Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 17, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1880 — Page 6

THE INDIANA STATE SEUTINEL, WEDNESDAY, APHIL 28, 10-

THE HOSTE. It U not donbUd that men bT b tbat Uc wher Mck ob ku MtAblished bl be Ith and th nm of hl poaeaiona and fortan; Aeno. be will not depart, if nothing calls bim war. '"nca If bu departad ha teems to U a wadwerj and if k Mni h. omm to wander-Defiultio. tiom CWU lw. Tb stay at home, Bf heart, ad reat Tb bird ia wfn( ia IM neat; O'er all that Hütt Iheir mlu-f and lly A hawk la howiag in the sky; To itaj at U bost." Longfellow. OCR TOCNO FOLKS. Ihe Shag. CEUA THAITIR. What 1 Unit great bird. sUter, tell m Perched bUrhon the top of the crag ? Tis tbe eornorant,denr lirtle brother; The fishermen call it theehag." "But what does It there, alster, tell me. Bitting lonely against the bWc liyr It baa settled to rtst, little brotber; It hears the wild gale wailing high." Bat I am afraid of It, sister, Far oyer tbe sea and the land It gazee, ao b ack and no silent ! "Little brother, hold fast to my hand. 'Oh. what was that, iister? The thunder? Did the shag bring the storm and tne cloud? The wind and the rain and the lightning? Little brother, the thunder roars loud. Jlun fast, for the rain sweeps the ocean ; Look! over the lighthouse it streams; And tbe Ugbtning leaps red. and above us ine gulls nil tno air with their acreama." O'er the beach, o'er the rocks, running swiftly. The little white cottage they train ; And safely they watch from the window The dance and the rush ot the rain. But the shag kept his place on tho headland,

He shook his loose plumes, and tuey saw Mm . . . 1 . .... . ... 4 tlin

luae spienaiu aau nwug m mo , Clinging fast to the gown of lit sister. The little boy landed as be Hew: He Is gone with tue wind and lightning! And I am not frightened are you?" The Child Musician He had played for his lordship's levee. lie had piayetl for her ladyship's whim. Till the poor little head waa heavy. And the poor little brain would swim. And the face grew peaked and eerie. And tbe large eyes strap ge and bright. And thev said too late "He Is weary ! He shall rest for, at least, to-nlg ht 1" But at dawn, when the birds were waking. As thev watched in the silent room. With a band ot a strained cord breaking, A something snapped in the gloom. Twas a string of his violincello. And they heard him tir in his bed. "Make room for a tired little fellow, Kind Ood !" waa tbe last that be said. Austin Dobson.

The Seal World. Elizabeth Eicbardson in Golden Days.

A pretty seal story was told me some time

ago by an eminent scientist. As he was walking one day on the Pacific Coast, be picked up one of tbe many little seals that were playin? with their mothers in the shal

low water or on the beach, thinking that if

lie could carry the little animal the long hundreds of miles that were between him and his home, it would make a nice pet for his little hoy. But he had gone only a few ftep3 away, when the mother discovered her loss, and started after him, crying and moaning eo piteously, as shejdragged herself along, that his kind heart was touched, and he put her baby down. "When he saw the great delight in the mother's face, he was very glad he had not left her desolate. For seals love their little ones most tenderly, and train them with great care and patience. If he had kept the little thing, he would probably have been to try, for it; for seals, though they make one of the nicest of pets, are very expensive ones, unless, indeed, they are kept on the sea-shore, where they can bo taught to take care of themselves in the water, and perhaps do some fishing for their owner besides. Seals are 00 shy that it would generally be impossible lor any one to get near enougU. to pick one of them up; for at the sign from their sentinel (when they come on shore one of their number is always set on guard), each mother would take her baby on her arm and dive into the water. But the story I have just told happened at one of the few places where the same seals come year after year, and feel so perfectly at home that they will hardly moye from under an invader's foot. . There are two families of seals. The one laving outward cars i3 the fur seal, and the one with no outwardly developed ears is the hair seal. These two animals have many sub-divi-sions, as the sea-bear, sea-lion, walrus, seaelephant and others; but the common seal, while it is one of the smallest, seems to be the most intelligent of them all. It is generally the commen seal that has been tamed, and I want not to give a scientific account of the different kinds but just to tell of a few interesting facts and stories, chiefly, but not entirely, about this one kino. That eeab can be" tamed, is not by any means a new discovery; for Mr. Houghton, in his book on "Natural History Among the Ancients," says that "Pliny expressly etates that these animals are susceptible of training, and, with voice and gesture, can be taught to salute the public, answering with a pecu liar noise." The ancients seem to have had some superstition about them; for it is said that Julius Casar always carried a sealskin with him as protection against lightning and thunder, Doth of which he greatly feared. It is very strange, that, though seals are water animals, they can not live under the water long at a time. Fish breathe by passing water through their Hills, but seals breathe with lungs, just as liuman beings do; and so, unless they come to the surface every few minutes, they would drown. The Philadelphia Zoological Society lost a seal in this way a few years ago; "This was a young female, who had the habit of generally staying in the water at night. During a very cold night, early in the winter, she lost the air-hole she had kept open to breathe through, and not having strength to break the ice which formed over her, she was found in the morning drowned." Though tb-y have only half developed hands -for Socrates speaks of their flippers as hands with five fingers, each finger with three joints and a claw seals make good use of them, and can easily climb out of an ice-hole which is three or four feet deep. There i I believe, but one species of seal known in tropical countries, and the greatest number of them are found far North. In Greenland, for instance, they are to numerous that they supply the Greenlander with nearly every necessary of life; for, says "Wood, he makes clothes of the fur, boats of the skin, buoys of the stomach, and f pear-hcads of the teeth. Besides this, the oil which is made of their fat is very valuable, and the bears, at least, make many a good meal on their flesh, though I do not know whether the Greenlanders eat it or not. Seals are said to have tho largest brain, in comparison with their size, of any animai, and they certainly show wonderful nitelligence. Sometimes one seal having solved trie mystery of fish-nets so thoroughly, that he never entargles himself in one, haunts a Ushing-gTound" for year?, and makes his

living by etaCKng fish out of the nets. He soon leconHis so expert that, though the fishermen get to know him and his ways per. fectly well, they can never catch him. This has so often happened on the Irish coast that the fishermen have become superstitious about such a seal, and let him help himself unmolested. They think," says "Wood, "that the animal is supernaUrally protected from harm of any kind; that bullets will not strike him, however well the gun be aimed; that steel will not enter his body, however keen the blade, or however strong the arm that urges it; and that the long array of nets are powerless to retain so puissant a being in their manifold meshes. So, after awhile, a seal if he be only bold and wary may lead a luxurious life at the fishermen's cost, for none will venture to attack an animal that bears a charmed Ke. "Wood says, too, that they are good nat ural barometers, and that "whenever an old seal is seen rolling and tumbling along a bank, a storm of wind and rain is sure to ensue before many hours have passed." In places where they have not been much interfered with, they become very fearless, and will often follow a boat clesely, just to satisfy their overweening curiosity by a good stare. They are very fond of music, and will follow any sweet sound for a long way. It is said that when the bell of a church on the coast of one of the Orkneys ring all the seals within hearing swim to the shore and listen with apparent wonder, but utterly without fear. There are a great many seal stories, showing how intelligent and loving they are. Strangely enough, when tame, they are very fond of a nice, warm corner near the lire, but are perfectly willing to share it with the dogs. They will eat off the same plate with a dog, too, and play with him most amicably. Indeed, they are very much like dogs, in most of their characteristics. They have just one cat-like trait. If they are not very hungry, they will play with a fish as a cat does with a mouse. I remember reading, as a child, a pitiful story mixed up with Irish superstition of a seal belonging to an Irish farmer, who

lived near tbe sea shore.

The animal played with the children,

came when it was called, and was in every way very bright, and a great pet. But a

"wise woman" told the farmer that the

harmless animal being, 3 the said, "unclean,"

caused the eickncss with which his cows

were afflicted.

The ignorant, superstitious man believed her, and sent the seal out in a boat, threw it

overboard, and left it.

The next day it came back. Again they

took it out further this time and two or

three days afterward it was found one morn

ing in the out-door oven.

Then tho cruel man put out the loving

animals eyes, and Bent it on an outward bound vessel to be dropped two or three days

irora land.

At the end of a week, during a terrible storm, the servants heard at night a cry

which thev thought was a "banshee but in

the morning the poor 6eal was found at the

door, dead starved to death; for, having had its eyes put out, it could not catch any food, though instinct led it back to the place it loved. But this is too sad a story. It will be pleasanter to end with a quotation from a re-cently-published book on the inhabitants of the sea: "They (seals) are not only capable of being tamed when in captivity, but it can truly be said they can be educated. They are extremely sensible to sound, and can even be taught to enunciate short syllables. I had one that could Eay pa and ma intelligibly, and no doubt with longer instruction, it might have acquired other words. This one would also play a whole tune through on a hand organ, by holding on the crank by its right flipper. He could also make as graceful a bbw as any lady need wish to receive, and 'throw a kiss' with his flipper with a great deal more ease and grace than many persons exhibit. "He would also follow me like a iog, and was not even discouraged by a flight of stairs, up and down which he would go to keep me in sight. "When I was obliged to leave him at night, or any other time, he would beckon to me with his head and neck 'to come back.'

just as plainly as words oould have expressed

the leeiing; and when he could no longer see me, he would cry like a child. Si;ht, hearing and memory are very keen. Thev

do not readily forget any one who has petted them, nor an unkind word either, and

never a blow; and really, if one had proper

accommodations, he could not easily procure

a more loving and grateful pet than a brighteyed, intelligent seul."

beals have, indeed, such human faces, and

so many human habits, that it is not strange that people, knowing nothing of them, and seeing them at a distance, should, ia times past, have believed them to be mermen or mermaids. Chips for the Children. The "best boy in school" occasionally hankers to throw a paper wad. On seeing a house being whitewashed, a smtJl boy asked, "Man, if you please, are you going to shave that house?" A little child was asked, "Where do you live?" Turning to its mother, who stood near by, the little one said: "Where mother is, there is where I live." ""What pretty children, and how much they look alike," says C, during a first visit at a friend's house. "Thev are twins," his friend explains. ""What! both of 'em?" exclaims C, greatly interested. A little boy, watching the burning of the shool-house until the novelty of the thing had ceased, started down the street, saying: "I'm glad the old thing's burned down; I didn't have my jogfry lesson, no how." A school-boy being asked by his teacher how he should flog him, replied: "If you J lease, sir, I should like to have it on the talian system of penmanship the heavy strokes upward and the downward ones light." Child (scarcely three years old) looking wktfully at a diminutive pie. Mother: "Now, Meta, I want you to save your nice Eie eo your papa can see it when he comes ome. Child, looking still more wistfully: "I sink 1 could tell papa ezacly how it loeks." A father never thinks his ten-year-old son is stronger than i horse until he employs him to turn the grindstone to sharpen the ax that is about as sharp at one end as at the other. The old man bears down until the lad's eyes hang out and his trousers' buckle flies oif, and just before he bursts a bloodvessel his father encourages him with tho remark: "Does it turn hard?"

THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER.

The fifty colored theological students of the Richmond (Va.) Baptist Institute have decided to quit playing croquet and base-ball because some ot" the deaeons of tbe colored churches felt aggrieved thereat. They laid to the old deacons: ""We do not believe there can be any sin in our taking euch exercise; but if it hurts your conscience, we will play croquet and base-ball no more while the world standeth."

She dwelt within a quiet home, No model of the graces ; Unknown to culture's highest walks, Or fashion's giddy places. A thouRQtlul girl so sweet and wlae. With earnest face and deep gray eyes. The farmer's gentle daughter. From morn till eve the little maid Is busy at her labor; She sweeps and dusta, and feeds the hens, And never rolnda her neighbor; No gorstp ever listens to, (A merit rare, 'tween me and you,) Thus lives the farmer's daughter. On baking days her tiny hands Are skillful at tbe making; No bread more light and sweet than hers, Was ever made by baking. Bbe rhurni tu buttor, golden, sweet. And Keeps tbe dairy clean and neat, The farmer's busy daughter. Her garden la an Eden fair, Abloom with pinks and rosea; 8he knows the name of every flower, And makes some gorgeous posies, Grows peas, and radishes, and cress. And corn, and quanta, and herbs to press. This farmer's happy daughter. Long may she bravely smile on us, Our darling household fairy. The queen oi garden, home and lot, And princess of the dairy, To teacb us by her pleasant way. To love the things of "every day." Uod bless the farmer's daughter. Rural Uew Yorker,

CONCERNING WOMEN'.

Mrs. Hcnnan, the grandmother of the Hood orphans, died suddenly a few days ago in New Orleans, and the little ones have thus been deprived of their last natural protector. From the London Spectator: ""Why is it that so many women who, in private life, are full of mercy and benevolence, should Bhow themselves so inveterately and perennially inconsiderate toward the harmless, necessary critic? "What has he ever done to them?" IIow to manage hair pins: "Stick all your hair pins downward, then you will not be annoyed by their falling out by the way, neither will your friends be worried with mental calculations as to how long it will bo before a hair pin falls, when it hang3 out of your head more than half its length." "Wrinkles on women's faces result from various causes. An idiot who thinks that it is advantageous to try to remove them tells f a "wonderfully beautiful" woman who did 83 follows: "She squeezed out the juice from tho bulps of several white lilies until she had obtained about seventy grammes of this liquid, to which she added an equal quantity of the best honey and thirty-fivo grammes of pure whito melted wax. These substances, being well mixed, formed a pomade, with which she delicately rubbed, morning and night, those parts of the body where wrinkles 6how most." Miss Genevieve "Ward, it is related, is the possessor of a pretty little dog, whose name is "Teck." "Teck" was the other evening banished from the presence of the actress, while she listened to the praise of her dramatic ability spoken by the Prince of "Wales and the Duke of Teck. Theircompliments having been rendered, they turned to leave, and had not proceeded many yards when the

canine favorite tnought himself at liberty to approach. "Teck, Teck, get in the basket!" called Miss "Ward, playfully, and little thinking of what was to follow. The Prince caught the words, informed "Teck" his companion, not the dog that he was wanted, an'J. upon receiving explanation from the admired actress, once more took his leave, enjoying tho mistake immensely, laughing heartily, and jokingly telling the Duke to "get in the basket." The modern novel is not destitute of passages like this one, from a new story called "Martha and 3Iary." Martha, who tells the talc, is a daughter of a Baptist minister. She had gone to church: "The congregation was just about the same, two or three missing perhaps. Papa gave a look round, mentally rioting who was not there, with, no doubt, a private resolution to call upon

them and know the reason why. I think

the female church members bonnets were perhaps a trifle more painful than ever. For downright, unblushing finery give me a little chanel where each tries to dress each

other down, and for hard, square, bad taste J

it must be Baptist. Papa gave out the !

hymn two lines at a time and then prayed. ;

Y e all stood up und turned round facing the other way, and in the middle of the long

prayer all about tbings in general.to my unbounded astonishment, who should come into chapel but a young manl If an elephant had walked up theuislo I should have been much less surprised."

rieaaantries Concerning the Fair Sex. The young lady who was blamed for allow

ing her clove to be discovered in a younj

man's pocket stated that she had no hand in

it.

The New York Commercial Advertiser

says there are 4,000,000 unmarried women in

the country and ice-cream quotations steadily advancing, and plaintively asks: "AVhat is to be done?"

At the cattle show Young farmer:

you fond of beasts, Miss Gusherton?" '.

Gusherton : "Oh, really, Mr. 1'awker, u you mean that as a declaration, you must speak to mamma!" Punch.

Mistress Cook, it is verv strange, but I

always fancv I can hear subdued conversa

tion in the kitchen on Susan's night out.

Cook Oh, dear me, mem; beggin your par- j ding mem, which it's me a reading "The !

Pilgrim's Progress" to myself aloud, mem. Punch.

A rich snob, who married a lady of brill

iant genius, said at a dinner party; "When

we were married my wile declared, 'with all

my wordly gifts I thee endow,' when ehe

hadn ta penny m the world." "But then

there were her splendid talents!" said a lady. "Oh!" exclaimed a wit, "but she didn't en

dow him with them!"

After the death of his wife a husband.

who seems not to havo been over-successful in the use of language, called on tho doctor

to express his obligation for services during the illness: "Herr Doctor," he said, 4I can't express my sense of gratitude for your skill and kindness. If I ever find mycelf in the same sad strait again I shall certainly call on you."

An Emperor at Eighty-Three. London Telegraph. Yesterday was the eighty-third birthday

of the venerable German Emperor, the

Doyen of the world's reigning monarchs, and

tho object of arveven more enthusiastic hero-

worship throughout the fatherland tnan that formerly accorded to his redoubtable ancestor, Frederick tho Great. Uprig ht.

ruddy cheeked, vigorous and sprightly, this imperial patriarch has outlived all the friends

of his youth, and ha seen pas away gen

eration alter generation of tho men whoso first commissions in the Prussian Army were signed by his father when he had already risen, by long and faithful service, to general's rank, and who, having attained the topmott height of their professional ambitions, have died off, one after another, full of years and honors, while he has remained, apparently untouched by the scythe of old Time. Those whoso privilege it is to 6ee and spetk with him daily are never weary of expatiat

ing upon. Tils clearness of mind, cheerfulness of spirits, and extraordinary capacity for enduring physicial fatigue without visible inconvenience, lie rises early every morning, is indefatigable in the transaction of State and military business, eats with undiminished appetite, and inspects his favorite regiments periodically on horseback or on foot, sitting firmly in his saddle for hours at a stretcu, or striding briskly along the front of a far-reaching line of troops paraded in he Scholoss-Platz of Potsdam.

Triplet Maxims. Three things to love courage, gentleness and affection. Three things to admire intelligence dignity and gracefulness. Three things to hate cruelty, arrogance and ingratitude. Three thincs to delight in beauty, frankness and freedom. Threo things to wish for health, friends and a contented spirit. Three things to avoid idleness, loquacity and flippant jesting. Three things tolike cordialty, good honor and cheerfulness. Three things to cultivate good books, good friends and good humor. Three things to contend for honor, country and friends. Three things to teach truth, industry and contentment. Threo things to govern temper, tongue and conduc t. Three things to cherish virtue, goodness and wisdom. Three things to do think, live, act. The General Convention of tho New Jerusalem Church will meet in Portland, Me., June 18. The notice etates that no pledges are made to provide for the enteitainment of the delegates, which is an innovation on the practice of the Church.

For Threat Diseases and Conghs "Brown's Bronchial Troches," like all other really good things, are frequently imitated, and purchasers should be careful to obtain the genuice article prepared by John I. Brown & Sons.

Emaciation, dropsy, mental and physical weakness arrested by Malt Bitters. "Since taking 'Dr. Lindsey'a Blood Searcher' that old eore of mine "is entirely cured." Bold by all druggists. Twenty thousand attest to the virtues of Dr. Graves' Heart Regulator ai a cure for Heart Disease. Try it. Pamphlet oa symptoms of Heart DiFeae free. Addie F. E Ingalls, ConcSrd, N. II. Price 50 cents and $1 per bottle. Sold by druggists and Stewart & Barry, Indianapolis.

Z5 Years Before the Public. THE GENUINE 4 Br. C. UeXAUE'S LIYES PILLS

ills that flesh i3 heir to," but in affections of

the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dys pepsia, and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, thev stand without a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. "So better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking quinine. As a simple purgative they are tmequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid with the impression, Mc LANE'S LIVER PILL. Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. McLaxk and Fleming Bros. CS?" Insist epen having the genuine Dr. C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by FLEMING BKOS., Pittsburgh, Ia., the market being full of imitations of the name Mclxine, spelled differently but same orr.nunciation.

"Are

Miss

Congh?, Bronchitis and Consumption. What i Well-known Irn-fflst majm about Allen LnoB JBalsam. MOTHERS, READ I Oakuasd Station, Ky. Gentlemen The demaud for Allen' Lüne Ha 'Hin Is Increasing constantly. The ladles think there is no medicine equal to it for Croup a od Whoopiog Cough. C. S. MARTIN, Druggist. KoM b; all MrlrlHc pairn.

TETTfl'e P CELEBRATED STOMACH

Fever and Asrne. The true antidote to the eileets of mlanma is Hostetter'a HtomacU Bitters. This medicine is one of the most popular remedies of an age of Huccesifal proprietary specifics, and Is In Immense demand wherever on this continent fever and ame exists. A wineglasnful three times a day Is the best possible preparative for encountering a malarious atmosphere, regulating tne liver ana Invigorating the stomach. b or sale by all Druggists and dealers generally.

TAKE

SIMEONS'

LIVEP.

REGULATOR,

PURELY VEGETABLE. Do yon want to purify the system? Do you want to get rid of biliousness? Do you want something to strengthen yon? Do you want a good anpetite? Do you -want to get rid of nervousness? Do you want good digestion? Do you want to sleep well? Do you want to builJ up your constitution?. Do you want a brisk, rigorous leedng? if you do, TAKE SIHHONS LIVER REGULATOR, AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC for Constipation, Headache, Tain in the Shoulders. Dizziness, Sour Stomacn, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Billons Attacks, pa! pit At Ion of the Heart, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, Despondency, Gloom and foreboding of evil, all of which are the offspring of a diseased Liver. J. If. ZEILI.t Sr CO., Price, 11.00. Phl!adelpbla,ra. bOLD BY ALL DRUUUlöTö. 12)

One Hundred Years Old.

I88O

WALTER BAKEPi & CO., Dorchester, Mass.

CHOCOLATE, BROMA & COCOi

PREPARA7 IONS

Have been the Standard for PURITY and Exceüen ce for 100 years.

13 Kedals ifim-class) received at Paris. Vienna. Philadelphia, etc.

SOLD BY LEADING GROCERS EVERYWHERE.

2323TE!

Hendl for IerfpllT Circular and Book of Cbolre Kceelpt

i

A Wcrd to Thosa Who Use Porous Plasters. It is a universally acknowledged fact that BENSON'S CAPCINE POROUS PLASTERS ARE SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS. The great demand for them has caused a number of unscrupulous parties to male and sell worthless Imitations ander the name of Capsicum or Capslcin. As the market Is flooded with, inferior plasters selling at any price. It is important lor the consumer to know which is the best. It is well known that some of the cheap plasters have been examined and found to contain Injurious ingredients which make them dangerous to use, causing paralytls and other disease. 8EABURY A JOIIITSO V, Pbnrmaceatlcnl Cbemlsf a, If ew York. I'Kirr, CHATS CAU HOX-bee that the word CAPCINE on each Platter is correctly pelled.

CRICINAL. AND ONLY CENt

HH

EstkbUihed

la 1S1

1

5

mmmM

CENUIKE

Threshing Machinery and Portatlo and. Traction Engines. THE RTASDAU1 f excellence tlmgintt tie Cr;, Raintif World. MATCHLESS for Crain-Pirinc. T:m..Kr;nr T-w

GiV-iVrv?. -Vt-?! Ctoninr. Hn,.,d mnd JHorfrngk Hort. TXlSyliX V&$A2 . t'Oll PA RA C J.K i. VK.- ef V,vi. P-rcetivm

JAKYKLOO for tatflf rvptrtor work In a3 l' f Grain, and vmicmal'g koowa a, tbe onlf fut-ceisl.il Threabcr

o-rn-., ..... . 1 "o"r. i Hirer, ana ail other Soed. Al 0I111I.I.V TMRABUi an1 tcowierfuTt limnlt, nMr.ir l- th.o one hair the iul rvan and tolte. PORTABLE, TKACTIO.V n4 TKAW-BCKALX. RTEAM-EAfclXE. lt .necial katurr. of rower, IWaliilitr, Sfetr, Kcoaomr, anl Brintr rntirel unknown la other nikm. fctmm-PowiT Ouilm ud (tficn Powir separators a ipeeally. Four ie of Separators, from Stall horse-power : al- 1 stvles Improved Konnted Horse-Powrr. a Veais mt IViNperm sad Con tin a on. Budaen or thi bouae. without change ef najue, location, or aoaaaxoaaeut, furnuhra a strong guuractee for superior foods ami honorable Walluf.

The wonderful roreese an! popularity of

oar TuKiToe Machinery has drive o other

roa-hiuea to the wall : henre various makers are bow attempt

ing; to build and palm ouT Inferior aad mongrel Imitation, of

Viu laxnou. gooas.

BE NOT DECEIVED

fir tneta experimental od wnrthle marhinerr. If tob hnt at all, tret Lao "tmitUJiAL" und Ue -tEXtlAJS"

irom M. C-J r'or full particular rail on onr dealers,

to us for llluttrau-ii Circular,, ahkh we mail free.

XICH0LS, SKFPAT.D & CO., Battle Creek, Mich. S-TTS

TAH

at :

km

I a Terrible IiteRe. Ita fearful frtvf mrmnttoii

rnnning down the thrtmt, nl ryw, tWfixus 1j3 of voira, !s of nell, ai-su.-tinc Wh, ntwal deformities and finally consumiitiuri. From first to lust it U erer iteTgrt-wive. Ordinary tieatmrntd are vor than naelM. If

cure in tHMiMt it uutr ramdlr dvolon into nntelr rfinwmn

Cpssful and plpasant tnatrnent it 3Dr. TV'T. XTCT. CASiT:'c.

SiHCARBOLATE 1 TAR INHALAMT 'Tf. em, ""TTl--emwawnuanamaaiaaaasi sasin

It 1(M3

minutrj

ndÄre ) FOB CATARRH, ASTHMA,

iCONSUftflPTION,

, th TsJue of Carbolale of Tar, the mntt hta'inj remedial agent Inmcn to teimet.

B ,W - -T 'W ev W-- M--f .MUmiind r7r11:ill lf t (.AQlirtManJ s.,1.r a!

- ----- . iuv J ailll KU Ullllilg j'lV'jH IllfTl m - are to roml.iue.1 vitli Pi- .e Tre Tar. that the more brenthinir conTorts them IRROtNEOHlTBC A

This is inhaled taken right to the duteaeed !

into a den xmnke or vitxir.

rt. o Iieat. no Iiot wafer, simply inf,ating or breathing it, and too. feel I r C J-AJt? its healins power at once. This treatment ist en.lor l.r t,).r.M..,. IhJ El l r EV Elcida

ererywhen-, and highly mmmendod by thnnwind. who haee tiol it with ff"""1" rUKsn taraW'. n.-I-.t.m mm' - - . mmmmmmmmmmmmmmW

etc.. Sent Pres.

IWhfa Tit!iu for circular., aim skia tv.- 1

Dr..lL.W. CASE. 933 Arch St. Philadelphia, Pa,

A POSITIVE CURE WITHOUT MEDICINES.

ALLAN S SOLÜBLE WEM BOKS

PATENTED OCTOBER 1, 187C.

OjSTE BOX No. 1 will euro any case in four days, or lead. No. 2 will euro iho Most Obsiinaio Case, no matter of how lore standing. No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copaiba or Oil of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyi pepsia by destroying ihe coatings of the stomach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections to produce other serious comvlicaiions. Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS or mailed on receipt of Price. For further variiculars send to drupo-isi in

our city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO., P. O. Box 1,533. No. 83 John St., New York.

Vc offer $500 Reward for any case they will oi cure. "Quick, Safe, and Sure Cure.

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JAMES' WISE OF HOPS, The Best Known Remedy in the World for Nervous Debility, Lost Energy. Lost Hopes, Imprudences of Youth, f Lo3t Vigor and Ambition.

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SI PER QUART BOTTLE: SIX FOR

DE. JAMES' LOCK HOSPITAL, 204 Washington Hf Cor. t'ranftliu, CHICAGO,

Chartered by the Stale of Illinois for the express pnrpo of string immediate relief in all cases of Private, Croulc uud Urfuary Disease in all their complicated forms. It 1 well known Dr. James has stood at the head oi the proleNlon for the past 3(1 years. Ace and experienre are oll.imporlant. feemnlal weakness, night lcscs by dreams, pimples on the face, lost manhood, can positive ly be cured. l-adies wanting the most delicate uttenlion, call or write I'lcasant home for patients.

A BOOK FOR THE MILLION---MRRI&GE GUIDE;

X371.ti OaIIo inTi nil nlmni 4 Ii ns T Icnc Qsaa nr?a 7 n . V ,.nsBra

T1 llll IVltn JUII auuuwill llivmi uirB-v IIH r;slJJ lUllli J, If (J Jf not; IO cents to pay poatnge; or lar? reTined wrik, 2-5 cents. Dr. James has 0 room and narlors. VftiKtrena one ut lit doctor. Ofaice hoar?, 0 4. .U. to 7 P. Itf. Sunday. 10 to 12. Dr. James Is 0 3 ears of age. Rubber goods of all kinds.

A TOO PACK pICTXOXAKY FOU 43.CTS. Tbe AnifTRtau Lit-'iouurv if vne KngliKfi lingua k contain.. ;t,"0 j-?rv, iM,h)0 vmril clearly lv-flDHi, untfW frououuot-d, nnd convily fntllfd, with n.irly X Illustre!!-m, an 1 hamlsonwly bound In clotu. with gilt stamp. A library ot l&nf uaire la ItHelf. No excuse tor word lnars.nc now. Sent, postpaid, for 4 2 cents, whlcb 1 n joh lraa than the publisher's price. Two book" for TScv!-. htarrpa taken. PCil? ft fßi-NI. SooksvUcra, 73 Betkmaa St, KJ,