Jasper Republican, Volume 1, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 October 1874 — Page 4
Wedded and Widowed.
' Between Three 'and four years since Miss Emma Hulsizer, then a girl of about sixteen years of age, came to this city to perfect herself in painting and music, for both of which arts she evinced decided talent. She is the fourth daughter* of William Hulsizer, of Rochester, Oakland County, a gentleman as noted for his liberality and hospitality as he is for his social and political influence. * While in this city Miss Hulsizer met many persons who became her warm and personal friends. After several months of intense application to her studies in this city she was sent to the Convent of Villa Maria, in Montreal, where she remained for two years as a pupil, distinguished alike for talents and attention to her studies, and where she graduated this summer with great honor, after which she returned to her home. During one of her vacations she visited a friend, Miss Moyes, of New York, and was introduced to Dr. 8. E. Moyes, the brother of the hostess. The result was an acquaintance which culminated in a betrothal, with the consent and approbation of the relatives of both of the two persons most interested, and it .was decided that the wedding should take place as soon after Miss Emma’s graduation as possible. Accordingly this entire summer has seen active preparations in progress for the event, and an elegant trousseau has been prepared for the bride elect, nothing which could contribute either to her comfort or adornment having been omitted, and everything being chosen with a view of the bridal tour to Europe, which was expected to consume at least a year.
The wedding was to have taken place on the 24th inst., and cards of invitation were issued in time to permit friends from all parts of the country to be present at the homestead on that occasion; the preparations were of the meet perfect and elaborate description and it was intended that the happy event should eclipse anything of the kind ever known in that part of the State. Friends were procuring their presents, and it seemed as though a" more auspicious beginning of a life of married happiness would be impossible; but fate decreed a sad reversal of the picture, and that the cup of joy should be replaced by the chalice of sorrow. At a late hour on the 14th inst. a telegram was received announcing the sudden and dangerous illness of the groom, and calling for the immediate presence of his intended bride. Wild with anxiety, yet hoping against hope, Miss Emma complied with the request, and on Tuesday started for Buffalo, where she found her worst fears were confirmed, a council of physicians having pronounced the patient as beyond all hope of recovery. The meeting between the almost dying man and his heart-broken betrothed was too sacred to be made the subject of a newspaper paragraph; but the sequel is one which so nearly resembles romance as to be almost incredible. The groom expectant insisted that before his death he should be united with the woman'of his choice, and, accordingly, a clergyman having been summoned, that most solemn of all rites, a death-bed marriage, was celebrated. The scene as described by one of those present was never to be forgotten. The groom, supported in the arms of his devoted mother, feebly responded to the questions of the officiating minister; the bride, kneeling beside the bedside, with true womanly heroism repressed the anguish with which her heart was rent; an only sister watched with agony by her brother, and a few fond friends knelt in silent grief as the words were said which made one of those two, so soon to be parted by the hand of death. The doctor bequeathed his wife as a sacred legacy to his mother and sister, with whom she will henceforth reside, and to whom she is now bound by ties of love. He survived until one o’clock on the morning of the 19th, when he sank into a quiet slumber from which he never awoke. Dr. Moyes was a wealthy man, audit is said he has left his bride a handsome fortune. These particulars were communicated by one of those present on the occasion to a friend in this city, who consented to their publication in this form.— Detroit Free Frees, Sept. 28.
Light Observed in Grinding Hard Stones.
• At the agate-polishing establishments of Oldenburg, Germany, a phenomenon has been observed for the past century that has as yet, perhaps, attracted too little attention from scientific men. Under very powerful friction, such as can only be produced by the machinery at these works, hard stones become splendidly luminous and transparent through•out. In this establishment the axis of an undershot water-wheel reaches into the grinding-room, where four or five grindstones rotate over each is brought a gutter, so that a constant small stream of water pours upon the stone. The grindstones themselves are entirely faultless. They are about five feet in diameter, and make three revolutions in a second, so that the grinding surface that passes the object pressed against it amounts to thirty-two English miles per hour. When grinding the workman lies on his belly, his chest on a semi-cylindri-cal hollowed stool, his feet stretched out behind, braced against a post fixed in the floor. With both hands he presses the stone to be polished firmly against the grindstone, bringing his whole weight to bear Upon it. The muscular strength to bear is very great, and the work is performed with intermissions of equal times of rest and work. Some experiments were made in this workshop by Noggerath in broad daylight. He observed that as long as a stone of the hardness of quartz was pressed against the revolving grindstone there was produced an intense red light, which at the same time radiated around the object and emitted numerous sparks. This experience was the same with all hard stones, which appear almost like red-hot iron, and it really looks as if the hands must be severely burnt. All the stones become warm in grinding, but not very hot. Chalcedony gave a magnificent fiery red light; chrysopase a little red light; rock crystal a beautiful rose red;
coralline a superb red light, the color being evidently, increased by the natural hue of the stone. Amethyst gave a pale violet, while numerous opaque stones gave no light at all.
Romance of an Organ-Grinder.
On a corner curbstone in Atchison, Kan., sits an aged woman turning a handorgan and watching for the straggling pence that thoughtless children or benevolent men and women may toss into her lap. A very sad story is the history of the old woman’s later life. Less than a year ago she dwelt in a German city with an intelligent, promising family of three daughters and a son. Their circumstances were fair, and they were all happy. Kathrina, the eldest daughter, had a lover who had some time previously come to America to lay the foundation for the future prosperity and bliss of his Kathrina and himself. As is not unfrequently the case, honest merit received its due reward, and the young man did well in the land of his adoption. When he thought the proper time had. come he returned to the Fatherland for his sweetheart, to bring her back his bride. In their humble obscurity Kathrina and her people had lived lovingly together and were loth to separate; so they all determined to come to America together. The young man espoused Kathrina, and the mother and son and remaining sisters prepared to cross the wide sea. They took passage on the Ville du Havre. The rest may be imagined. The young husband and wife sleep at the bottom of the ocean, and the widow’s son and daughters went down with the others, and she alone of the little circle was picked up. She suffered, a maniac, in a New York mad-house for a while, then went forth friendless, desolate and poverty-stricken, yet struggling to increase the tenure of her miserable existence by a few years or months or days. And she sits an the curbstone daily, half-witted and half-fed, grinding away. — St. Louie Republican.
That Detroit Justice.
There is a Justice in Detroit who, if we credit what the Free Press of that city says, has made himself remarkable for the impressive solemnity of the sentences he passes upon prisoners. Here is that paper’s report of one of the latest cases in his court, a man who was arrestedjfor vagrancy: “ Can’t find nothing to do but loaf around the wharves and gallop up and down the alleys, eh?” remarked His Honor, as a young man was rushed out. “ I am a stranger in this town—deadbroke and nobody to borrow of,” replied the prisoner, his hair climbing up to 85 perpendicular as ’Bijah glared down upon him. During the momentary pause a boy in the alley was heard singing: “Not a shilling in my pocket— Palling hard against the stream!” “I can’t help it that you are dead broke,” said the Court. “I’d be glad if everybody owned a silver mine and two coach dogs. The officer says you have been wandering aimlessly around, sleeping on bales of hay, taking free lunches and making no effort to amass a fortune. You don’t seem to have any aim—any ambition.” “ Yes, I have,” replied the prisoner. “ Where is it, sir—where is it?” asked His Honor, leaning forward. “Didyou ever hear of Cicero taking free lunches? Did you ever read that Plato gamboled through the alleys of Athens? Tell me, sir, did you ever hear any one say that Demosthenes slept under a coal-shed or on a bale of hay? If you wanted to be a Plato there would be fire in your eye; your hair would have an intellectual cut; you’d step into a clean shirt and hire a mowing machine to pare those finger nails. Sir, you have got to go up for four months.”
The Size of Chimneys.
One great fault in the construction of chimneys is that they are too small. This is the more noticeable when coal is used, as the soot will soon fill up a small flue. For a six-inch pipe the general rule is to make the flue inside the size of a brick, four by eight inches, but a much better rule is to double this as the smallest size permissible. In order to estimate the size of a flue, we must first consider the number of stoves or vent-holes that are required. We will suppose that there are two rooms in the cellar, and that the chimney rests on the cellar bottom. We shall then need two pipe-holes in the chimney; say two on the first floor and two in the chambers. This makes six. Now six times sixty-four is 384 inches. That will make the chimney sixteen by twenty-four inches inside. Such a flue will carry all the smoke, and do a large amount of ventilation. In the wintertime, in case there is no stove in the room, a stopper should be used to prevent fire from falling soot. If the cookstove does not draw good, you may be pretty certain that the difficulty is a too small flue or too small a pipe. A nineinch stove should have a seven-inch pipe, as our soft coal soon fills the small pipe with soot. My cook-stove has a seveninch pipe and a flue twelve by twentyfour inches; and we never think of taking it down to clean it, as it never gets foul. A neighbor was very much troubled with a smoky stove and the want of a good draught, and two or three stoves had been condemned and sent back for the want of good baking quality; but it was discovered that the flue was too small, and filled with soot, and the only remedy was to reconstruct it. This time it was made large, and the difficulty at once disappeared. Stove-dealers begin to understand this, but they have a difficult time in convincing their customers of the fact.— “ Rural," in Chicago Tribune. It is stated that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company contemplate such a change of the face of their stock certificates as will very materially narrow the ability to raise the number of shares, if it should not entirely prevent that species of fraud. It is proposed to have the denomination in the center of the face of the certificate, printed in large letters in colored ink. With this guide any raised certificate would be detected by the receiver at a glance. A California baby recently died fatness.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Sunderland Pudding.—One cup of milk, one egg, one and a half cups flour. Stir well together, bake in cups about twenty minutes, and serve with sweet sauce.— Cultivator. Mucilage.—According to R. Bother, the following formula affords a mucilage which will keep in the hottest weather: Gum arabic, twelve Troy ounces; glycerine, eight fluid ounces; water, sixteen fluid ounces. Short Nut Cakes.—Two cups of sweet milk, three cups of sugar, five eggs, three tablespoonfuls of butter (level, not rounded), one and a half teaspoonfuls of soda, three of cream tartar, one spoonful of salt, a little nutmeg. Pickled Plums.—Seven pounds sweet blue plums, four pounds brown sugar, two ounces stick cinnamon, two ounces whole cloves, one quart vinegar. Put a layer of plums and spice alternately. Scald the vinegar and the sugar together; pour it on the plums; repeat for two or three days, the last time scalding plums and sirup together.
Preserving Grapes With Honey.— Take seven pounds of sound grapes on the stems; have the branches as perfect as possible and pack them snugly, without breaking, in a stone jar. Make a sirup of four pounds of honey and one pint of vinegar, with cloves and cinnamon to suit, or about three ounces of each is the rule. Boil them well together for twenty minutes and skim well; then turn while boiling hot over them and seal immediately. They will keep for years if you wish and are exceedingly nice. Apples, peaches and plums may be done in the same way. Peach Marmalade.—Take small and imperfect clings; they will not admit of being removed from the stone in pieces of uniform size and shape, but you can pare them, and after cutting from the stone place them in a porcelain kettle with one pint of water to two quarts of fruit; boil them until soft; take off and put through a sieve with a wooden potato masher. Then return to the kettle, adding one pint of sugar to every quart of prepared fruit; bring to a boil and seal while hot. It can be sealed without the addition of the sugar, and when eaten let it be sweetened with white sugar to the taste. It then greatly resembles fresh peaches. Cold Slaw.—With a sharp knife—there are knives made for the express purpose —cut up nicely a firm head of cabbage. Sprinkle it with as much pepper and salt aS you think necessary. Beat up the yolk of one egg, add a lump of butter the size of a walnut, a gill of cream, the same quantity of vinegar, a tablespoonful of sugar, an even teaspoonful of mustard, and a pinch of bruised celery seed. Heat these condiments, mixed together, in a tin cup; put the slaw in an oven, and pour the mixture over it boiling Ijot; stir it till well mixed, and the cabbage slightly coddled; then send to table hot. It may not be irrelevant to remark that the term cold, usually appended to slaw, has no reference to the dish being served up hot or cold, but is only an English corruption of kohl, the German name for cabbage. Cold slaw, therefore, merely signifies sliced cabbage. It is the most digestible form in which cabbage is dressed, besides being generally liked when well made, and peculiarly acceptable at seasons when vegetables are scarce.— Harper's Bazar.
Sheep Troughs and Racks.
We have insisted upon the importance of furnishing good troughs and racks for feeding sheep, whether under shelter or in the open air. Where lumber is plenty and cheap there will he no difficulty in so doing. In a wooded country troughs may be quickly made by any one who is handy with an ax by splitting any soft wood log of a suitable size, hollowing it smoothly out, boring tour holes for legs and placing it where wanted. Watering troughs are easily made thus, except that larger logs are used and only about one-third the diameter of the log is first hewed away before hewing out the trough. Legs should not be put in the water troughs unless they are small, since they will be apt to split and leak, but proper bearings and clamps should be placed under them to raise them to the required height. To make a rack, select good white oak poles six inches in diameter. Peel the bark and bore one and one-half inch holes slanting inward. Rive out suitable pieces, two feet long, smooth them and fit the ends so that they may be driven tight; put legs to it so that it may be of a proper height and you will have a rack that for all practical purposes will be as good as the best.—Western Rural.
Removing Odors From Milk.
If milk has the odor of garlic or other vegetable, drop a piece of charcoal—a two or three inch cube—into the pan or pitcher. Charcoal is an excellent absorbent and filter, and has been used for the above purpose with success. Bear in mind, in all treatment and handling of milk, that sweet milk is an exceedingly ephemeral article, bearing within itself to a greater degree than any other article of ordinary commerce the seeds of its own speedy and unavoidable dissolution, and this natural tendency to quick decay, inimical to the interests of the butter-maker, must not be facilitated by permitting it to absorb still other agents to hasten the process; but where milk has become tainted from any cause, the process of aeration may be improved by putting a cloth over the perforated pail and pouring the milk through that into it; purify milk in the pure, fresh air, away from all taint® of stable or house. To illustrate this tendency to decay in milk, we give the results of experiments with three lots of milk: The first was aerated as above and cooled down to 51 deg., which is the temperature of very cold spring water, and was perfectly sweet 120 hours; the second was shut up in a can at 98 deg., the temperature of fresh milk, and exposed to the heat of the sun; it was spoiled in seven hours. The third was exposed to bad odors and was putrified in forty minutes and rotten in seventy. As each vegetable and plant has a pe-
collar volatile oil of its own which gives to ft its aroma or scent—all butter-makers are familiar with the distinctive aroma of butter made largely from turnips, cabbages, onions, garlic, and even green clover has a peculiar oil, which makes the dry plant a better article for butter —it becomes necessary to act upon the inference to make the best butter. Butter contains 2 per cent, of these volatile oils, which are caprylin, caproin and butyrin, which form caprylic, caproic and butyric adds, the basis of decay in butter. The mingling of these oils would give the aroma to the butter; a predominant, pungent odor'where an article like garlic or turnips entered largely into the food of the animals would indicate at once the cause; others would be detected with more difficulty, but where Kentucky blue-grass and dried clover, and timothy and orchard grass are furnished to cows, with our ordinary soiling crops, wheat, rye, oats and corn, free from weeds, and such grain—particularly oats, bran and corn—as experience shall demonstrate to be profitable, we may feel that we have taken necessary and important steps toward making the best of butter.— Cor. Maryland Farmer.
Hints to Painters.
You are generally working in ill-ven-tilated shops and handling poisonous pigments the year round, one of the most dangerous of which is white lead; therefore, it is imperatively necessary that you be cleanly in your habits and person. If you eat with unwashed hands and wear clothing saturated with paint, you must expect to absorb large quantities of poison, and suffer in consequence, and perhaps bring on paralysis or kidney disease, which will render you, if not entirely unable to work, so weak and prostrated in mental and physical power as to be but a shadow of your former self, and suffer always from general weakness. All carriage painters should wash their hands before commencing or resuming work, and should do it as often as possible during the day. They should have a strong decoction of oak bark also to wash in, the tannin of which would not only harden the skin, but would protect it against the action of lead and other poisons. This Is where the British coach painters are ahead of us; you will always find plenty of oak bark in their shops. You should also keep your hair cut short, and wear a light cloth or paper cap while at work. Be sure that your hands are well washed before partaking of food. lam very sorry to say it, but the truth must be told sometimes, you often eat your noonday meal with unwashed hands. The mouth should be well rinsed with water before eating food. The body should be sponged as often as possible with cold water, and the hair should be thoroughly washed every day; you will find it better than hair oil. Your food should contain a large proportion of fatty substances; avoid all strong drink; drink milk in large quantities; rest or sleep five or six hours, and my word for it you will have no painter’s colic or cross wife.— Carriage Monthly.
Best Organs on Most Favorable Terms.
The new terms offered by the Mason & Hamlin Organ Company for the sale of their celebrated instruments create dissatisfaction with many dealers, who declare that they wil| greatly injure the business of selling other organs, especially by peddlers. By these terms a person is allowed to hire an organ, paying only a reasonable rent for it—having the privilege, of course, of returning it at any time after six months, or of purchasing it at any time. If the purchase is completed within a year the whole cost of the organ is only 5 to 10 per cent, more than if all cash had been paid at the beginning. Dealers say this is much too small a difference for the accommodation in time, and privilege of returning, given. The Mason & Hamlin Company are determined to try the experiment thoroughly at least, being confident that their organs will prove so attractive and satisfactory in use that scarcely any will ever be returned to them. Circulars with full particulars can be obtained by addressing them in Boston, New York, or Chicago.—Exch. Now that the season for husking bees approaches, the far-seeing young man will buy up all the red ears which are offered at ten cents apiece. —The school census of Milwaukee, just completed, shows a total of 94,405 souls namely, 47,198 males and 47,207 females.
Died Suddenly of Heart Disease.
How common is the announcement Thousands are suddenly swept into eternity by this fatal malady. This disease generally has its origin in impure blood filled with irritating, poisonous materials, which, circulating through the heart, irritate its delicate tissues. Though the irritation may at first be only slight, producing a little palpitation or irregular action, or dull, heavy, or sharp darting pains, -yet by and by the disease becomes firmly seated, and inflammation, or hypertrophy, or thickening of the lining membrane or of the valves, is produced. How wise to give early attention to a case of this kind. Unnatural throbbing or pain in the region of the heart should admonish one that all is not right, and if you would preserve It from further disease you must help it to beat rightly by the use of such a remedy as will remove the cause of the trouble. Use Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery before the disease has become too seated, and It will, by its great blood-purifying and wonderful regulating properties, effect a perfect cure. It contains medicinal properties which act specifically upon the tissues of the heart, bringing about a healthy action. Sold by all firstclass Druggists. HEART DISEASE CURED. Rockport, Spencer Co., Ind, Feb. 1,1874. Dr. R. V. Pibbcb, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y.: About two years ago I was afflicted with a disease of the heart, which at times created a pressure around it, almost causing suffocation. I saw an advertisement of your Golden Medical Discovery, recommending the same as a cure for disease of the heart I then bought half a dozen bottles of it, and after using three bottles I was entirely relieved and am now enjoying good health. Gratefully yours, Vitus Killian.
Chill Cure!—Safe and Subb.—Dr. Wilhoft’s Tonic is curative and protective. It will cure Chills and protect from further attacks. Its reputation is established. Its composition is simple and scientific. It contains no poison. It acts promptly and its effects are permanent. It is cheap, because it saves doctors’ bills. It is harmless, speedy in action and delightful in its effects. Try it and prove all that’s" said. Wheelock, Finlat & Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. Fob sale by all Dbuggists. Thb Northwestern Horse-Nail Co.’b “ Finished w Nail is the best in the world.
Popular Fallacy and Deceptions.— It is an infirmity of man to cling to the teachings of a past generation and to stubbornly resist the light of reform and progress. Health-reform and Temper-ance-growth are jealously watched over by the Poison Bitters compounders. One great prevailing deception of the present age is the impression that every human biped of either sex must be stimulated, and the poisoned chalice is labeled “Medicated Bitters,” the better to palliate their use and prolong the epidemic. One of the most zealous workers to cure this malady, Dr. Joseph Walker, Inventor and Proprietor of the famed California Vinegar Bitters, believes in making Bitters that are “ true medicine,” and advises the sick man to swallow a draught that will wash out the Leprosy of his disease. In this faith he is steadfast, and his Vinegar Bitters, though a contradiction to the general character of all other Bitters, are, as a great success and Zt/fe Vitalizer, evidence of one popular fallacy and corrected. 3 To have good health the liver must be kept in order. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator has bigcome a staple family medicine. Purely vegetable—Cathartic and Tonic—for all derangements of Liver, Stomach and Bowels; clears the complexion, cures sick-headache. Shun imitations. Try Sanford's Liver Invigorator. The Elmwood Collar is the most perfectfitting collar yet made. It is so close an Imitation of linen that it cannot be detected. The novelty that produces this effect is the folded edges, which, when worn over a scarf or tie, prevent the sharp, raw edge from showing as in other collars. It is for sale at all gents’ furnishing stores. — Brooklyn Union.
Ladles Desire What Men Admire.-And this little thing is beauty. What do we say is beautiful ? A transparent complexion'and a luxurious head of hair. What will produce these? Hagan's Magnolia Balm will make any lady of thirty appear but twenty; and Lyon’s Kathalron will keep every hair in its place, and make it grow like the April grass. It prevents the hair from turning gray, eradicates Dandruff, and is the finest Hair Dressing in the world, and at only half ordinary cost. If you want to get rid of Sallownesa, rimples. Ring-marks. Moth-patches, etc., don’t fbrget the Magnolia Balm, ladies. Rewamr-I will give *IOO for any case of flesh, bone or muscle ailment like Rheumatism, Bruise, Spavin, Stram’or Lameness, upon either man or animal, which tne Mexican Mustang Liniment will not cure when need according to directions. Near SOyears has proved it to be the most wonderful remedy for Neuralgia, Warns, Swellings, Enlarged Joints, Hoof All, Screw worm, Sting, Caked Breasts, etc., ever discovered. Who will let a horse limp when Mustang Liniment will cure it? Who will let a child cry and suffer from bruises or chilblains when the Mustang will prevent It ? Who will pay large doctors’bills when they can buy Mexican Liniment for 50 cts. and $1.00? It Is wrapped In a Bteel-plate label, signed “G. W. Westbrook, Chemist." Wm. E. Everson, Agent. Founded on a Rock t—The disappointed adventurers who have from time to time attempted to run their worthless potions against Plantation Bittees vow that they cannot understand what foundation there Is for Its amazing popularity. The explanation is simple enough. The reputation of the woridrenownetl tonic is founded upon a Rock, the Rook of Experience.
lit Amuican Kat ui YigeUNa Chopper. [From the Farm and Fireside.] “Herewith we present an illustration of a most useful little machine, designed to serve several useful purposes in the kitchen, such as chopping sausagemeat, pie-meat, hash, fish, fruit and vegetables. A glance at the cut will give the reader a general Idea as to the mode of operating the machine. Being compact, it takes but little space, and can be used on a Kitchen table, taking about the same space as an ordinary chopping tray. The American meat and vegetable chopper has been long enough before the public to be thoroughly tested, and the volume of praise that has been bestowed on it from various sources must convince all that this Invention is almost a necesssity In every family. This chopper is made in larger sizes for the use of butchers, and these have also become very popular." These Choppers are made In seven different sizes—four sizes for Family use and three sizes for Butchers —and are sold by the principal dealers in Hardware, House Furnishing Goods and Agricultural Implements throughout the country. For Descriptive Circular and Price List address D. A. VEWTON CO., 110 Chambers Street, New York, umr® To sell the HOME SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE. PRICE $35. Reader!! yon can mak< money selling the “ HOME SHUTTLE” whethei yon are EXPERIENCED In the business or not. If you wish to buy a SEWING MACHINE for familj use. our circulars will show you howto save money. Address JOHNSON, CLARK & CO., Chicago, 111.
HealthW Mangr RNS lI4DEARBORNST ~
St. Louis. 206 Ollvc-st.: Milwaukee. 107 Wisaonsln-Bt, Pamphlet, explanatory. A~DAY7<SUARANTEED (l ■>K «^. our . WELL AUCER AND DRILL in good territory. HIGHEST r . ■ TESTIMONIALS FROM GOVERNORS ||OF lOWA, ARKANSAS AND DAKOTA. ■■ MF Catalogues free. W. GILES, St Louie, Mo. AIIB “Ladies’ Friend" contains 7 articles II UK needed by every Lady—Patent Spool- ■ Holder, Scissors, Thimble, etc.—guaran- ______ teed worth $1.60. Sample Box, by mall, B| EUf 50 cents. Agents wanted. PLUMB & CO M HEW 108 S. Eighth street, Philadelphia, Pa. U Bristol Clothes Washer. 152 LaSalle-st., Chicago. AGENTS WANTED. Send for circulars. Weoffei EXTRA INDUCEMENTS. KUAINT, KUEER & KURIOUS Is the valuable book we give to all. Full of facts, figures and fun: 64pages; SOpictures. Inclosctwo stamps and address Blackie & Co., 746 Broadway, N. Y. FIVE MYSTERIOUS PICTURES. Queerly Concealed Beauties. Strange Devices. Puzzling Problems. FREE TO ALL. Address, with stamp, ADAMS & CO., 4 Pearl street, Boston. A MONTH—Agents wanted every- | I where. Business honorable and,flrst- ■ 111 class. Particulars sent free. Address ■FU W JOHN WORTH A CO. St. Louis, Mo. CUSHING’S MANUAL Of Parliamentary Practice. Rules of proceeding and debate in deliberative assemblies. An indiepeneable hand-book for every member of a deliberative body, and the authority in all the States. “ The most authoritative expounder of American parliamentary law."—Chas. Sumner. Price 65 cents. Sent by mall on receipt of price. Address THOMPSON, BROWN A SO., Boston, Mass. WATCH EREE nrin TIIIMI 1® first-class business KeAU best book that has been placed In the hands of Agents this year. Men who can manage tenitory will be given Extr* Term«. Will pay SALARY If THIS TEA ©—The choicest in the world.—lmporters’ I £M U prices—largest company in America—sta- ■ ~ article pleases everybody—Trade continually increasing—Agents wanted everywhere—best inducements—don’t waste time—send for Circular to Robert Wells, 48 Vesey St., N. Y-, P. O. Box 1287. f* Fl 111 EATERS THOROUGHLY CURED. 11U111 M Cheap, quick; no suffering. 6 yrs II ■ IHI wonderful success. Describe case. W B ■■■ Dr. Armstrong, Berrien, Mich, g Assents WanteiErWsl fEOfi JMEn DAY Commission or S3O a week Sab at once to COWEN A CO., ElgMth street. New York.
CII _ 1 Go through the Ague perforXnil kO niance day after day, fill all WjJLCWxUyour vltafity Is usS up and your health permanently rulnW H T* Tl take a bottte ot D U.,1 llßress Fever Tonic. YTfT aa + and break up the fearful malat once. Cures of Ague Kd vv VMiV warranted by the KreM Manufacturing Co. Ctactanati, O. T 7 The Ague uses up the vital forces fasW A TTTWT ter than any other comJfc Vw IM ptalnG-don’t allow it to Kre** run on, but break It up in Tonic? Stretch TIME, contains a box of Pills Try this remedy. FREE, in each wrapper WT A TZ"V and is warranted to cure UxIAK AGUE. This remedy is manufacturedby Kmm Maiiulbctiiriiig Co* Cineinnoti. O*
Business Education CHICAGO
YoungYlen desiring to fit themselves for business Will be Interested to know that H. B. Bryant’s Chicago Bumness CoU«re is the largest institution of the kind In America. Three months’ tuition, with all the ad. vantages of this great business training-school, costs but $35; six months S6O, and one year SIOO. Mr. H. B. Bryant, the original rounder of the chain of colleges, has withdrawn as a partner from all the schools of the chain in order to give his whole time to building up in Chicago an Institution for in advance of any business school heretofore In existence In this country, and this purpose Is being rapidly accomplished. The terms are put at a low rate, being based upon a large patronX Circulars have been prepared giving the currlcnof study, which will be sent on application to
H B BRYANTS
Best Organs for Easiest Payments The MASON Sc HAMLIN ORGAN CO., winners of THREE HIGHEST MEDALS and DIPLOMA OF HONOR at PARIS. 1867, and VIENNA, 1873, and HIGHEST AWARDS IN AMERICA ALWAYS, respectfully announce that, having greatly increased their facilities for manufacture, they now offer their celebrated Cabinet organs, not only for cask exclusively, as formerly, but will also rent them with privilege of purchase, or sell for payments running through one to four years. One may rent an organ and thoroughly test it before completing its purchase: If paid for in the course of one year the cost will be only five to ten per cent, more than the lowest price for cash on delivery. The following table shows amounts and times of payment on several plans, running through one year, for a FIVE OCTAVE DOUBLE REED ORGAN, style T, with Five Stops, Vox Humana, etc. Other styles are at proportionate rates, Cash Price, $l3O. Time Price, $143. Rent 3 Mos., $14.30. Paym’t in In Thrge In Six In Nine Twelve Advance. Months. Months. Months. Months. No. 1 sll3O sl4 30 sl4 30 sl4 30 SBS 80 No. 2 28 60 .... 28 60 .... 85 09 No. 3 28 24 28 24 28 24 28 24 28 24 No. 4 71 50 16 45 . 16 45 M 45 16 45 No. 5 69 72 .... 67 96 No. 6 69 90 .... 69 90 - sl4 30 in advance, and $10.44 each month for Jlo ‘ 1 twelve months. Organs will be furnished on these plans, either through agents or directly, to almost any part of the country. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES, with full descrlptiona of the organs made by this Company, and clrcu. lars showing in detail the different plans of payment on which they are now offered, sent free. Address MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO.. Boston, New York or Chicago. Livingstone Is Dead I For 30 years millions have intently watched his eKniLousyetnEßOio stbvgolf.s and grand trijMPiis; and now they eagerly desire the Complete Life-History of this world-renowned hero and lENßFactor, which unfolds also the curiosities md wealth of a wild and wonderful country. We publish just that history from his birth to ils burial. Now ready. 2,oooagents wanted quickly. ine agent sold 184 first six days ; another, 196. first reek. For particulars address H. A. W. Blackburn, 76 Griswold street, Detroit, Mich-
Why is Dyspepsia go General I Simply because It Is neglected or maltreated. Strike directly at the cause. Remove the acrid humors which engender it, from the stomach and bowels, with Tarrant’s Effervescent Seltzer Aperient, and indigestion, with all its painful concomitants, la cured. Sold by every druggist.
ECONOMY.
Evervfntelngent person i s aware that a 1 arge amount of money is wasted and thrown away every year in Clothing. Silk. Laces, Kid Gloves, etc., which become soiled with Grease, Faint, Tar, etc., and are laid aside not half worn. There 18 no longer any excuse for this fearful waste, as SAPOLIENE Will clean all kinds of Clothing, Silks, Laces, Kiel Gloves, etc., etc. It removes Paint, Grease and Tar instantly, and without the least injury to the finest fabric. Makes Old Clothes Look Like New! SOLD BY AGENTS AND DRUGGISTS. Agents Wanted Jackson street. Chicago, HlASTHMA. Pophani’s Asthma Specific* Belief in ten minutrh. M I have been greatly relieved by your Asthma Specific, aud believe its continued use will cure me.” Isaac M. Hart, Newton, la. Vorsale by Druggists. $1 per box, by mall, postpaid. TRIAL PACKAGE FREE. Address, inclosing stamp, T. POPHAM A CO., Philap annua, Pawn,
ABENTB WANTED latest and best Family Medical Guide-giving remedies for every known disease. Also, THE FARMERS’ AND MECHANICS’MANUAL, by Geo. E. Waring, Jr. Gives rules, calculations and diagrams for workingmen of every trade. 506 pages: 211 engravings. Sells at Bight. W. SCOULLAB, 108 West Madison St., Chicago. ADVERTISERS! am. Newspaper Union repre £X seats over 1,500 papers, divided into 7 subJi visions. Send 3-cent stamp for Map showing location of papers, with combined and separate lists, giving estimates for cost of advertising. Address 8. P. SANBORN, 114 Monroe street, Chicago, 111. Texas Bureau of Immigration. Printed and written information sent free: reduced passage and free homesteads secured. Address _„ wt J&Sfr & BOBERTSON, Houston, Texas; W. G. KINGSBURY, 404 Walnut St., St. Louis, Mo., Or C. W. MATHEWS, Atlanta, Ga. ci Tram jss ?• Hi « h Bria s e p - n - y - W la fU ■ (City, byP.O.moneyorderorregißtered 11111 ■ II letter, for quick and permanent relief ftw from Chills and Fever without quinine. AGENTS ™ RMTMTStfS w other article. One agent made Sv 39 in 31 days. Recommended by Am. AgricuL turlst, and over 100,000 families using them. Ciboulabs fbbb. CLEGG ft CO., 20 Cortlaudt St, N. Y. Awarded the Highest Medal at Vienna. SUPPLY THB TBADX WITH CHROMOS AND FRAMES, Stereoscopes and Views, Albums, Granhoscopes, Photographic Materials. Photo-Lantern Sudan a specialty. HOG RIIGER. Tod,c * Bol<L ■'£. Hardware Dealer. Sell Them. Ringerjl, Rln(r.pr lOOeOcts, Tonga g 1,25, by mail, post paid, ■ Circular, free. Address H. W. Hill SCO. Decatur, 111, To Millers and Engine Owners. To nearly doubleyour steampower and save fuel also, address J. F. TALLANT, Burlington, lowa ONEY Making Employment, Best ever IVA offered. Address M. N. LOVELL, Erie, Pa <PQ/hPayaroritMirinSdayw. Agent.wanted. Addrea., with qrOVz .tamp, BvaMaS Bso>*. Sobols. Saws, Boekford, 111.
V W * C, - gga ' Dr. J. ciifornia Viuegar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the native herbs found on the lower ranges nf the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked, What is the cause of the unparalleled success of Vinegar BitTERst” Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient recovers his health. They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in th® history of the world has * medicine been oompo untied possessing the remarkable qualities of Vinbgab Bitters in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonia relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Tavar and Visceral Organs, in Bilious Diseases. The properties of Dr. Walker’s Vijtxgab Blttbrs are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilio“*» Grateful Thousands proclaim Vinegar Bitters the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones aro not destroyed by mineral poison or a other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious. Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout oui entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove the darkcolored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitatation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. Scrofiila, or King’s Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitutiona Diseases, Walker’s Vinegar Bitters nave shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.— Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of Walker’s V inegar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of file system in a short time by the use of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. No system of medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelminitics will free the system from worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, tn young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement ie soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores: cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. k. h. McDonald & co., Druggists and Gen. Agfa., Sen Francisco, California, and cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts., N. Y. Sold by nil DructKi.ts ’><l Dealer*.
HALCS patent standard SAFES AT "HARD PAN PRICES. HALL’S SAFE & LOCK CO. OAt/o AG O , /Z- L..
Codey’s Lady’s Book Offers to and will give to every Subscriber, whether Single or In a Club, who pays in Advance for 1875, and remits direct to this office, A Copy of “THE RESCUE,” The Handsomest Chromo ever offered. For Circular, containing terms, etc., address L. A. GODEY, N. E. comer Sixth and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa, AGENTS 2 ALL’SCram’s Historical Reversible United States and World, new Sectional State Maps, Charts, Pictures, Frames. Novelties, etc., sell everywhere. I have the best-selling line of goods In America for Agents and Canvassers. Circulars fre -. Send at once to GEO. F. CRAM, 66 Lake street, Culcago. ~ A.N.K. ~ 477-R. X.L. rrHIS PAPER is Printed manttractured 1 by G.B. KANE* CO.. 1«1 Dearbottret. Chicago For sale by AtN. Kkllooo. It Jackson Sts Chicago
