Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1880 — Page 6
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THE IKDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1880-
THE HOME.
It ! net docbted that men bate a home- In that lac where each on bu eatabluhed Ma hearth and the turn cf Li poaaMiiona and fnetnnew. whence be will not depart, If nothing call him away; wh"f" u b haa departed ha seems to be a wanderer, and If ha returns be ceaaea to wander. Definition from UU Law. Then stay at home, my heart, and reat The bird ia safest in iu nest; O'er ail that flatter their wings and fly A hawk Is horerin in the sky; TO stay at uomw i . Longfellow. OCR YOCSO FOLKS. Garden Lore. Every chIM who haa gardening tools Hhould. ie.rn by bert these gardening rules: lie vnoowusa?anleEiusfpaae .... Should be able to dl? the depth of its blade, He who owns a garuening take , . ,,. Should know wUat to leave and what to taue. Jle whoownaa gardening hoe Must be sure how fce means his strokes to go; Hat he who owni a gardening fork May niRke it do all tne other tools work; 1 hough to shift, or to pot, or annex w hat you C ATI A trovers tho tool for child, woman or man. Harpers You eg People. Up the 11 ill. A SOSG FOR THE CLIMBERS. Stop by step we climb the hill. In the early hours of day. Feeling heart and pulses thrill As we st-ek the upwaid way. Clearer vision shall be ours. rurer air ana wiuer view, A" we climb thro thorns and flowers Nearer to the upper biue. Patient labor scales the heWht ; He who hopes to win the prize les not keep the vale in Mglil, But looks upward to the saies. From the vale of loth and dreams, i limb witn suadfast heart and true; Day by day the summit gleams iieacon-ute the distance through. We must earn the prize we Beek; Thoe who pause with folded hands Wiu;n;:, while the will is weak, Tarrv in the lower lands. Tbose a'one who work and climb, Ualn the prize and win tile rest Comin? in the later time ün Uie conquered mountain's cr?st. A Day Greater Than July 1, 177G A Sketch of King John and the Mana Charta. AVher. you go to England you will visit London, and about the first place in London you will want to see will be the British Museum. Li this British Museum is a parchment old, dim, injured by fire and from it, brown and shriveled, still haligs a royal seal. I wish it could tell its own story how it came to be written, and why it is such a precious thing to all Englishmen. It ia ! vsars old, and it marksthe real beginning ot English liberty. The King who had to trive this promiso, called the Great Char ter or Magna Charta, was John. The peole of his day said of him that: 'foui as it is, ell itself is defiled by the fouler presence of John," and the people of to-day, after six centuri??, think ihey spoke the truth concerning this man. You know how England looks noTv with its green lanes and hedge rows, magnificient lorests and parks, mile upon ivnli of rich corn-lands and meadows every inch of ground is cultivated like a jrarden". England six centuries ago was not this England. There were few and poor road?, and lonj lengths of swampy, desolate fens and bleak moors, here and there was a hucje castle of white stone, with turrets and towers, a house and fort in one buildisg large enough to hold a village full of people; near it, a handful of huts for the lower people. On one hand was magnificence, armies of servants, horsemen in armor, 00,000 dishes served at a marriage feast, tourneys with glittering armor and knightly courtesy, that wc read cf in the tales of Walter Scott; on the other hand, discomfort, squalor and ferocity no chimneys, no window-glass, no plaster on the walls. There was straw on castle floors to catch the pieces thrown from the tables. And within the walls of Oxford, having even then its great university, thousands of students were crowded together in wretched, dirty lodgings. They got their learning from bogging, wandering monks, and they drank, quarreled, sacking now and then the house ot some Jew. An old rhyme ran: "When Oxford draws knife, Xnglaud's toon at strife." "We happen to know how this King John was once dressed; for his portrait effigy, the earliest in all England, is in "Worcester Cathedral. He wears in this a loose dress or tunic reaching from neck to ankles, the sleeves tight, the color golden; over it another dress, shorter, the collar crimson, the sleeves loose, around the throat and sleeves embroidery of gold and gems; the dress girt in at the waist, red hose, black boots and golden spur3, gemmed gloves, below the crown binding the hair a circlet of jewels. John, often called Lackland, because he had no possessions, came to the throne when he was thirty-two years old, and he reigned seventeen stormy years. He was handsome good-humored, apt, with the power of making men and women like him; but he was mean, cruel, perfidious. "When a boy he toro at pleasure the beards of the Irish chieftains who came to own him as their lord. He Slotted against the father who loved im, and against ltichard, his brother, the lion-hearted. He ground down his people until a nation in arms forced him to give them the Great Charter. "We know the story of Arthur told by Shakespeare, the boy whom John undoubtedly killed with his own hands. Arthur was the son of John's oldest brother. This boy of fifteen claimed certain possessions in France that his uncle John claimed. He would not give up his claim to them. He was captured. Two hundred Knights taken with nim were loaded with irons and drawn in open carts by bullocks. Twenty-two were deliberatley starved to death. One story is, that Arthur's eyes were burnt out; another, that he was taken out in a boat on the river Seine and stabbed by his uncle, and still another is, that one dark night he was taken from the tower, and, weak from imprisonment, lifted on his horse. As they rode on his uncle said: "Fair nephew, come and see the day you have so Ion; desired. I will make you as free as air. You shall even have a kingdom to govern." Then he stabbed the boy, and helped to push him over the precipice into the waters of the Seine. For this murder the peers in France took away John's French possessions, and it was in his trying to get then back again that he quarreled with the Pope and his nobles, and finally got so weak that the barons dared force him to give that famous promise. There were two great men in England, one the head of the Church and the other of the baronage, who objected to John's taking the English money and English men to reconquer possessions of France. The Archbishop died in a few months, and then John determined to put in a man who would do his bidding. The monks at John's command, chose one, but the convent before this had chosen another. Both claimants went to Rome to have the Pope settle the quarrel. The Pope after year settled the matter by choosing a man himself. This was placing himselt above England and her King, but the Archbisop, Stephen Langton, was to prove himself great enough to defy both Pope and King. John would not receive, him, and in a fury answered the Pope's threats with: "By God's teeth, if you or. any
of your body dare to lay my States under an interdict, I will end you and your clergy to Rome and confiscate your property. Aafor the Roman shavelings if I find any in my dominions I will tear out their eyes and cut off their noses, and so send them to the Pope." But the Pope was a3 stubborn as the King, and the interdict felL At night the clergy came together and they chanted a miserere; the church bell rang out a funeral knell; the pictures and the statues in the churches were shrowded in black veils. Then for a year over the length and breadth of the land no church bells were heard; thera was no worship in the churches, and the dead lay unburied on the ground. Yet the King was defiant, laughed at the interdict, and imprisoned the relatives of the priests and Bishops who had fled across the sea. Then the Pope took another step and cut the King off from the pale of the church. And yet the King was undaunted. He seized the church property for his own use. "When the Archbishop of Norwich withdrew from his service, and he had him seized and a cape of lead soldered around his neck. Underneath this weight, and from hunger, the Archbishop died an awful death, but no other Archbishop withdrew from the King's service. To retain his hold on the baronage, he demanded as hostage the son of one of his greatest nobles, Deßrasose, in whose domain were great herds of white cattle with red ears. This noble's wife boasted that she could victual a besieged castle for a month with her cheeses. She boldly declared that her son should not go as hostage to a King who had murdered his nephew. Four hundred of the white cattle were sent to appease John's (Jueen, hut the r.oble Lord was sent to Ireland in exile, and his wife and grandchildren were starved to death. One more weapon was in the Pope's hands. He could absolve John's subjects to obedience; ho could depose an unworthy King. This he did, and promised the King of France forgiveness for his sins would ho make war against John. John allowed the Pope's legate to read the proclamation before his face and resolute as ever, prepared to arm against France. He was wise and quick in war, and a large army crossed the English Channel and captured some French ships and burned the city. "We must remember that John was not the first English King who had oppressed the people, but the church had always before been with the King. Now it was his enemy. Upon whom .lohn could rely? He had defied ti e nobles or baronage; he had seized their castles, he had taken their children as hostages; for his wars, he had taxed them over and over; he had exacted unlawful services; he had given to foreigners the high places they should have had. If the nobles felt themselves under the rule of a despot, how must it have been with the common people who had no land of their own and had to render homage and pay taxes to two masters, their King and their Lord? So it was that the King at the very moment of his success, found himself at war with Rome, with France, witli Scotland, Ireland and "Wales, and his baronage almost to a man conspiring against him, and the rank and file in sympathy with the barons. He disbanded his army and took refuge in a castle. He tried to win back his people by remitting their fines. He humilated himself betöre the Pope. He received the Arch
bishop, Stephen I.atigton. On his knees he gave England to the I'ope, and received it back in token that the Pope and the church were over England and its King. Now he felt with the church on his side he could compel hisbaronä to cross the channel to fight the French King, iiut the barons said that tbo King could compel tham to fight at home, but that it had boenjthe right of Englishmen not to be forced to cross the sea to fight the King's foreign possessions. The King found himself again baffled; his justiciar, Jeotfry, was with the people, and the Archbishop, Stephen Langton, loved his country better than he loved his church, and he was with the people. It was Stephen Langton who showed the barons the charter of rights that John's grandfather had given the people. It was Stephen Langton who got from the King, on his way to attack the Barons of the North, the promise to judge them by law before he tried them in arms. At this time Jeoffry died, and John joyfully exclaimed: "Now, by God's feet, 1 am'for the fi'st time King and Lord of England." But John was mistaken. It went on three years more before the crisis came. In January, 1215, the Uarons in arms appeared before the King. He begged till Easter to consider their demands; in vain in the meantime he tried to get strength to resist them. Then again the Barons assembled, and when John heard their demands, in a fury he cried: "Why do they not demand my kingdom also?" Still he delayed, but in a little while he had but seven nobles for him and a whole Nation against him. He had to yield to a meeting. "Let the day be the 15th of June, and the place Runnymede." On one bank of the Thames was the King, on the other the Barons. The conference was held on an island near a marshy meadow by the riverside, the meadow of Runnymede. The charter was agreed to in a day, and twentyfour Barons were to be chosen to see that the King observed the (harter. The King passionately exclaimed: "They have given me four and twenty over kings!" and flinging himself on the floor gnawed sticks and straw in his rage. The Great Charter was not new laws. They were old rights made plainer, with stronger means of carrying them out. No freeman was to be seized or imprisoned without a trial by his equals; the ways of getting justice through the Courts were improved; the people were not to be taxed save by the Common Council of the realm. No man would be imprisoned and not brought to trial. Prists, Bishops and great tenants were to meet ia this great Council; no longer were provisions to be forced and labor to be exacted unlawfully from the people. The Barons gave to men whose Lords they themselves were, the same means of getting justice that they" demanded from the King for themselves. In working for themselves they helped the people. "We must not think that after this there were no more injustice and wrong doing toward the people. It has taken centuries to work out the rights that the Magna Cnarta said that the English people should have, but there it has always stood, when the crisis has come, declaring what the rights of the English people were. The greatest day for England and America, greater than the 4th of July, 1776, was that 15th day of June, 1215. A Mistaken Application. Never get out of temper with a barber. A gentleman not long since was fitting in a barber's chair trying to read the morning paper while having his hair cut. The barber in the meantime was worrying him with the recital of a long story about the barber s boy and the shoemaker's daughter at the last Saturday night's ball, a story which was strung out until forbearance ceased to be virtuous, when the man being cupped looked up somewhat annoyed and exclaimed im patiently: "O, cut it short." The barber did cut it short When that man left the chair he was as bald as a new-born baby. Mand ( an aristocratic child : "How crettv and clever you are, mother! I'm so glad you
married into our family. 1'uncn.
EXPRESSIONS.
'Twae "RoMnnon" he called hi bird. Said they, "What made yon da so?" "I named bin, though It sounds aheard, Became t!io rooster crew io." Syracuse Sunday Times. She painted on china and lilk, Atid talked acienca atd art day and night, She read Kmklu, Carly le and that ilk; And combed her bair like a fright. She wrote essay and paper and such On the Cosmic, the Keal and Ideal, She waa linguistic from English to Latch, And her Blocking were out at the heel. StenbenTille Herald. How long does a widower mourn for his wife? For a second. Andaman Island widow swear the skulls of their deceased husbands on their shoulders. Some one says that as a circus, Congress draws onlv when all the other shows are shut up. The Binghamton Republican says that a bawling cow is worse than a second wife who don't want to get up and build the fire. A woman who patiently waits for her husband from midnight to dawn, has an object in view, and more than likely another in hand. A new spring bonnet is called the 'Nihilist." A "blow up" at the breakfast table is anticipated when the husband sees the bill for it. The young lady who worked a pair of slippers for her beau with the unique design of a coiled snake on each, doesn't go to the theater at his expense any more. "Sir," said an astonished landlady to a traveler who had sent his cup forward for the seventh time, 'You must be very fond of coffee." "Yes, madam, I am," he replied, "or I should never have drunk so much water to get a little." A kindly policeman pic ked a drunkard out of a San Francisco gutter, and, perceiving that his head was bent over to one side, set about straightening it by main strength. The fellow lazily opened his eyes, and remarked: 'Born so, mister, born so." "now do you contrive to amuse yourself?" "Amuse," said the other starting, "do you know I have my house work to do?" "Yes," was the answer, UI see you have it to do; but as it is never done, I concluded you must have some other way of passing vour time.'' The young folks were talking about mistakes in courtship, when Uncie Job broke in with the declaration that there was never any such thing. "For," said he, "nobody ever makes mistakes worth mentioning in eourUhip. It's afte r the courtship is over and the lovers have been married that the hurtful mistakes begin." ""Well, uncle," said one of his prettv nieces, "what's the moral of all that?" "The moral!" exclaimed Uncle Job, "What's themoral? "Why, I s'pose the moral is keep on courting.'' Lucy Stone Blac kwell, the lady who has been clamoring for woman's rights ever since the capture of Ticonderoga, has taken another degree in equality. Just as she alighted from her carriage in Orange, New Jersey, theothcr day, a nice gentlemen stepped up and inquired the way to a certain street. The amiable lady turned to answer and the nice gentleman snatched her satchel and ambled around the corner. The satchel contained $18, a copy of the constitution, with objectionable clauses marked, an essay on man's inhumanity to woman ard a pair of blue woolen stockings. Post iX-spatch. MEDICAL AND SI KGICAL NOTES. Absinthe and Insanity. According to a Statement made bv lr. Blam-k, alsintlie causes some CO per cent, of all the cases of insanity in France. The liqueur, it appears, is produced by the diminution of alcohol with wormwood, cither pure or mixed with other herbs. Several are usc-d for the purpose of varying the flavor; fr instance, the niiise, the angelica, etc. M. Magium, in a series of experiments on animals, ha3 ascertained that the poisonous properties of ubr-inthe are. much greater than of any other epirituus liquor, even alcohol. The leading meinlers of the medical profession in France are said to be strongly opposed to teetotalism that i, they not only prescrilnj alcohol in various cases, but recommend the use of such stimulants to their patients in moderation; but they unanimously condemn the use of absinthe. Evolution ofMemory. In a communication to the "Soviet it do Biologo," M. Delaunoy takes the position that there is an evolution of the memory which is first sensorial, literal, and then intelligent. It appears, however, that at the Ecole Normal and other sc hools, the pupils who have the best memory are not the most intelligent; it is also more developed among the peasantry than among the citizens, and among the c lergyman than among the laity. Again, investigation oho ws that the memory remains intac t in diseases of the left side of the brain and is much affected in those of the right, from whic h it may be inferred that the right side is more the seat of this fac ulty than the left. From a physiological point of view, memory is diminished by over-feeding, by physical exercise, and by education in this sense, that the illiterate have potentially more memory than those who know bow to read and write. Memory is better in the morning than in the evening, in the summer than in the winter, and letter in warm than in cold climates; it is, therefore, to a certain extent in inverse proportion to nutrition, and, in fact, to evolution, leing greatest in those who are at least advanced. Milk and Lime "Water. Milk and lime water are now frequently prescribed by physicians in cases of dyspepsia and weakness of the stomach, and in some cases are said to prove very beneficial. ' Many persons who think good bread and milk a great luxury, frequently hesitate to eat it for the reason that the milk will not digest readily: sourness of stomach will often follow. But experience proves, says the Journal of Materia Medica, that lime water and milk are not only food and medicine at an early period of lifOj but also at a later, w hen, as in the case of infants, the functions of digestion and assimilation arc feeble and easily perverted. A stomach taxed by gluttony, irritated by improper food, inflamed by alcohol, enfeebled by disease, or otherwise unfitted for its duties as is shown by the various symptoms attendant upon indigestion, dyspepsia, diar-rha-n, dysentery and fever will resume its work, and do it energetically, on an exclusive diet of bread and milk and" lime water. A goblet of cow's milk may have four tablespoonfuls of lime water added to it with good etfect. The way to make lime water is simply to procure a few lumps of unslaked lime, put the lime in a stone jar, and add water until the lime is slaked and of about the consistence of thin cream; the lime settles, leaving the pure and clean lime water on the top. RELIGIOUS NOTES. A transcendental preacher took for his text, "Feed my lambs." A plain farmer quaintly remarked to him, on coming- out of the church: "A very good text, sir; but you should take care not to put hay so high in the rack that lambs can't reach it." It is about 100 yesrs since the beginning in modern foreign missions. ' There are said to be now one million and a half of converts from heathenism. The Bible has been translated into 220 different languages, and ti e
copies circulated amount : to 14S.000.000.' More than seventy barbarous languages have been endowed with a grammar and literature. A very ancient custom was oWerved oa Good Friday at St Bartholomew the Great, Smithfield, London, where at the conclusion of the service an old tomb in the churchyard was visited, and Rev. J Morgan laid twentyone sixpences on the tomb, which were picked up by twenty-one elderlv females of the parish. It is said that an old lady left this gift, and that sho lies buried in the churc hyard, but the exact spot can not 1 pointed out. The '"Guardian" is a new evangelical Protestant Episcopal journal of this city. It quotes a paragraph in which Dr. Bacon and President Porter are referred to as representatives of Liberal Congregationalism, and says: "It (Liberal Congregationalism) is itself already as Unitarian as it can be. It has net reached the lowest depths of blasphemy and atheism whic h some have reached : but the personality of God, the divinity of Christ, the personality and work of the Holy Ghest, the inspiration of the Bible, the divine institutions of the Gospel- -ill these are either ignored or ridiculed and scouted at." The ''Congregationalist'' retains a true Puritan hostility to those who disturb the meeting: "Those late coiners are still at it. Last Sun Jay several were shown into pews already as lull as was comfortable for the occupants after the sermon began. "Whereupon one new remedy suggested itself. The polite attendanc e of the gentlemanly ushers on these people throws a veil of respectable appearance over their bare-faced impudence. At an appointed time, say at the opening of the hymn before sermon, let the ushers take their seats, leaving the stragglers to look out for themselves after that. After a little experience some who don't mind casting contempt on the public service cf God might shrink from facing His worshipers with demands for seats that would have been gladly offered ten minutes earlier. Try it." A Butterfly'a Moral. A boy, on perceiving a beautiful butterfly, was so smitten with its gaudy colors, that he pursued it from flower to flower with indefatigable zeal; at first he attempted to surprise it among the leaves of a rose; then he endeavored to cover it with his hat as it was feeding on a daisy; now he hoped to secure it as it revelled on a sprig of myrtle; and now grew sure of his prize on perceiving it to loiter on a bed of violets; but the fickle fly still eluded his attempts. At last, observing it half.buried in the cup of a tulip, he rushed forward, and, snatching at the object of his pursuit with violence, it was crushed to pieces. The dying insect, perceiving the boy chagrined at his disappointment, addressed him with the utmost calmness in the following words: "Behold, now, the end cf thy unprofitable solicitude; and learn, for the benefit of thy futuro life, that pleasure, like a painted butterfly, may serve to amuse one in the pursuit; but, if embraced with too much ardor, will perish in thy grasp.''
For Coughs, Colds. Catarrh and Throat Disorders, use "Brown's Bronchial Troches," having provtd their efficacy by a test of many years. All forms of Heart Disease readily yield o io use oi ur. u raves' Heart Kegnlator, Pnysicians recommend It. Pamphlet on symptoms of Heart Dieea?e free. Address F. E. Infralla, Concord, N. H. Price 50 cents, and $1 per bottle. Sold oy nruggista, ana tte wart k Barry, Indianapolis, Ind. "Sellers Liver rills" stand unrivaled in tbs United States for curing biliousness, sick headache, etc. Deep-seated coogbs. and catarrh extending to the lungs, cured by Malt Bitters. 43 Tears Before the Public. THE CEE3UINE Dr. C. McLANE'S LITER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia, and Sick Headache, or disease of that character, they stand without a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking quinine. As a simple purgative they are nnequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid with the impression, McLANE'S LIVER PILL. Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. McLanb and Fleming Bros. Ef Insist open having the genuine Dr. C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Ta., the market being full of imitations of the name Mclxine, spoiled differently but same pronunciation. Coughs, Bronchitis and Consumption Waal a Well' known Drag-trial uji About Allel!'' Lnng Hainan). MOTHERS, READ I Oakland Station, Ky. Gentlemen The demand for Allen's Lunar Iii 1 km m is increasing constantly. The ladles think there is no medicine equal to it for Croup and Whoopins: Cough. C. S. MARTIN, Druggist. Sold by allJIedlclne Iecwera. EXfRACTtheGrcat e'etable I'ain Dentroyer ana Sjeciflc for Inflammations, Hemorrhages, Wounds, C n t s, Broises, Burn, Sprains, Ac. Stoppinsr the flow of blood, relieving nt once pain, subduing inflammation, healing and curing disease so OND f q rapidly as to excite wonö der.aumiratiqn, gratitude. endorse, recommend and prescribe it. It will cure Rheumatism, Catarrh, Neuralgia, Asthma, Lumbago, Sore Throat, Diarrhoea, Headache, Dysentery, Toothache, Broken Breast, Karache, Boils & Sow, Pilea, And stop all Hemorrhages from the Nose, Stomach or Langs. Destroyed! Immediately relieves pain in any place where it can be applied internally or externally. For cnts, bruises, sprains, &c. it is the very best remedy known: arresting the bleeding at once, reducing the swelling and inflammation, stopping the pain and healing the injury in a wonderful manner. Vegetable. It is harmless in any case no matter how applied or taken. Ia never told in bulk, but only in rar bottles with Pond's Extract" blown la the Class and our trademark on outside buff wrapper. Ttwanqf imitafiont. Try It and you will never b without it aingle d&f . Sold by all Druggists. I JURELY
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tapecw.iy nas it mriniree-t i;9 potenrv in curing Tetter, Uar Kali.
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If n;i fii'l dull, drowsy, debilitated, l:nve Milnw co!or of skin, or vellowish-brown spots on lace or bodv, frequent hcMncLo or dizziness, bad tate in mouth, iuiernal heat or chills TtCTw .J. ..'UY.1!0"' 'rrc-",:r apiK-'titc, and toiifrue coaled. vu are suffering from T?IF i er' or " "". Ah a rcmely for nil Midi msca Dr. fierce'a Goldea Ateoual li'ovcrr Im a no counl, .-is it effects ix:riect and ni.lic.nl cure. Ill tlse rnrc of EIronrUllU. Si-vrr. ui.a v-.i .... .i .i
P P I 'V. ast'"i'ie'l the medical Jacultv, and eminent i-hybician pronounce it the rreate.-t niedionl discovery of Uie n-c Sola br druggists.
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O OW t." v xv i?iciii, " i in, or occupation, rur uaunuire, iieauarae, QtS ;oiiliaUoM. Impnrr Itloori, l'atn In the Shoulders. Tha-Litüo Giant" Cathartic Stomach, ttad Tate In Menth, Hi Ilona attacks, i'aln In , r, , region or Kidneys, lute ma I Jever, Kloaled fee! log oui Stomach, Rush or Blood to Head, take lr. I'lerce'a Tlcasant Purgative relicts. 7 drugg'ata. - WOUI.D-S DISPOSABr HDICAL ASSOCUTIOX. Prop'n. Baflklo, H. T.
Beware
To protect the public against imitators w e specially caution all purchasers of BENSON'S GAPGIUE POROUS PLASTER To see that the word CAPCINE on the lable Is spelled correctly. Do not allow some other Plaster to be palmed off under a similar sounding name, with the assurance that it is as good. Bear in mind that the only object such dealers can have, is the act that they can make a few pennies extra by selling the spurious. SEA BURY A JOIIXSOX, Pharmnccnllcal Chemists, Xew York.
The City Railway, Chicago, works 4,760 Horses. Bead: We use exclusively WhUtler'- Liniment. It will pay all owners of horses to call or write. M. W. SQUIRES, Snpi. O, C. R, Co. The Express Company works 370 Hones. Bead: I liare been using Liniment on the horses offne American and U. N. Express Companies' table for 24 years. I neyer met any that bad onc fculh the merit of Whi (tier's Liniment. Oar stables are open ; call and see for yourselves. II. KNIGHT, Supt.Ex. Co. Bead what Graves & Lomis, the largest breeders of Horses in the State of Illinois, have to say : Tor thirty years we bare been using- all kinds of liniment mnnfa4tnrod for horo.e, and, or nil tho llnlmen. Whittle' stands at tt bead ol lb list lor HrratrhM,rca.d !-. Thrnh, Npraln, Um11m1 NpoU and Wore of mny ktn1. It will Rive all boa-semen Mtlsfatrtlon. ghatm a miMIS. Tbere Is no remedy on earth that eqnals TVblttier's Liniment for BhenmaUsm and Piles. It will hnTthMia effect npnn the Damon. Per ("nix, Kcalrt 1Iel, Cotorrn, Pimple or Hlotctie on Far or Itxly, J11 More or I'rean Cats, Isold by oil Drat gists, or by DR. 8. WHITTIER 204 Washington fiU A POSITIVE CURE WITHOUT MEDICINES.
ALLANS
SOLÜBLE
PATENTED OCTOBER IO, 1870.
OISTE BOX Ho. 1 will euro any case in four days, or less. llo. 2 will euro the Most Obstinate Case, no matter of how lonp- standing. No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copaiba or Oil of Sandalwood, thai are certain io produce dyi pepsia by destroying the coatings of the stomach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections io produce other serious romvlications. Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS or mailed on receipt of Price. For further particulars send to drupfrist in your city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO., P. O. Box 1,533. No. 83 John St., New York. We offer $500 Reward for any case ihey will not cure. Quick, Safe, and Sure Cure.
NICHOLS SHEPARD & C O. Battle CreetHicL
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rarabilitr. HafetT. Koonomr. ul BrutT entirelT unknown . J KAITIOX. aa TRA W-HL Separator, a .pecialt J. Four .lie of 8eparators, from to 11 84 Year af Proanervaa aad Coatlaaoaa B)Ibm KoooomT, and B-atr entirelT unknown aent, luruuae a .tronf aarante lor (upertor gooua ana CAUTION!' machiue. to the wall ; The woaderfat mere, and popnlarltTef oar iaaaroa Mnchtnerj ha. artrea otnsr 1 : hence ration maker, are sow attempt ing to build and palm off Interior aad Btongrel Imitation of ur uunoa. goooa. BE NOT DECEIVED tT inch ejperlmental and worthle. marhlnerr. If Ton bnr at all, ret U "OliltiLXAL aad the " fcE t'l"E" from an. Cy Vor full aartlralar call oa aar dealer., or writ, to a. lor lUu.uatd Circular., which we mail free. Addrea. HICH0LS, SHEPA&D ft CO., Battle Creek, Mich. a cure is possible, it may rapidly cessful and pleasant treatment I iCARBOLATE It drx'3 not require tm minulex to demonstrate I FOR the raJue of Carbolate of Tar, the
PnUTAHI.I'. THAI'TIIIV. ..4 aTRin'RIKVIVM ATI
em
Balsams and Cordials of the most healing and soothing nmertiea TrTTTrTHTT are so combined with Pii re Tree Tar, that the mere breathing conrerta them I Q Ff O I J C H ITI Q JL Into a dense smoke or riiior. This is inhaled taken rieht to the diseased aBBnaawawaBvawawawawawawawawmaHKBaaaaH
Meaiina remedial aaenl ktumm ut part. Itahea Xo heat, no hot water, simply inhalinn or healing power at once. This treatment la endorse . . - - . avsrwwKara aan1 htrrtil artnmanfiwf W thttiaMt. wKa perfect satisfaction. Fl'I.I. TBKATMLST gent
XlOIf A. I, WATS GUAMAJiTJSJZn. Address.
lWb?.:?Tu,i' Dr. IL TV. f!ASE. fl33 Arch St Phn.ir1Plr.Ma Pu
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Holls, Carba oltr or Thick taking the large, repulsive, nanseous pills. These ma; t "nnj larger loan lUILSiara 'KefaMe, no inrtcul.ir care is reqnird uienu 1 ney ojK-rate without disturbance to the 1 ORICINAL AND ONLY CENUINE Threshing Machinery and Portahle and Traction Engines. THE PTAXDAKI r xoelleae tnugomt f CrataXaÜMMf Wttrid. MATCHLESS frr Grain-Paring, Time-SavUf, Perfect Clcanl'ir, Rapid and Tkorxmak Work. INCOMPARABLE la (W'- of VtrUt. PmfettUrm ot faru, Tkonmak Workminihip. Elegant rinisa. aoa MiARTKLOUS tar mtftf mifmrlor work la all kind of lirain, aoa umrMiif inowa as tue noeeuna lbreor In Max, TlmothT, ciorer, aoa all other Nnli. im,, min lrs than one balf the anal (ear and belt. KA1U M IAM.tJVl.fc. wlta .orcla) frstam or rowel EXnl.ViX with iixrlil fentom of Power. la ether malm. Bteaa-Power Outfit, and Btoaai-Fowtc la ethei hone - power ; ale 1 Tie. Improred Monnted Horae-Power. by tbi. aouae, without change of aame, location, or nanaf aonaraoia neauuz. Wi Is m Terrible Disease, its fearful effects corruption running down the throat, weak eyes, deafness, loss of roles, loss of smell, dUirtutinr odors, nasal deformities, and finally consumption. From first to last it is erer aggressira. Ordinary tieatmenta are worse than useless. If neelected whila dorelop into quick fonanmptlon. The mrwt thorough, sue TIt - , X7". CASE'S W TAR INHALANT CATARRH, ASTHMA. most iCONGUnPTION, mrirmr brtathina It. and too feel I F"a TT A r"Pir?ro . . ar Sanaa g. i a i a by physicians iari s a, v W kaoo na ls aarit-W RRBBBtBIBM ' I Circulars, etc., Sent FreT 8ATISJFACy ....aaaw A oon
$ Fraud
WAID BOUGIES
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