Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 33, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1879 — Page 8

TimklOTlA MORtfbfo, AUGUST 131 1879:

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.. . . . - . - (:'-. .;,:. 1 Household Knowledge. ...m Washing Qnirs. To wash quilts, comfortables, tickings, sackings, etc., soak in pore cold water 24 hoars or more, then rub through warm water with a little soap and rinse welL It is worth trying. . , Show Spokgx Cakb One quart of flour a little heated; one and a half cupful sugar; two teaspoonfuls cream tartar, mixed with flour (no soda), whites of 10 eggs. This makes a very white and beautiful cake. . - Ohios Soup. Cat ' into slices 12 onions; . boil them in three three quarts of milk and water, equally mixed; add a little veal; season with butter and pepper; add a few well-toasted slices of white bread . and a handful of finely chopped parsley. ,,, Y--Pixeapi'LK CtxBTAKD. Oae can of pineapple, out fine, two cups of sugar, two cups of milk, four eggs, one tablespoonful of butter; beat the eggs, then stir in the batter; sugar and milk; add the pineapple; then bake in a moderate oven. This will make two pies. .

Beets. Beets retain their sugary, delicate J flavor to perfection if they are baked instead of boiled. Turn them frequently while in the oven, using a knife, as a fork allows the juice to run out. When done, remove the skin, and serve with butter, salt and pepper, in slices; be sure they are "piping" hot. . . Hush tob Fbylho. Put a quart of water on the fire to boil; stir a pint of cold milk with one pint of corn meal and one . tea spoonful of salt. ' When the water boils pour in the mixture gradually, stirring all well together. Let it boil for half an hour, stirring often to prevent it fronv burning. It browns better when made in this way. Nobmahdy Pie. Cut up potatoes, carrots, celery and any vegetable except cabbage into a pie dish. Ada a nanarui ot wensoaked Cat least 23 hours) split peas, two hard boiled eggs, a -little chopped onion and parsley, ana a bit of butter, pepper and salt. Moisten with, anv ' stock, milk or cream. Cover with a very light crust and bake. Delicate Apple 8auce. Pare, halve and quarter a sufficient quantity of nice stewing apples, pat them into a baking dish and cover thickly with sugar; bits of 'lemon peel may be added, if liked. Pat a plate over the dish and set it into a pan having a little hot water in the bottom and place in a hot oven. Bake until the pieces are clear and tender. Bbbad Fbied Cake. Take any bits of bread you may have left after ' meals; soak them in milk or milk and water no til perfectly soft; mash fine, add two eggs, pinch of soda, salt to taste, and enough flour to make them fry nicely; drop the spoonfuls into hot butter or lard. These are inexpensive and good, and a better way to use dry bread than in puddings. -Vegetable Stock. Clean and cut up some carrots, celery, turnips, onions, lettuce, parsnips and herbs; pat them in a Btewpan, with butter and a little water, and stew until the water is evaporated and the batter beeins to hiss; then fill up with fresh water, add nutmeg, pepper, salt and a few green peas; simmer for three hours, strain and use for maigre soups of any kind. Butter Cakes. To half a pound of butter and the same quantity of brown sugar, three eggs, the rind of two lemons,' quarter of an ounce of pounded cinnamon and half the quantity of powdered ginger; work into it as much floor as will make it a paste; cut it into shapes or leave it whole, and strew over the top some pounded almonds and candied orange peel. Bake in a slow oven. . . - Ssow Potatoes I dined with' a friend last week where potatoes were brought on the table in an unusual form to me. They made a delicate, appetizing dish, and I will append my friend's simple directions for preparing. After, the potatoes are boiled and steamed off, rub them through a colander, where they will drop below in coiling strings, heaping themselves in a light and airy mass. Serve at once. Sajlt fob the Throat. One who has tried with benefit recommends salt as a gargle for the throat for those inclined to a hacking cougn or soreness or the throat or mouth. A teaspoonfal of salt is dissolved' in half a tumblerful of cold water, and with this the throat is gargled just before each meal. An unusual freedom from coughs or sore throat u claimed to be the result of this simple remedy. ; j. .. Farm Notes. A breeder of poultry Bays: "Every spring X procure a quantity ot cedar boughs and scatter them plentifully in and around the hen house. This is all that IS necessary,, as the odor of cedar keeps away the lice." Tor windgalls use a padded bandage, with astringent lotions: applied two hours a day at first, adding two hours every day after, until it is kept on continually, is the usual remedy. Best from work is helpful to a care. Growers of frait should bear in mind that now is the time to look after their frait. If the trees are crowded the imperfect fruit should be pulled or knocked off to insure a crop of sound, well matured fruit in August or September. .. - The National Live Stock Journal says: "A slop made of corn and oats, ground in abont equal parts, with a little oil meal added, makes the beat food for the sow while suckling, to increase the flow of milk; and this, with clover pasture and plenty cf soaked corn during the summer, will promote a rapid and healthy growth of pigs." To make a good harness polish take of mutton suet two ounces; beeswax, six ounces; powdered sugar, six ounces; lampblack, one ounce; green or yellow soap, two ounces, and water, one-half pint. Dissolve the soap in the water, add the other solid ingredients, mix well and add turpentine. Lay on with a sponge and polish off with a brush. ' Potatoes suffer more from weeds than any other croo. One weed will take up and evaporate a good deal of moisture from the soil and rob the crop of what it greatly needs. This loss of moisture is not often thought of in considering ' the effects of weeds, but it is very important. When too " late to be killed by cultivation, the weeds should be hand-pulled. Diluted carbolic acid is found to be a complete exterminator of ' the potato beetle and other insects infesting crops, and it should be used in preference to Paris green. But it is destructive to plant life unless it is suffi ciently diluted with water one pint of car bolic acid to luu parts ot water. - This important fact should be borne in mind, and, doing so, there is perhaps no better insect destroyer known. ''.". f An unfeeling correspondent recommends the cruel method of splitting the tongue of a cow tbat sucks herself. Bather than adopt the barbarous treatment we wonld dry the cow and fatten and sell her for beef. We have published better remedies than this, and herewith give another. ' Hake a bridle with a medium sized wire for a bit, and fasten it upon the head of your self-sucking cow, and she will quit toe naoib Professor Farrington, in a summary of the excarimenU begun In 1870 by the Maine Agricultural College to ascertain which has the greatest value as a food for awine, cooked or uncooked meal, says: "We have, by an Tnerimen which has oeen continued irom three to foar months of each of the nine years linos its beginning; obtained evidence that all the money and laoor expenaea in cookiner meal for swine is more than thrown way." 1 The Agriculturist says: "Whan hogs ars .nt .. fatten and fad on dry corn, it is the aractica to give them bat little water; but ' they require soma. It wonld not be possible for a boa- 'to Jive for weeks' without water

or other drink when feeding oh dry corn, although when fed on new "soft' corn, a very small quantity of water will be sufficient, and possibly, if the corn is very soft and unripe, water might not be indispensable." ;L. .: . : ' I -.: .. Land which without an application of manure will give a yield of 15 bushels of wheat per acre, will, by the addition of 80 pounds of nitrogen in a favorable season, give from 35 to 40 bushels of wheat, with a proportional increase pf straw. : t , Carrots seem to have some peculiar effects on the health of horses, rendering the skin especially glossy and healthy looking. For milch cows carrots are valuable for the golden tinge and richness which they impart to the batter. They are also more nourishing for cows than turnips are.. In ieeding carrots pare must be token that the pieces are not cat in such a shape as to cboke the animal. Cut large carrots lengthwise, not across. ' ' .' A writer in the Ohio Farmer says: "It is the belief of observing ones that the seeds or spores of mildew exists during the winter and spring on the bark and buds of vines, ready to vegetate anew when suitable weatber occurs in summer.' ; As a possible

check to this I am about to wash most of my vines, before the bads open, with carbolic soapsuds. I think . this will also tend to lessen the mischievous - work of the steel beetle on the buds." j ;,' A correspondent, speaking of crops, says that farmers should have a diversity of crops, so that if there is a failure in one there may be a hit in another. . The intelligent farmer lays his plans as much as the leader of military. He looks ahead to see what will make him money; and he do a' t pat all bis eggs under one hen, for she might leave the nest and all would be addled. Farmers should plan wisely and carry out the plans to the best of their ability. Something on Feeding Oats. 1 Oats are justly advocated as the grain above all others adapted to horses, and it is true that for young horses and those used on the road there is probably nothing equal to oats; but they ought to be crashed or braised and not ground. In fact, I think all grains are better fed in this way, and it seems strange that there are no good American oat crashers. They seem to me simple affairs as I have . seen them in English stables. A wheel, of perhaps 13 inches in diameter, made strong and having a perfectly flat periphery (of steel, I presume), like a steel tire, having a face about three inches wide, is turned so as to bear evenly against a smaller one of, say eight inches in diameter, having a similar face. These two wheels are geared to tarn together, and the oats are slowly fed in by a hopper. Good oats, . when crashed, ' are -nearly round, and as big as a silver three-cent piece, and the husks are quite Inconspica ous; poor ones show more husk than grain, and retain more nearly the form of the uncrushed oat. Barley may be crushed equally well with oats, although harder, and corn, when too green to grind, might well be thus treated. If grain be swallowed whole it is not easily digested, but if crushed or broken even, it is likely to be. "Coarse meal," that is, the corn meal usually sold for feeding in many Eastern towns, simply because it can be cheaply produced, is better than whole corn, because it is broken and some portion of it tolerably fine, but all the flinty part is in large solid pieces, which do not adhere to cut hay, do not soak quickly, and are alow of digestion. When new corn is crushed, although it is not comminuted into meal, its integrity is destroyed and is easily digested, because it readily absorbs the water or the juices of the stomach. Cure for Hog Cholera. . Anderson Democrat. . . In the issue of the Democrat of July 11, 1879, we published a cure for hog cholera. The remedy was so very simple and the cost but a trifle, that we urged farmers to try it and report their success. The following is the recipe: "Break a box of concentrated lye into a barrel of clean water, and when the lye is dissolved give it to the hogs as a drink." William Johns, ot Union township, lost 35 hogs from the cholera before reading the above remedy. He came to Anderson immediately, ' procured the lye end returning home," applied the remedy as directed and with entire . success; every one of the sick hogs got well and none have sickened since. He says it seems to give them immediate relief. He had in the lot one that he thought so near dead that it was useless to try to save him, but second thought said try anyhow. Sj he rolled him on his back and poured same ' of the liquid down his throat The next day he came up and "took his medicine" with the other hogs at the trough and the second day . was perfectly well. If Hr. Johns had not been a reader of the . Democrat, he thinks he would have lost his entire lot of hogs and also thinks his $1.50 was well invested. Suppose more of our farmers. who are suffering heavy ' losses with the cholera try the above remedy and send qs the result . " ; - Smith Chambers, of Richland township, heard of the Democrat's hog cholera cure, and came in on Honday and purchased some concentrated lye, and says he proposes to give it a thorough test and report the result. He has upward of a hundred hogs, and they were dying at the rate of 10 per day. We have he?rd of several more who have tried it with most satisfactory results. What we have is only hearsay, and will report results when we have facts. We still urge farmers to give it a thorough trial. If one box of the lye does no good, try it again and again. Later Hr. Chambers was in the ; city yesterday. and informed os that not a single hog had died since drinking of the lye, and is elated over the discovery. . . . The Way to Know People. ' The only way by which people can be thoroughly known is by living with them in the same house or traveling with them in the same carriage. The smooth surface which we can maintain with so much success for a short time gets broken up by the thousand petty details of daily life, and tempers are tired and characters revealed to an extent which years of an ordinary drawinging-room intercourse would not have allowed. 1 hen the real man or woman comes out and the human nature which has been supressed as serts itself, sometimes with startling sincerity almost always in unexpected places; for no one is what his casual acquaintances and superficial friends believe him to be, and the depths reveal secrets never so much outlined in the shallows. Jlenden Kecorder. In all clashes of society Glenn's Sulphur Soap is the ruling partner. Ladies use it to remove detects ot tne complexion, ana per sons troubled with eruptions, or other irri tations of tbe skin, are promptly cured ay iu Bold by all druggists. .., Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye. black or brown, 60 cents. , , . No time to attend to your cold, do yon say? Why. Hale'a Honey of Horehound and Tar is for sale at every drug store, and you have only to take it to be cured. Pike's Toothache Drops cure in one minute. t Grateful Women : 1. ' None receive so much benefit, and none are so profoundly grateful and snow sucn an interest in recommending Hop Bitter as women. It is the only remedy peculiarly adapted to the many ills the sex is almost universally subject to. Chills ana fever. Indigestion or deranged ' liver, constant or periodical sick headaches, weakness in tne back or kidneys, pain in the shoulders and different parts .ot tne bod v. a feeling 01 las situde and despondency, - are ' all readily removed by these Bitter.

FINANCIAL AKD C03HEECIAL

1 '.- nBTABTCIAl. . OFFICBOFTHB lirDIAHAFOIiTS CSKNTOTXa, I Monday Evxmmg. Aug. 11, 1879. t The local money market has moved along quietly during the entire week, dosing with this evening. The demand for money has not been overly large, and the tone of the market has been exceedingly healthy, first-class paper being easily negotiated at the usual rates of Interest. Mew York FlBaaetal Market. ' Nkw -yobx, Aug. 11. Money market active at 8a7 per cent.; olaslng at pereent. Prime Mercantile Paper 34 per cent. .,. 1 : Governments rall and weak. Railroad Bonds Strong; C, C. and I. C, firsts, 76: no sales of seconds. .1 : State Securities Inactive. The stock market was strong and buoyant almost tbe entire day. Lake Shore was again tile feature, Belling up from 87 to 82 and closing at the highest point. tiranger shares also shared largely in improvements on reports of inoreaHed earnings. Northwestern common advancing 1 per cent, and St. Paul common 1 per cent. On the day's transactions St. Louis and San Francisco was very prominent in dealings, and noticeably strong, especially the first preferred, wbloh rasa to 3o against '&) Saturday. In "final dealings a strong tone prevaled in advance for the day, ranging from 5,'- per cent. Transactions to-day aggregated 220)00 shares, of whlcb 2,100 were Erie, (f.SUO Lake Shore, 26,000 Northwestern common. 1,400 Northwestern preferred, 15,000 St. Paul common, 1,000 SC. Pan', preferred, 1.600 Ohio and Mississippi, 4,300 Wabash, 2,100 Union Pacific, 9.4U0 Lackawanna, 4,300 New Jersey Cen'ral, 8.700 Michigan Central, 2,100 Pacific Mail, 80,000 Western Union, 1.200 Frankfort and Kokomo, 4,100 St. Louis, Kansas city and Northern common, 4,600 St. Louis, Kansas City and Northern preferred, 4,000 St. Louis and San Francisco oommoD, 6,400 St. Louts and San Francisco preferred, 4300 St. Louis and San Francisco first prelerred 1.200 Northern Pacific common, 1,000 Northern Pacific preferred, and 1,100 Burlington, Cedar Saplds and Northern. sovkbitmebt tutuuKrrrjEB. Sterling, 80 days 482 I U. S. 10yBterUng, sight 483J4 New U. S. 4a 101Z n B ! till 1AIS? rvinM 1(11 New 5 per oentalo-il Nora The purchasing price for Government Bonos In Indianapolis varies from the New lork quotations ll per cent. . . ecu mail stocks. . . ff. D. TelegraphSt. Paul preferred. 9 Wabash 3X;i Fort Wayne 111 Terra Haute v Terr Haute pfd 16 Chlo. and Alton,JI14 C. and A. pfd 116 Ohio and Miss 1H DeL, Lack, and W. 6H A. and P. Tel 8K?4 Chic, Bur. and 411H HannlblandSt. J. lv H. and St. J. pfd i Canada Southern.. 6!i4 Louisville A Nash. ffl Kansas Pacific 614 Kansas and Texas, ln'4 St. L.and San Fr 115 8. L. and S. F. pfd lt Do. first pfd 85 St, L. K. and N'rn- 1 Do preferred 67j Cent. Pac. bonds 10 Union Pao. bonds-100K U. P. land grants U.P.slnklug fundLI6 4ulcksllver Quicksilver pfcL... Pacific Mall.T....-., Mariposa.. 2 Varlposa pfd . Adam Express .... Wells Fargo Kx 1IH 08 American ivz 47 United States Ex 44 N. T. Central 118 Brie 27 Erie preferred 62 Harlem- .155 Michigan Central- 85W Panama.. 57 Union Pacific stks. 70 Lake Shore 92 UlinlsCentraL A Oleve. and Pitta W Northwestern lya North west 'n pfd 0..O., O. and w. J.uentrai., Rock. Island.. 140 , i 8U Paul Offered. STATB BONUS. fennessee slxes... Fenn. sixes, new "Irclnta sixes. Missouri sixes 104 Si 28 2D Northern Pacific N. P. preferred 162 4bJi Va. sixes, new-., COHHEKCIAL. Trade has been exceedingly good this week in all branches of commerce, and with the great improvement in collections, the large crops, etc., our merchants are hopeful of the future, and the fall stocks in this city will be larger and better assorted than for several seasons past. Quotations, as a general role, are undergoing no changes. The following table shows the amonntof grain in store in this city at the present time :

. . 2 Elevator. a . &. 3 a . - -. S S a Elevator A...... 81,200 23,500 57,300 8,700 Elevator B 26,000 3,100 3,300 Central elevator 8,100 800 6u0 700 City elevator 20,000 ... 3,400 Elevator D 6,000 400 300 Elevator E 8,500 2,000 750 TotaL. 146800 28,000 58,9a0 16,400 Corresponding day last year... 129000 29,000 10,000 2,200

The table given below shows the receipts and shipments for the 24 hoars ending at U o'clock to-day; . Vt -:!.-.:-- Beoeipta Shlprdts Flour, bbla.. fVheat, bDm orn, bu. Oats, bn Rye, baMMM. 8,800 88,000 65,000 1 28,000 9,000 . w.ooo 47,650 33,000 a , 8,600 .1 : 500 U'8 4,400! dooj barley, on. Bran, tons... Oornmeftl, bbla.. 4tarob.bbla.. 1001 s 100 . 8 Ha vt tons Lard, to& ,150 UUU, IW1 i Provisions, tons... 60 ' ' 190 "THE MARKETS DAHVI BEVIEW. " . : ' Flour, Grata aswl Hay rinnr-Wft anota: New nroeeM. 86 2SA6 75: fancy, 86 25A6 75; family, 84 2591 76; tow grades, Wheat 8teady. The market is qmet, bor dering ontodallnesa. inspections mis mornInffH Cni. WD1CD lHClUUt DUUUaj S Shippers are doing comparatively little, owing to the scarcity ot rniiMucivnui u xmimu.. m KAitimore elevators ro iu iai w iuu, and vessels scarce, ana very uiuo wuci. wuiu a then now if cars were plenty. Prices at the seaboard are generally easier snu m was weak The foreign aenuaa to-uay ws ugjib. Shipments to Europe Saturday, 80,000 bushels. we quoie; mo. Asrea New No. 2 red : 03 New No. 8 red . 90 Now Mo. 2 amber ... 92 New rejected r.......... . 00 New no.z refl. un uau aukubu New No. 2 red, August ... ......... New No. 2 red, first half Sept 14 . 93 New No. 2 red, September - Corn Is scarce ana wanted, prices firm and market strong. Kar corn neia at mo. we quote: . Bid. Asked. White No.2.. White No. 8.. 88 Yellow..High mixed. Mixed 36H August...... September ....- Oats r lrm ana active, We quote: New No I white, spot; to; Aueast ifiVS024: Sepr teraber23$24c; new mixed, spot, 22495t ffla4c August. v A Bran 88 bid per ton. Hay Is In moderate shipping demand. Choice timothy, wire bales, pressed, 110910 00 per ton; loose bound, tiiou. , . , The rravfaloa Market Tbe market is quiet and unchanged. We quote as follows: ' - . ' Dry salt Heats uiear nnnBDui. cuuuidera 83 25 asked. , . Lard Prime steam, 15 W-io 60. Sweet Pickled Meats Hams, 7$ 980, a to average, brand and delivery. . 'i-.'. MlaecMasMaoa Prexlaee. .1 Apples Receipts liberal; common to choice bring 209300 par bu box; II 2i32 per DDL. Cra os, per oa. Beans Choice clean navy scarce at f 1 60 per bu; clean medium, 81 40jl 60 per bn. . BlackberrUa Choice Northern, 83 per 16quartease. 1 Butter Receipts moderate. Choice quality meets a good demand. We quote: Choice selections of Indiana table butter, 13915c; good hmui, UI . I ( country. 89'0c. (Stbbage cnoice, i per odi. .- , HhMM R a. Blackman's Solan cheese. 7340, Cherries Hca roe ; choice fresh 8697 per stand. Currants Hcaroe. Oholoe, loll drawers. In good order, 8697 per stand. Cider Ware's clarified selling at 17 25 per barrel of 40 gallons. Dried Apples Are steady at par lb. Kegs 'alr local demand.at 7c per dos. can Feathers Prime live geese baying at 87c;

'mixed gees and dock, 200250; old feathers,

Foreurn Frnlta Wn 2 00; loose Muvcatel raisins, 3 007lbTLondon layer, C2 2592 86; California ralalna,60 lb boxes, 7(7Xc; currants, new, 66o.per lb; Oranges, Messina, I77 60; Palermo, $77 50; Lemons, Palermo, t66 50; Messina, 16 60;large lemons, 85 506. . , . , 7 : . Fresh Vegetables Home-grown tomatoes, Choice ffitoc per bu:nj-w ODlons, 75cIl per vu., v. v ia per 001; cacam oers, selling at zae per do; ; beets, 25c per dos bunches ; egg plant. II per do. .... . 99 r , atand8eb6trie1Jbt receipt at SS.SO06 per Grapes Large receipts. Ivea stealing dull "iS5 Pr lbM Hartford, A7e per lb. Conootd, otSi'C per lb. r .ne78eU n? at 14Q15C per lb In glass eaps; 16(S)16C for 1 to 2 IK Mia dtII (nnt rlau In Of 2S to 50 lbs. . - . . . - . nueuebemea Choice 13 b03 per bn Melons WntnrniMlnni la orrwwi mnnlv at SI 1 12 per 100. Nutmegs, choice fresh, ttdoas per DDI. .- . ', , " Peaches Small reaetnlji of Tjistitrn r.ltnira and siuall freestones; fair to choice, in good condition, .1(9125 perH bn box ; 81 7592 per oux. . .... Pears Choice eating, 11 609? 00 per bn: Bell pear, 11 5091 75 per bo box; Bartlett, Vto2 50 perbusheh - . '. Plums Market well supplied. Damsons, SO 6 50 per stand. , . Potatoes Choice, SI 50i75per bbl. Sweet White, 84(4 50 per barrel; red, II 251 60 per bushel. ,. 1 . ; Poultry We quote:- Live turkeys, e per lb; live ducks, S2 25 per dos; live fowls, hens, 83 00 8 25 per dos: roosters, 2 00 per do : new, full feathered, 84 20 par dos. Spring chickens, f 1 75 2 per d z. Wool The market Inactive and prioeshlgher. We quote: Unwashed. 27o, and tub-washed wasneidat3oAo. ,- .. .. tki . The Clroeery Market. Coffee The market is active and firm. We quote: Ordinary, 10l!c; fair, uW12c; good, rXMal3Xc: prime, 1415Hc: choice, 16164c: old Government Java, 2128o. uiuuiat- utaio ior 14 to 16 os. per set. Cheese We auote: Ohio faetorv. 5tt7a.aa to quality; fancy Western cream, OjJTkc. snoiasses and Syrups New Orleans molasses, sso&oe, and syrup 359560 per gal. for common to oholoe. Rice Carolina and Louisiana, 798X0. Sugars The demand Is frood ml nimtAhnn. We Quote: Hards. V- af:vc: standard A.UiaHVj--off A, Hii&WtPi white extra C, Kasc; fine yellow, TKH4c; good yellow, 7.a7ci fair yellow, 7W(7 So; common grades, 6"49Je. Spices Pepper, 14il5c; aisploe, iA20o; cloves, 60c; ginger, 20aje: cinnamon In mats, Ka45c; nutmegs, 85cl 06; mace, 11 25i&1 40. Soap German and olive soaps, 6A5c; TIM Irom Market. " Business is good at quotations. ; , Car-Wheel Iron Cold-blast heola iUritx cold-blast cottage and bath 83935; eold-blast Shelby 81932. Bar Iron To lam buvera 2b: to aananmara 18-10920. Norway Iron Bars and shapes 7X98c: nailrod 890c. Steels English east 20922c: American l.va 18c; extra sizes and qualities additional; round machinery 10912c; spring loe; Swede blister 9910c; American blister tyaluc; rolled lay and toe calk 8910c : hammered lav and toe calk 8910c; tire, according to size and brand 6c ; plow steel slabs 6960. Shapes extra In pro portion to waste in cutting. Cut Nails Nos 10 to 60, 8215 per keg; smaller sizes additional as per card; fencing same as common; tobacco, barrel, casing and finishing extra. txone anoes Leading brand at S4. and mule shoes 81 higher. Horee-Shoe Nails Leading brands 20o for 8s; smaller alaes additional. Discount for quantity. Carriage and Tire Bolts Refined 80970 per cent.; Norway 6090 per cent. Nuts and washAn 7 ttT minnlBAtnmit' llatfl iron narrow leetn 40. Screw and Strap Hlnaes 195c according to size. Clevises Melkle' wrought plow alevlsea 8990. Lead PlgS95Xc;bar8c . The Drag Market. Dealers report a good trade at quotations. Alcohol. 82 0892 ft: alum, per lo. 8M(tHc: cal omel, per lb, 70o: camphor, per lb, 935e; cochineal, per lb, 75o; chloroform, per lb. 80980c; oopperas, ddis, 10, ixc; copperas, kegs, lb, 20; Bum opium, iD.sozaaau; indigo, per lo,wcWi; oarice.Calabrian, lb, 88o; magnesia. caro.-os lb (Jennings'), 40942c; morphine, 84 2.S94 50; maoaer. io,ixc. uiis i'nntor,oest,gai,si 4091 w; X7 O .1 ! WU11 f . c.Ml . 1 A. yr. uvj v. uv.,1 wj , mwwv, KAffi iv, wuic, Su, 817&93 60; sperm, gal, (1 85; straits, gal, 4uo; bank. c: bergamouib : (Sanderson's). S3 60: eassla, lb, 81 25; lemon, lb (Sanderson's), S3. Quinlne.P.A. W.,os,83 6593 60: cinobonidia,pr os, 81 8591 40; rosin, bbl, 8397 60. Soap CasUie, Fr-tH912c American bicarbonate soda, per lb, 894c: soda, bicarb. English, casks, lb, 6s; soda, aal. lb.. 29493; soda-ash. lb,494)c; saiu, r,nsom. 10, kmo : snurr per case. 4 dos bottles. Scotch, 88 60 perdoz, per lb 65c; snuff, Garrett's, pack, gross, 813 OO913 50; snuff, Garrett's, percaaeof 4 dos, 81560916; brimstone, by the bbl, 34940 per lb; flower sulphur, lb, 496e; saltpeter, commercial, 10, oniuo ; saiLpetre,pure, lb, 15918c; turpentine, bbls, gal, 83c: turpentine, bans, gal, 88c; Venetian red. Eng., bbls, lb, So; Venetian red. Eng., kegs, lb, 8S94o: Iodine, 86 0096 25; iodide potassa, 4 75cloves, 4&950C rta ubarb, powdered, 819 1 26. . The Dry tOoods Market. There is a good business belns: done in this branch of trade. . . Brown Bheetinaa and Bhlrtlnss Great Western 4-4, 8c; Columbia 4-4, 8c; Hoosler 4-4,6Hc;Trion,7Ko; Bartow, 7Kc; Georgia A, 7 Ho; Columbus, 7o; Nashville, 8c; Laurel run, 1 yyo ; fremium, oc : aastern sianaaras, 8c; PeppereU 10-4, 24c; Peppereil E, 8c; Peppereu it, v4c; r-eppereu u, vc ; reppereu is , BJic ; Indiana A, 7c ; H, TUP ; D. 80. Bleached Shlrtiugs Amoskeag 4-4, 10Co; Fruit of Loom, VAC ; Bay Mills. lPHc ; Hope. 8c ; Lonsdale, c; Lonsdale cambric, 18c; Msson ville, o: Wamsutta,12c: New York Mills, 12c; Pride ot West. 12 Sc PeppereU 10-4, 27c : Peppereil 9-4, 14c ; Peppereil 8-4, nljjo ; Peppereil 4.18c..Paper Cambrics Man vilie,7c; 8. S. A Sons, 7c; Mason ville, 7o ; Warren, "0; high colors lo higher; seconds, lo lower. Prints Fall styles Cooheoo, 7c; Hamilton, 6c; Pacific, 7c; Arnolds, 7c; Cones toga, 6!ic; Gloucester, 6c; Simpson, 6Jc; plain black, PAc; Washington, 5)4c; Spragues, 64c; Southbrldge, 6io; Freeman's, 6c; Harmony, 6S0; ahirtlng prints, &H96c. Bags FrankUnvUie, 823H; Stark A, 825; Otter Creek, 820. Osnaburgs Six ounces, 7980; eight ounces, 99e- ! Corset Jeans Androscoggin, 8c: Canoe River, 84c: Indian Orchard, TAa; Bockport, 7o; Laconia, 80: Suffolk, 7Kc; Naumkeag sateen, Ho: Peoaot. Shio. Ticks Conestoga, ex 17c: do. 7-8e. 15c; Gold MedaL 4-4, lHe; OCA, 7-8 13Jc; CT. 4-4. 14c; Lewis ten, 4-4, 17e ; do. 32 inch, 15o ; do, 80-lnch, 13c: Hamilton. . 134o. . . . . . . Stripes Amoskeag, ibc; Hamilton, 104c; Sheridan , 8c ; Mechanics, 6c ; Yeomans, 10c ; Washington awning, 17c. - Spool Cotton J. s P. Coats. 55h Clark's John Jr , 55c; Clark's O. N. T., 55c; Green t Daniel, 80c; Holyoke.27Xc; Stafford's, 27K0. Jeans Louisville, 25937o;' Eastern, 109 40C. : . . : Mlaeellaaieoaa. Candies The demand is eood. ' We quote Stick candy, 10911o; inacb. drops, 11 rarjn: Kisses, uaioc: nut oanuv. umexz rum urops. hard. 20o. and Arabian Bum drops. 119 15c; rooK cauuy, 1 1 c ; lozenges, io9uc; com mon pan work, iao; nne oo,vm; plain cream work, 20c; decorated cream work, 23u; oordial goods,a9Xio uau uucl uwua duiuwh is goou at oar figures. We aaote: Tomatr'es. 3 lbs. 859W;8 lbs, 81 109I 20; Peaches, t lbs, II HU 91 tu; 1D4, n 109 id; ids pie peacnes, i it. Blackberries. 95c: Strawberries. 81 2591 80: Raspberries, 81 8691 40; Cherries, red, 81 609 1 86; String Beans, 81 00: Green Peas, 81 269 om.Va,mmtth rvv-n SI VTUf iA . i - tl a . nniaa 81 6092; Salmon, 1 lb.ll 7591 80; 2 lbs. S3 26; Lobtera. 1 lb. 81 7691 80: 2 lbs. 88 25: Tnmbler jellies, 80c; Cove Oysters. 6O9SO0: 2 lbs, II 009 i; rsaruiues, ay bne cane. ixraiMiO. Cotton Rope 20921c: candle wick. 239266. Wooden ware Dealer report a good demand at our flaurea. , Common buckets- .81 409 1 65 Pine Tlmrn - - 7 609 60 Cedar churns .12 OUOtlS 00 Ash churn s- , 8 OtKll 00 . 1 50 1 75 Oommon brooms. Medium brooms. , 2 009 2 60 , S 609 8 00 . 6 769 00 Extra brooma Matches, telegraph.... Tubs, No. l...n . 2Vd 8 60 10 OS, io. i. , 6 259 6 60 Tubs. No. 8 . 4 269 4 60 Waahboarda. ainc- , 1 409 a ou Washboards, wooden.. 1 S9 1 W Leather A fair amount of business Is belnc doi-.a in this market. We quote r OaKsoleai lo; hemlock Bole at 20928c; harirsss 309S8C: bridle 845954. per doson : skirt ing StM8o, per lb.; French ealf 81 1691 , per lb. ; city calf 81 91 10, per lb. ; city . kip 66B0et per 10.; upper aip fwT per aoaen. Nuts Almonds, shoft-shelled, per lb., 19 20c: filberts, r2V4l4o; Brasil nuU.BSjc; Naples wainnis. incisit?: anaiwn waiania, 10; pea nuts, red, 6o raw ; so roasted; white, , raw wo roasiea. Oils Market rule steady, we quote Unseed, raw and Bank oil . 88 boiled... 6570 Lard oil, extra66fl0 Lard oil. No. l. , 60 Lard oil, No.2 47 Mlnars' oil.... J6158 LnbrioatlnE oil-.14u16 HtralU oil 40 Benzine... IS Caster oil Jl 46 rinl Mil T ..Ml. legal wtilJMm Powder and Shot We quote rifle powder at

84 50, and blasting at 83 SO92 78 par kee. Patent shot at 81 SaaU 70. . .

Tinners' Supplies We have no change to ..wo au uwMiiujiB, no 1UUI; Best charcoal tin, I C, 10x14 and ' 14x10 1 f' wpe dox; 1 o, 12713, 87 25 per box; 1 X. 10x14 and 14x20, 9 00 per box; I X, 12x12 89 00 per box; I C 14x20 roofing tin, best brand. 86 60 per box: 1 0 20x28, roofing, 818 60: 27 B. iron, 13 40; 27 charcoal 84 50. 75; Northrop sheet Iron, roofing, 84 EOjper sqaare; copper bottoms. ladlaaapalla Live Stack Market. .. UarroH Stock Yards, Aug. 1L, Hogs Receipts, 1,920 head: shipments. 76a head. Tbe market opened very dull and Biow,witn lair receipts 01 very good quality, but generally too heavy for this market, both shippers and packers buying. Sales generally to packers at 83 6093 67$. Af the close all were oiu. we quote: 7 Assorted light 83 6VS1 70 Assorted imf , , 3 bixmi 66 Light thrnww,nts , ,,..., 8 Idm.i 25 Boughs 2 50&2 85 I catue Keoeipts, 800 bead; shipments, 650 acnu. unoougm. . we quote: Good to prime heifers and steers. f 8 25 8 75 Good to pilmo cows and heifers,,... 8 00 8 69 Medium 2 8U9 2 5 Common... ... 1 Sora 2 20 Bulls 1 6txa 1 25 Cows and , , 15 OU&rt 00 . 8 &09 4 50 Pheep Receipts 667 head; shipments 667 head. Unchanged. We quote: Car-load lota. 120 to 140 lbs average 84 00A4 25 Fair to good, 1U0 to 115 lbs average 8 25(93 76 SCAKKKT1 BT TELNBtPR. 8w Tark Market. Nxw Vork, Aug. 11. Cotton Quiet at 11X9 HVic; futures firm. t lour Bull. Receipts 35,600 bbls; superfine EH OSA !lft. AAmn.nH . . . 1 I. ' . . A good to choice do 84 SVatt 25 ; white wheat ex tra 4 759. 25; extra Ohio 4 4096; St. Louis 4 oiC(o ou; patent lo 709773. Wheat Spring dull; winter quiet; receipts 548,000 bu; rejected 74975c; No 4 do 83c; No. 8 do 89a0c; No 2 do II; uni; railed winter red 97911 (S; No2 do 11 OK9I 0SH; mixed winter II 0791 074; No 1 amber 81 Oval u; No 1 dol 0HH91 00; No 2 white 1 ft; No 1 do sales 01 ii, uw ou ati 1191 ll'-i;o 2 red, Augustsales of 21.000 bn at (&; September, sales of 80,000 bu at 81 084; October, sales of 24.000 UU !, si Vlff. . . Rye Steady: Western 63c. Barley Dull and nominal. Malt Quiet and nnchaneed. Corn Dull: reoelnU 2tvi.llO bn? nnmdl 44H4c : yellow western 4794c ; No 2 Aoenst tc oia, v! asaea; repierauer vsyfi bid, 4oJ,o Oats Fairly active; receipts 4tj.uo bn; mixed Hay Fairly active. Hops F'.rm; yearlings 4910c. i Suear Doll and unchanged. Molasses- Dull. Rice Firm. Petroleum Dull; united 6838ic; erode otic; renned 6hC Tallow Steady and unchanged. Rosin Dull and unchanged. Turpentine Quiet and steady at 26e. Ekks Strong; western V9180. Provisions Pork firmer: new mess S8 90m 8 02, lat ter choice. Beef about steady. Cutmeals qoiei, oni nrm ana uacnangea. Lara nrmer; steam So 7os5 77. Butter Dull; western 7917c Cheese Quiet; western 8H955i:. Whisky Quiet and steady at si 07. Cktcaaa Market. Chicago. Aug. 1L Flour Dull and nomi nal; double extras t43 75; extras S3 2694; buji 11 uw - mo-i iainil u 91199. Wheat Dull, weak and lower: No 2 western DOc; No 2 Chlcso spring 84oesh; 849S4o September; Wwsfic October; No 8 do 7ec. Corn In f"ir demand, but at lower rates; S3Hccash: SSs4c September; 84934Hc October; rejected 3lc Oats Dull and lower; 23ccash; 23J-c Seplemwr; K't ocioour; rejectfeu aic. Rye Steady at 49e. Barley Dud and nomlnaL Provisions Pork fairly active and a shads higher; t22!eh and September; S8 27j October. Lrd fairly active and a shade higher: 5 cash : id 7 bid September: 85 40 bid Oc tober; So S2V the year. Bulkmeals steady at to si, (4 43 ana ao. Whlskv Steady and nnclisneed at 81 04. Freights Corn to Buffalo 4X94e; wheat do Receipts Flour 700 bbls: wheat 91.000 bn; corn 37a.ui0 bu; oau wxio bu; rye lliuO bu; barley 1.4U) bu. .hlpinents Flour 8.000 bbls: wheat 165.000 bu; corn 673,00 bu; oau 63.000 bn; rye 2,000 ou ; oariey wuu ou. At tbe Close Wheat Firmer, bnt not quotaoiy nigner. Corn Quiet and weak; declined o. Oats Firmer, but not quotably higher. Provisions Firm and unchanged. Balstaaora Market. Halttmorx. Aug. II' floor Lower for hieh grades and quiet; western superfine 82 7593 60; western extra moo; ao lasauy rH9a a. Wheal Western anlet: No 2 western winter red, spot and August, 81 07; September i (r.;ucioD8r ii Corn Quint: western mixed, spot and Aug ust, 45s1945c; September 47947' J:; October amtr'A.o: svt-amer 44X4 ic. Oats bull and lower: western white 8l93oc: do mixeo. i9a4c; rnnsyivania iHaooo. itve unlet at o stows. Hay tsteady: prime to choice Pennsylvania 113914. Provisions Steady. Mess pork 810 2a. Bulkmeats: loose shoulders Sc; clear rib sides 4 Ho ; packed 495c. Bacon : shoulders 4ic; dear no sides o. nama 111912. Larus. Butter Active and nrm; prime to cnoice western packed 12914c. jlcks Active ana nrm i ii-.mix. Petr ilenm Dull ; erode be; refined 6Jic Co See Quiet: Rio cargoes 119140. Whisk v Stead v at SI 03V. Freiehta To LJvernool per steamer active and wanted; cotton 5-82d; flour 2s; grain 89 Receinta-Flonr 5.04O bbls: wheat 221.100 bu: orn 27,600 ba; oats 7,800 bn ; rye 300 bu. ' . . . . - . . ,.10 . .,,-- . J Urtrt 1. Ollipiueni vvxieai, inwuu, jn u viwwu. Hales w neat oiu,wju du: cornu.uu do. Ckleaso Lire Btewk Market. Chicago. Aug. 11. Tne Drovers' journal nnnru: Hokk Receipts hjjIU bead; anipmenta aj head; reeeipta last week 6,000 head. Market a shade firmer; mixed packing 1393 25; choice ne.vv Ti sxa.i ou: iient 31 wif5 si. Cattle Receipts 8,500 head; shipments 850 head : receipts last week 21,ouO head. Market a shade stronger all round; good Phlladelpblas and exports 84 8094 85: shipping active and firmer at $494 60: greasers 83 6094; butchers' staadv:eows S2 2592 80: western higher: Col Of ados and Texans S2 8093 30; Texan grassers BOWS ICUTB Kb W& 1(1 OlTI B u 0,'W AO. Sheep Quiet and weak; Islington and Hert ford cattle and sheep markets reported the same to-day, but the general leeling Is a shade better. IiSSM Market. ST. LOOTS. Aug. 11. Flour Easier, but dull for high grades; low grades scare and wanted; XX fall 83 8094 10; XXX fall 84 4094 60; family Si na4 7U- choice to fanev 84 7595 60. Wheat Opened a snaae on, nui cioseu oeiier and firm: No 2 red fall .t9S4ao. cash; W-y W4J4C August; 149:4C r-eptemoer; m-isatyf tlcinherr iH'r. vear : No 8 red fall 8794c. . t,rn inscuva ana easv: no mivu oiyo cash: 82i32iio September; 32J932tc Octoluir - 73v. imvi '.rr Tear. , Oats Inactive and rower io z zzozic cash; 2hfic October; '40 November; aiJic nye mgner; iy,c. Whlik ntonilv at Si 05. ' Provisions Pork duU at 88 7598 80. Lard dull and nominal at S588. Bulk meats Dora inally unchanged; oar low clear rlbs80; clear 84 60.' Bacon dull; clear ribs 1 B094 v; iteoeipia r iour u,uuu ooia, wui)j corn 48,000 bu; oats JHJDW du; rye 1M; oariey nnna SblomentaFlour 14,000 bbls; wheat 41)00 bu; corn 20JNO ba; oats 1L00Q bu; rye none; barley none. . Toled Marke. TOUDO, Aug.' H.wneat Steady: No 8 whiuTWihuh SI SO: Mo 1 white Michigan Si 25: No 2 do trc; amoer Michigan, siot, uuni amiar use- No. 2 amber Illinois 900 Corn Quiet; No 2 spot 3ugC; October 38c; rejected 874C ; damagd ic. - Oau Dull;Noaspot84J4o; August 24 Vic; No. 2 white 25mj . The following were tbe closing pricesWheat Quiet; No 2 red winter, September, se-vi,: srestern amoer, mym, Corn Dull; high mixed iS.'c. OaU No 2 spot J. ,,.. uMi.i' hf i is nnft bn : corn X4.0O0 bu. ShipmenU Wheat 168,000 ba; corn 82100 bn. .., , Haw Tark Uva suae asrais. - Nw York, Aug.ll'-Beave ReceipU to-day were 4.800 head; for the week 12.480 head- tor T." " ' 7: .V 11 iw head. The market is active and firm with a farther advance of strong Vie. per pound on all f7oes f0?? extra shipping steers, for which the demand waallibt; extreme range or natives 910K per .potnd;for aalaiVmedtum to good butobarlng steers, 89 9- ,nnrt used 800 head; none shipped HJiaVia'vWeamer took 1,880 haafof Uva aattla. and UH6 quarter beef, making

Jr.ths week 20,040 head of live cattle and 4,456 quarters beef. Sheep Reoeipui ,708 bead, making 16J60 bead for the week, against 29.40 bead test

wcea; maraet eteny at 7f4 50 period lb for sheep, and S5nto for lambs; highest figures for cboloe Canada lambs; shipment Saturday 420 bead ( live sheep, and 800 carcasses of mutton ; for the week '20 head of uva aneep. and 1JHH esroaases muVoo. Swine RsOMtnta R Wfi hMil m.bin. mbu head for the week, against 17.7mi l-Kt. wk market fair for live bogs at S3 0594 10 per 100 Ids for poor to rood. Uh sales 19 xaAm from S3 6594 10. ., East Liberty IJy Stsek HarkatU . . 1 KAST LISrjtTT. Am. 1L Alt 10 RttwlMi si dcs and Including Friday last 8.278 bead or through stock and 1,131 bead for this market; vi'vm w me wtTKeoDiDi in is aay 3 .830 bead of through and I.2S1 head of lmluninu 17111, ofthroogb and tSUt bad of local week before. uoaupiiir oruiuwnsiawa is good and of a belter quality tban renorall v so early In. the week. About 83 loads were sold lor tfaa NewYork market, and two or threa loads tn country buyers; the balance of tbe 60 loads which have cnanged hands to-day to retail dealers ; prices were a shade better tban at any time last week ; best So 10 asked. 84 80 got: ' fair to good 84 8O94 75: common S3 64. Hogs Receipts 8.400 bead: total for the week 12.650 bead, aealnst is an he kfore; Yorkers 83 eo3 70; Philadelphia 13 70 Sheep Receipts to-day 5.000 bead; total for the week 1600 head, against 9,700 head tor t he -' ueioro. maraet active and a shade higher than last week. - Banal U-re Stack Market. Buffalo. Anv. 11 tviiia Pacini. n n L"fl head ; receipts consigned through, 175 cars Market active and higher for good to choice steers; medium and common grades unchanged. Sales of good to choice steers at 84 6595; extra 85 2095 35; common to medium 83 7594 10; light butchers' 83 5093 85. Sheep and Lambs Receipts to-day 10.000-' head; consigned throUKh. Li ears. Market: for sheep firm and In active demand ; offerings light. Sales of fair to good western sheep at " S3 6094 : Choice 84 2lMa4 l ext ra n ivittan fcl TS. f i. Lambs higher; sales of wes'ern at 859 50; Canadian at 157595 80. All oflerings ' uisposea 01. Hogs Receipt to-day 4.190 head : conxigned through, 37 cars. Market moderately active, prices unchanged: offerings nmerallv nfuml quality. Sales or Yorkers, good Michigan to cnoice corn-fed at 83 Cm3 90: medium and - heavy 83 &03 70; Philadelphia 8494 10; . mixed ends 3 24: coarse, rough lots 82 6093; best grades deposed of. . . St- Laala Ure Stark Market. St. Lnrrm. Anr. II Catii fa fir im,.4 for shipping grades, bat the supply to very light: good to cbe'ce heaw stMrs wonld hnnn 84 7093 90; grtws Texans better at 82 2593 25: imwHi. iwwh irwipis acsa: snipmenu 600 bead. . Hogs Dull and weak: Yorkers and Raltl. moresS3 5593 7U; packing 82 l8;3 30; butchers' to faney si 4093 ,0; receipts L9u0 bead; ahlp menu S00 head. Sheep Hteady and unchanged : fair tocholc muttons S3 5093 50; reoelpU 7u bead: shinmen U OcO bead. . Plttakartr Fctralvaaa Market. PTTTSBrfao. Anr. 1L Petmleam on1t MnAs 73e, at Parker's, for shipment; refined tfo a u,iflucijuui UCU1CI7. r o New and Elegant Styles IN T--I-1 . V T 1. nECaiaces, mum- iw raets GO TO BMEiM. Will & MAIHKf, Ho. 12 East WasMmrton St. A SPLENDID OPPORTUNIT TO WI1 A FORTTJ1TE! Ninth Qrtid Diitribation, Clan I, At Sew Orleans, TUESDAY, September 9th, jb iuu atonuuy vrawing. . Louisiana State Lottery Co. ' Thla lnstltntlon was raemany inoorporatec by tha Laglslatore of the sutefor adueatlonal and oharltable purposes In 1H88 for tbe lerna fTwcatr-lTS Year, to whlcb contract the Inviolable faith of the State la pledged, with a capital of 8LO0O40O, to which it has since added a reserve fund of 8360,000. Its kaitd sur out inrMBKB DisnuBtmoif will take plao monthly on tha seoond Tuesday. It aavaat bcauss oa PoerPOMkB. Look at tha following distribution: CAPITAL PHIZH S30 OOO: vnfiOO Tlckeu at 83 each. Half Ticket. 81. " LIST Or PRIZES. 1 Capital Prlse saoCT 10,000 1 b.UUU bjXO 5.UU0 10,010 10,000 10,000 10,000 1000 t.708 MOO 800 3 Prizes of 82,5m 6 so MA) aoo 600 600 ... . 10060. ao. 16 APPROXIMATION PRIZES. " S Appro xllnatlon Prise of 8300 8 do do aoo do do lil ... L85T Prises amounting to -8110,400 Responsible corresponding agents wanted at all prominent points, to whom a liberal eoinpensauon wui oa paia. Application for rates to slabs should only b Blade to the Home Offloe in New Orleans. Write, clearly statin: full address, for farther Information or send orders to M. A. DATJPHXJI, P. O. Box 893. New Orleans. La. or same at No. 319 Broadway, New York. Ur J. T. Woodward, lfi North Illinois street Indianapolis. . , , All onr Orand Extraordinary Drawing ara ander the supervision and management of eenerals O. T. Beanreaard and Jnbal A. Early Survival of the Fittest 1 FmriT MEDicntR mAT nis bealkc MILUOSS SCBTKQ SS TKARSt MmEAI MEMS IMMM. A BALM FOtt EVERT WOCSD OF . MAS AXD BEASTt . THE0LIEST&BESTL1HIMENT - EVXB KADE IX AkEIUCJU ' . ' SALES LAE6EB THAN E7EE. . . j The Mexican llusinnjr Liniment lias Wui-n known for more than thtr!y-nvr Lv3 vears r tli b-st of all l.inlim-nis, for ij .linn n 11 1 im-u ,i & , v. .... . u. . rx i;iro-r bin i-vcr. It. cnr-s when all Pirthers fall. and penetrates skin, tendon re'r!nl ruuwlo, to the very bwn. old 4, - $100.00 KiEWAKD. After 15 years' experience In the treatment of Hemorrhoids or Pile without a single failure in effecting a permanent cure, I am ready . 1 .1 . .. rr 1 . , 111 fat 810U ior any case 01 rues mat ican not cure, uw matter of bow long standing. ' My treatment is mild and st tuple. I use no knife aor ligatures. Address me for circular. Bonth Illinois street. I , . A O Tlf -. ' Consultation and examination free, umos Da '

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