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About Willamette farmer. (Salem, Or.) 1869-1887 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1876)
1 J K f) Ifc i PTnoys op HdsBADivr. DIRECTORY. .OFFICERS ortho NATIONAL GRANGE. Matter John T. Jones, Barton. Phillips, Ark. OeerteerJ. J. Woodman, Paw Paw, Von Burcn, AliCu. Lecturer A. I). Srnodley. Cresco, Howard, la. Steward A. J. Vaughn, Memphis, Toon. nAte't Steward Mortimer Whitehead, Mlddlebnsb, Somerset, N. J. VnaplamS. II. Ellis. Sprlnjlioronh. Warren. O. rreattrerl". M. McDowell, Wayne, Steuben, N.Y. ikcretaryO. 11. Kellcy, Lonlsvlile, Ky. Oate-KeeiterO. Dinwiddle, Orchard Urovc, Ind. Ceret Mrs. John T. Jones, llartou, Phllllus. Ark. Flora Mrs. Samuel E. Adms. Monticello, Minn. Pomona Mrs IIarey-Goiilard, North Granby. Ct. Lady Assistant Steward Miss Caroline A. Mall, lioulsillle, Ky. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. D. Wjatt Alkon, (Chairman,) Cokesbury, 8. C, E. li. Shank'and, Dubuque- Iowa. Dudley T. Chase, CUrcmont. N. U. Alonro Odder, Hock Falls, Whiteside, 111. W. II. Chambers, Osweccheo, Kussell. Ala, Officers of Oregon State Grange. Matter Wm. Cyrns, Sclo. OcerteerA. It. Shipley, Oswcco. Lecturer Mrs. E. N. Hunt, Sublimity. Secretary "V. L. Davidson. Salem. Steward W. II. Thomas, Walla Walla, W. T. AttManl SUu-ardQ. W. Riddle, Canyonvlllc. CAaitalnV. II. Gray, Astoria. Treatvrer S. P. Leo, l'ortlaud, Gate-Keeper V. H. Graham, Fisher's Landing, . Clark county, W. T. Ceres Mrs. B. A. Miller, Jacksonville. Pumona Mrs. S. D. Durham, McMinnvlUo. V Flora Mrs. E. A. Kelly. East Portland. Lady Att't Sleicai d Mrs. Georgia Smith, Hood HIv er, Wasco coun y. Executive Committee Vim. Cyrus, Sclo; H. Clow, Dallas; E. L. Smith, Hood River. State Mutinies Agent S. P. Lee, Portland. Clackamas County Council. The Clackamas County Council meets on the fourth Friday of eaeh mouth at 11 o'clock a. m. Placo ol meeting, at J. G. Trulllngcr's mill, near the center of the county. Officers N. W. Randall, President; A. Nichols, VIco President; W. W. II Samson. Secretary, P.O., Needy; John Ring, Treasurer; Frank Vaughn, 1st Steward; N. II. Darnall, 2d Steward; Wm. Klggs, Gatekeeper. jlrethren In good standing are imlted. to meet with as. By order of the Council. W. W. n. Sajisoh, Scc'y. Notice to Patronu. The Post Ofllce address of S. P. Lee, Treasurer of tho State Grange of Oregon, Is changed from Oregon City to Portland. Express packages will also be lor warded to Portland. Hemlttmiccs. Money due the Fahmeb can bo paid to tho State Agent at Portland, Mr. S. P. Lee, If more convenient i thau sending tho same to this office. . The Teacher Must Steadily and Constant ly improve. There is no tomptation so great to tbo hard working teacher as to remain on the very spot whore ho has earned his certificate, That attests his ability to instruct. He has toiled (o obtain it, and now holds it as a key to a position. His efforts have not boon for the know lodge, the stiength, the enlarged views, but for the certificato that he lb quali fied for an instructor. There is many a man who looks back to a day when he was ad' tnitted as a member of our noble profession, and grounds his fitness wholly upon the sue cessful examination he then passed. It is not to press any more labor on these tried shouldors that we beg to say a few earnest words against contentment with past achievements. It is for encouragement and relief. It ia to show you that If burdens may not be inado lighter, yon may be made stronger and more able to bear them. The ignorant man cannot possess self- respect. He may cover his defects by one pretense or m.olher; ho may conceal them from his associates; but they become at lost powerful reasons that will impel him to seek other employment. Tbo daily tasks of the school room are of irksome nature. There is a constant demand lor patience '-that divinest quality," and ho who would walk among tho perplexities and reiterations of tho school room without growing narrow and soured, must dally Hud in the works of genius that halo which renders common things in its (light transparently beautiful. There is an artificial constraint in the school room. From that tho teacher must purge himself by conversing with minds that ever treat him with dignity and respect. He will -bo able, by communing with the best thoughts, to stand on his platform every day, a stronger and a wiser man. There should be a steady attempt to be something better than teachers, even true men and women. Llko all monotonous oc cupations, there is a tendency to deteriora tion in teaching. Tho wenrisomeness of school room work gradually undermines even a noble nature. Against this, early and constant opposition must bo made. The entire Ufa must not be spent on things al ready known ; there must be a pressing on to tho things that are before. It is the posses sion of ideas above and boyoud the work done that make a great soul. Men in the drudgery of camps, of counting rooms, of courts, and of tbo pulpit, too, havo cherish ed thoughts that kept thoir lives fresh and green. It is thin that imparts character to .juon and women. Daily attrition with tho rough things in life's pathway has a tenden cy to utterly destroy it. It is tho'atmosphere that is abovo us that cauecs it to oxpand into strength ?.nd beauty. Tho steady attempt of tho teacher to im prove himself bdcoruea thereforo apparent, fjr character Is too subtle- a force to remain hidden. It animates his pupils, they know not how. A teacher te3chts only what lives on his Itps; it is not what he has stored in memory as his stock in trade. By tuch a teacher tho driest lesson may be embellished. But among his own profession such a teacher becomes a power of good almost immeasurable. Such a soul performs his part so well (hat he lifts overy one of hU craft along with him; thoy all receive tho honor such a man gradually draws toward himself. A few men and women who will not l itifio.'! with thouifdves i they vera votnrday, what landmarks they bo come! Oibera look at them as sailors to dis tant beacons, to guide their way and to pat torn out their lives. JV. 1". School Journal. Popular education is tho hope of there public. I trust that the time Is not far dis tant when the people will arquiosce in sus taining the common schools, and when they who ask a division of the school fund will yield to tho genius of republicanism, and be satisfied to givo rollsious instruction and enjoy religious worship in tho family and in tho church, while tho Stato, with a sovereign impartiality, shall perform Us great duty of making education universal, through tho best system of common schools tho world over saw. Judge Taft, Atty. Gen. Might I give counsel to any young hearer, I would say to him, "Try to frequent the company of your betters. In books and life is the most wholesome society; learn to admire rightly; tho great ploasure of life is that. Note what tho great men admired they admired great things; narrow spirits admire basely, and worship meanly." The Feabody fund for Southern education afforded for that purpose 91,160, lost year, abovo expenses of management and will afford over 8100.000 this year. Over 1,000.000 children are attending schools supported in part by tho fund. Shorthorns for Milk. The breeders of fancy stock sometimes get some good hard blows dealt them by the good old practical farmers who fail to see why they should pay n largo price for a cow's grandfather's reputation, but wo have not seen a more sensible thrust at tho ' 'fancy" for a long time than the following by J. S. Latimer, In a late number of the Kationa1 Live Stock Journal: The very sensible inquiry of John Cook, With your remarks thereon, in the last num ber of the Journal, and bis and your sugges tions In regard to what tho farmers want in tho way of cattle, brings to my mind tho many letters and inquiries I havo received: i, e., "Havo you any Shorthorn cows that are good for milk?" "Havo you any cow for salo that a farmer could buy at a fair price, that will givo milk enough to raise her calf, and furnish somo for family use?" "Havo you any cows that will raise their own calves?" Dozens of such inquiries as the above aro mado, ospoclally at the fairs (as any one knows who has attended them and shown cattle). I was not a little amused at a veteran pair of well-to-do persons, that had raised a large family, and accumulated a goodly share of this world's goods, at a fair in Honry county, Ills., whero a grand display of several leading herds of this part of tho Stato were on exhibition. After look ing with much iuterost ovor the many very fine animals, and asking many questions as to their merits, thoy seated themselves near, In the shade, the old lady remarking (to her bettor half), witu a significant look and gest ure, "Them cattle are purty to look at, but they're no count for milk won't raise their own calves have to have some old scrubs to suckle thoir calves. They'd bo purty cows for a young pair, like we was forty years ago, to start with. How would wo have raised all the boys and girls that we have, without milkt You've got to have iqttk to raise calves and pigs, and children, too, old man !" Thai's so. There is no use of dodg ing tho question, and the true answer. What do wo want cattle for? Rich men and lords can afford to havo them for pedi grees and playthings, but the toiling masses of farmers will not and dare not, overlook tho useful, practical and essential qualities or the Shorthorn cow. And if the breeders of America would comprehend tho real wants and wishes of tho American fanner, and quit breeding for pedigree alone, and breed for the true merits of cattle beof and milk in stead, as is now the disposition, of breeding for pedigree, w Ithout any of tbo above quali fications, then, and not until then, shall we see the farmers eullsting en masse in tho en terprise. I will say, for the benefit of Mr. Cook and others, that I have always found tho Shorthorn cow equal, If not superior, to any other for milk and butter; and I believe that amongst tho old an J reliable families of cattle, where they have been bred for the useful qualities (as they should be), you may yet find cows that have no superiors at the pall. I havo at least threo families iu my herd, and all tho fault I Uud with them Is, they give too much milk , I have had no oth er than thoroughbred cow3 on the farm for three years past, and hove only milked wha1 I had to that is, what the calves would not lako and, at this time from eight cows (four of them holfers), raising nine calves, we are getlng four pallfuls per day; and 1 have never sat down to my tablo without having an abundance of nice buttor, and plenty ol milk and rich cream, which I think a good thing for children as well as calves and pigs, all three of which aro strictly esonllal ou a well-regulated farm. Tho Valno of Furo Breeds. By pure breods, wo mean tho distinct and perfectly developed strains of animals or fowls, whose characteristics havo btco.no such by continued breeding to a certain uni formity of standard for successive genera tions, until tho family thus bred has a fixed namo,Bnd it members a cloo fcimilarity to oach other, end to tbo fixed standard. That such puro breeds aro much better, and more valuable than coinmou stock wo can posi tively assert, whllo we aro equally j-osltive that many, oven iu this enlightened day, will dispute onr assertions. Wo wish to talk to farmers, for they aro the principal stock breeders of the world, their nocoseary sur roundings fitting them specially for this in teresting pursuit, without which agriculture is but an imperfect and incomplete Industry. It Is now so well known tint snlmnl manurfs jiossoss n valim ns Artlllz-i far beyond former ideas, that every iu'.olli- gent firmer knows better than to count Iho profits from his flocks and herds simply by the proceeds of their sals on foot or in the shambles. If it is profitable to bred stock under any circumstances whatever, t is mur-h more so when the breeder can produce just the type of animal wanted , and it Is hero wo find the great value of the pure b cods. Tho firmer who simply desires to go together a h6rd of fifty cows, without also hiving a special care to select or breed such as will be best adapt ed to his purpose, mlght(just as well buy a farm without ever inspecting it, provided ho gets the oighty acres deemed necessary, or whatever tbo quantity mly be. If a cow is a cow, and that Is all that Is to bo said, then an acre is an acre, whenever you find it, of dry uplands or swampy bottoms. But peo ple are becoming moro intelligent, thanks to the wide-spread literature and free school system of our day. Farmers, as a class, have advanced won derfully within the last decade, oven they are not eo slow to learn as formerly and do more Independent thinking on overy sub ject that Interests them. It is now fully known that the puro breeds offer an opportunity for choice in breeding, according to'Aho object in view, and that the different characteristics of tho thoroughbred varieties, are extremely convenient for the intelligent breeder. Farmer Fogy may still stick to his aucient stock of no particular kind of cattle, or of all combined. He can sometimes got a cow that is a good milker, a bullock meaty and of fluo texturo and flavor, for which tho butcher will give a good price, or oxen who will dovelop strong frames and a powerful draft. But if any one of thoso ouds is attain ed, it Is scarcely better than a chance for tune, for the only selection he makes with certainty, is in deciding how many calves of each sex ho will raise oach season. Our Intelligent farmer knows better than this. He does not raise Jersey cattle for beef, or Shorthorns for milk production, that is, If beef in tho .first case, and milk in the second, aro tho special objects to be attained. His horses, cows, oxen, sheep yes, his poultry and bees oven, are bred with an object in view, and tbo variety of each which be breeds, is that which may bo expected to further the object. Volumes might bo writ ten on this subject. Details cannot bo at tempted in ono brlof artiolo. But ''order Is heaven's first law," and the groat laws of reproduction are such that romarkablo or der will come from a careful attentiou to and regard for nature's laws of breeding. It will pay the farmer to study tho subject more. The possibility of perfecting a strain of ani mals, until the progeny of any parents may be reasonably oxpocted to approximate any possible ideal, adds new interest and power to one of the most interesting and profitable Industries of any country. Rural Times. Nelson's Coat. It has baen stated, in some ot our best biographies of Nolsou, that he went into the battle of Trafalgar with orders and decora tions on his coat; that tho officers pointed out to him that these would attact tho atten tlon of the enemy 'a.marksra an, and-reqnest- ed him to chango hlJoot;andthatha proud ly answered, "In honor I have won them, and in honor I will woar them," or in words to that effect. Some years past, my friends, Mr. Francis Bailey and admiral W. H. Smyth, camo in contract with Sir Thomas Hardy (tho Capt. Hardy of Nelson's flag ship)', and inquired of him as to the accuracy or this report. He repliod distinctly that Nelson did woar the decorated coat, and that he (Capt. Hardy) did represent to Nolson the danger; but that tho obajacter of Nelson's reply was materially different than roported. He only replied poevlshly, "This is not a time to talk of changing coats." I heard this from my friends very soon after their interview with Sir Thomas Hardy. I think it probable that Nelson was, at that time, In great anxiety. Tbo hostile fleet lay In a deep horseshoe form, open to tho windward. Tho smaller British fleot. in two nearly equal divisions, advanced In nearly parallel lines into the horseshoe, The wind fell to a very light breeze, and tho British advance was very slow. During this time tho British fleet was exposed to a heavy fire from the enemy, which they could not return. Had tho wind sunk to calm, tbo British fleet might have perished. There romalned, however, enough of breeze to carry them on, and, whon onco mixed In moleo their suc cess was no longer doubtful. O, li. Airy in the Athena-urn. English Skktkm'Ku, At the assizes in Exeter, In England, the other day, two cases were tried, one dlroetly following tho other, which to tho reflecting mind will preseut somo inexplicable tealuies. In the first case a man was charged with the manslaughter ot bis wifo at Devon port. He pleaded not guilty. The evidence of a policeman was that he struck her with his clenched fist, aud she died In half an hour. The Jndge, Baron Ainplilel'c, said them was no doubt that the prisoner had struck his wile a vio lent blow, Arnaults on woir.em should be severely troatedand In onlHr to maUo a se rious cxtuiplo of the pri-miier ho would bo sentenced to six months' imprMcnmont. In tho noxt onto a nrirlno btnrodealcr whs charged with stcalinic four lletces of wool, which wore found in his possession, and clearly Identified by tho prosecutor aud his witnesses. Tho u soused bald lie Dought tho wool. Iho prisoner had hitherto borno a good charrcler. Tho fonie Judo hontoncod him to rlvo yoar' soryitudo. Thu dltcre paucy In tbo two sentences rntlnr mirptlbod tho peoplo In the court. The 10. miles of tho Northern Pacific Railroad In Washlncton Territory, connect ing l'agot Sound nud tho Columbia river, yielded a revenuo Ust year of fUtifiilM, or nearly $300 a day for overy working day; of Die ear. Tho operating expenses wore 800,732 57, or about $200 iwr day; and tho profit &i5,f)0S.S7, or over 5100 per day. W. O. Hush, of Thunttnn couuty, W. T.. Iiu-s ris.uivbd an order 1'ui u iir-lnml or H'tnl "lit-flt. Tlia order camo from Buffalo, Now York. ? Albasy JE Hannon Amity O G Getchcll Bethel 1.11 Frazer Ituena Vista Wm Wells, J W Hobart Mutto Disappointment S Handsnker llrownvllle W II Kirk Duttevllle JW Itacheldcr Canyon City Dlllthinchart Canyonvllle O W Colvlg Cole's Valley WB Clarke CottaoUrute J 11 8hnrtrldge Coc Fbhoomakcr, 11 F Kendall Coriallls K Woodward Crcsnell Uoscoo Knox Clackamas W A Mills Camp Creek GUHammerslcy nallaa J D Lee. 1) Jt (inthriu Drain's Krcuson A Drain Damascus ; I'm be Daytou K C llndnuay Dalles S L llrook East Portland Jacob Johnson Empire City TU Wlncluider Elkton V II Haines Kugenc John McUlmig Fox Valley A D (lanlncr Fairfield ,1 J lllCMlns Forest Oroo S Hughes, W 1. Curtis Goshen J llnuilsakcr Gcnals Slieppiml & Gaines GK-cmllle .1 F Pli-rco Halsey TJ Dlack Hoodllivcr W 1' Watson llarrlsbmg Ulrnm Smith Illllsboro Al.nelllng llcpncr Slot row & Herren Independence W L lloileln Junction Smith. Brasflcld & Co., W I. Lemon Jacksonville M Peterson Jefferson W F West Kcllogsr's AB Mellon; Lcwlsille JM llewley La Grande S Ellsworth Lafayette Dr Fopplctoti. A 11 Henry Lebanon S II Clauchtnn McadonUlte It K Laudale McMiunvllle A Kcid Mitchell A II Itrcyman Monmouth W Watcrhouse Needy Wm Moreland New Era J Casto cwcllvllle PF Castlcman North Yamhill DC Stewart nalrlan S lv Itrtxmmm Oswego All Shipley Ott J li Hcnroeacr OreironClty -M Bacon Ochoco J II Douthlt ron'lleton W A Whitman IVoHs 81) Haley Portland H P Lee, Ajrent Stato Granco PrlncsUllc OMPiingio Pcrrydalc MeOrcw'sbtore lilrkrenl 1 A Patterson ttoscbnrs Thos Smith Sclo Irvine .t Mortis, Thos Mnnkcrs Kllvortnti Ah ah llrown Shedd's WM Powers, OK Wheeler Springfield A it novey SnrlrK'vitr JII LcwellCU Sublimity John Downing Sweet Home Hen Marks Sheridan JB Morris Pilot Rock k uimam TcnMllo KM Ourney Turner li A WitZel Vancoavcr SW llrown, B llDenuro Wheatland I'C Forrest Wlllametto Fork M Wllklns Walla Walla .IF Brewer Woodburn Matthlot Bros Waldo JO Elder Willow Forks ACPcttcys Yoncalla J K Ellison, US Apnlcgato Zona D J Cooper S Goff, General Agent for Eastern Oregon, FRUIT TREES ! Prices to Suit tho Hard Times ! Woodburn Nursery, CTOOJDSUKKT, 2KC.ORION CO., OB.EOOW. A Choice Selection of Fruit, Shade, . . Ornamental. ..AND.. Nut-Bearing T JEL EES, Vines, and Shrubbery, Plum and Prune Trees, Constantly on Iluml. ADDRESS, J. H. SETTLEMIER, Woodburn. Send for circulars , ecpSStf ATTENTION Sheep Growers!' A SURE CURE FOR Scab, Screw Worm. Foot Rot, AND ALL ParasitoB that infost Shoop. TT 13 SAFER, BETTER, AND VASTLY CHEAP. THAN ANY OTHER EFFECTUAL REMEDY FOR THE TREATMENT OF SHEEP. IT Improves the Health OF THE ANIMAL, AND THE QUALITY OP THE WOOL. X35T" One gallon Is enough for one hundred to two hundred Sheen, according to their age. utrength. and condition. It is put np In FIVE-GALLON CANS-1'rlco. flit per can. Send for circular, to T. A. DAVIS & Co., PORTLAND, OREGON, Wlioleaulo Agrntii for Hie Stale, Or to your nearist Retail Drug."lt. mjfl STATE AGENOY rnu the Patrons of Husbandry. Front Btrjct, near FlauJirs' Wharf., IOU'II..M, . . - - OUI2UON. Address all commuu'cit.oni to B, P. LE2. Agent, j45i2)tt .r.iJUMiHHaaHKMMH liSirlKffl MARE THESE FACTS! THE TESTIMONY OF THE WHOLE WORLD, HOLLO WAY'S PILLS. (7a3-I.et tbo suffering and diseased read tbo following. iTLet all wbo have been given up by Doo lor, nud spokon of as Incurable, road tbo fol lowing. 3'I.et all wbo can believe facts, and can ImvB faith in evidence, read tho following. Know all mom by tiiksk presents, That, ou this, tho Twomloth day of June, in the year of Our Lord Ono Thousand Eight Hun- droit aim uixiy-six, porsonawy came josepu II ay dock, to mo known as such, and being duly sworn, deposed as follows: ' That he ifl tho Mile conora! agent for the United States and dependencies thereof for preparations or medicines known as Dr. Holloway's I'll 18 and Ointment, and that the following certifi cates aro verbatim copies to the best of bis knowledge and belief. JAMES SMEITUE, Tl. s Notarv Public, 14 Wall Street, New York. June 1st. I860. Dn. Holloway: I tako my pen lo write you of my groat relief, and that the awful pain in my sldo has left me at last thanks to yonr Pills. Ob, Doctor, how thankful I am that I can get some sleep. I can never writo it enough, I thank you again anil again, and am euro that you aro really the I'rioud of all sufferers. I could not help wri ting to you, and hope you will not take It amiss. JAMES MYERS, 110 Avenue D. This is to certify that I was discharged from the army with Cbronio Dlarrhooi, and have been cured by Dr. Hollowav's Pills. WILSON HARVEY, New York, April 7, 1800. 21 Pitt Street. Tho following is an interestiug case of a man employed iu an Iron Foundry, who, in pouring melted Iron iuto a 11 ask that was damp and wet, ctusod an explosion. The melted iron was thrown around and on him In a perfect shower, and he was burned dreadfully. The following certificate was given to mo, by bim, about oight weeks after the accident: New York, Jan. Iu, 1800. My name Is Jacob Hardy; I am an Iron Founder. I was badly burnt by hot iron In November last; ray burns healed, but I had a running sore ou my leg that would not hoal. I tried Holloway's Oiutmeut aud it curod me in a few weeks. This is all true, and anybody can see ine at Jackson's Iron Works, 2d Avenue. J. HARDY, 111) Goorch St. Extracts from Various Letters. " I had no appetite; Holloway's Pills gavo mo a hearty one." " Your Pills are marvellous." " I send for another box, and keop them in the houso." "Dr. Holloway has curod my headache that was chronic" " I gave one of your Pills to my babe for cholera morbus, Tho dear little thing got well in a dav." " My nausea of a morning Is now cured." 11 Your box of Holloway's Ointment cured me of noises in the head. I rubbed some or your ointment behind the ears, and the noise has left." " Send me two boxes, I want one for a poor family." " I enclose a dollar, your prlco Is 25 cents, but tbo mediolne to me la worth a dollar." " Send mo five boxes of your Pills." " Let me have three boxes of yonr Fills by return mall, for Chills and Fevor," 1 have over 200 such Testimonials as these, but want of spaoe compels me to conclude. For Cutaneous Disorders, And all eruptions of tho skin, this Ointment is most invaluable. It does not neal exter nally alone, but penetrates with tbo most searching effects to tho very root of the evil. HOLLOWAY'S FILLS Invariably cure the following diseases: Disorders or the Kldnejs. In all diseases allbotlng these organs, whether they secreto too much or too 111110 water; or whether they be afllloted with stone or gravel, or with aches aud pains set tled in the loins over the regions of tho kid neys, those Fills should betaken according to the printed directions, and the Ointment should be well rubbed into the small of the back at bed time. This treatment will give almost immedlato mllef whfi' U other means have failled. For Stomachs out or Order. No medicine will so effectually Improve the tone of the stomach as these Pills; they remove ail acidity, occasioned either by In temperance or Improper diet. Thoy reach the ilvor and reduce it to a healthy action; they aro wondorfully oflloacloiiH In cases of spasm In foot thoy never fall in curing all disorders of the liver and stomach. HMowait J'llli are the font uimtly known In Hit) world for the following dUtatee: Aguo, AHthma, UIIIoiiH Com plaints, Illotohes on tho Skin, Dowel Com plaints, Colics, Constipation of tho liowels, Consumption, Inflammation. Debility, Dropsy, Dysentery, Erysipelas, Female Irregu larities, Fevers of all kinds, Fits, Uout, Jleauaoho, IndlgoDtlon, Htouo t Gravel, Secondary Symptoms, Tic-Dolouroux, Tumors, Ulcors, Vonoral All'ec tloiiN, Worms of all kinds, Weakliest from uny uaiiHO, tto. Jaundice, l-iivor uom- plaints, Lumbago, Piles, Rheumatism, Kntentloii of Urine, Sciofulu, or KllltTH'S Kvil, Soro Throats, I.III'OIITAX ' CAUTION. No mi aro uouuli.o unless tho xlunaturt J. JIavdovk, us ugont lor llio United NtulLi.,, Hiirroiimii ouch box of l'ills, ;tud Oiutinoat A iiiimliomo reward will Do glvuu to nr.; ono ritmluring such luforiimlluii as may loid to iho detection of uny party or parlies toii'i torfuItluK tho iiiocllcliioi or vmidlug til) name, knowing them to bo spurious. Sold at tho Manufactory of Professor IIoixqway it Co., Now Yciik. and by all rospocUblo lniKKits mid Dealers In Medi cine throughout tho clvllled world, Iu box es at 'S cents, 02 cunts, and gl tmcli. fSi" There is couslderdbiu Miving by tak ing the larger sizes. N. It. Directions for tho guidance of pa tlonts in every disorder aro ulllxed to each, box. w'Jly. Si ii I 1 ryl ' -