetS. hour. Take up the chicken and then stir into the tomato Cook 28 |Friday....... 5 51 6 20 8 20 add one cupful of hot Water to two or three minutes longer. 80 Sunday ....] 5 47 6 22 10 88 with one tablespoonful of flour. and strain. 2 81 'Monday..... 546 6 28 11 40 | Season with salt and pepper. TESTIMONIAL. less sentimental bachelor, turned forty, says “a Woman should be like a roasted lamb, tender and nicely dressed, and without sauce—unless it's mint I “love you still,” is what a man said to his wife, when she was giving him a curtain lecture. People that use the SHAKER FAMILY PILLs once will continue to use them, because they operate briskly, but gently, producing no griping or nausea. They are excellent as a family physic. Decidedly the very best Pills made. Use PAIN KING for toothache, headache, etc. - - - LIFE AMONG THE SHAKERS. Should any one have a curiosity to read about the SHAKERs, and learn what they do, how they live, and what they believe, send to us for a little pamphlet entitled “THE STORY OF THE SHAKERS.” - FUN. At a meeting of the inhabitants of the Gorbals, Bailie Mitchell in the chair, it was resolved and unanimously agreed, "that a new bridge be erected | NEVER DESPAIR, we BRING You words OF CHEER. | PEOPLE that think they have consumption often fall into fits of despair, because they see themselves wasting away, growing weaker and weaker every day. This is not always the re- | sult of consumption, but is more often the effect of indigestion. The food eaten is not digested, | consequently, it gives no strength to the en- | | feebled system. In fact, when food is not properly digested it does more harm than good. But do not feel cast down. There is hope in on the site of the present wooden one, at the foot of Portland Street, and that the bridge trustees be requested to repair and keep open the said WoodeII bridge till the new one be built.” A MERCHANT being asked to define the meaning of experimental and natural philosophy, said he con- sidered the first to be asking a man to discount a bill at a long date, and the second his refusing to do it. EveRY man talks of his neighbor's heart as though it was his own watch—a thing to be seen in all its works, and abused for irregular going. | such cases. Seigel's Syrup or Shaker Extract will correct the defective action of the digestive organs, and will restore strength to the enfee- bled respiratory organs, and heal the inflamed tissues, thus building up the broken down con- stitution and restoring vitality. - The retail prices of these medicines are as follows: Shaker Extract of Roots - - - - - - - - - - - - 60 cts. Shaker Family Pills. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 25 cts, Shaker Soothing Plaster - - - - - - - - - - - - 25 cts. Pain King- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 50 cts. | | || - - - C -*. - º | Newſ a very ye. | WILLIAM JLCLEMENTS LIPIRARY OF AMERICAN IIISTORY UNIVERSITY:/\ICHIGAN - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ------ The goods mentioned in this book are sold at wholesale by A. J. WHITE, 54 Warren Street, New York, and, at retail by nearly all do alers in Medicines | and by Druggists. If the reader cannot obtain a supply in his neighborhood, we | will appoint a Local Retail Agent, so that the public can be supplied. Terms | for Agencies can be obtained from A. J. WHITE, 54 Warren St., New York. PRESENTED BY SALISBURY BROS. 6 E. Grand St. New Haven. D.E.A.L.ER IN; DTRTC.G. A. N. C. MTETTCTNTTES. And a choice selection of Toilet Soaps Perfumery, Trusses, Shoulder Braces, - Sponges. All kinds of Druggists’ Sundries usually kept in a First Class Drug Store,