Jasper Republican, Volume 1, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 July 1875 — Page 4
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
Cut- worms are catting corn in the vicinity of Corydon. Terre Haute is talking park with a fountain attachment Hoe cholera is carrying off hogs at a fearful rate in Pike County. Seventeen attorneys live ofl the legal quarreling of Harrison County. A baht) of gypsies are peddling “fate” in the vicinity of Bowling Green. A ditch seven miles long is to be cut in Tipton County at a cost of SO,OOO. Centennial societies are being organized in several counties of the State. Rushvillb is infested with thieves who help themselves to gold-headed canes. Cass County claims to be better financially fixed than any other in the State. The apple crop is reported from all parts of the State to be a complete failure this year. Job Gardner, a farmer, had his pockets picked of $l6O at the Goshen races the other day. During a heavy storm at Berno a few evenings ago a large show-window in a drug store was blown in and a clerk fatally injured. In the excavation for the new Terre Haute gas-holder a number of very beautiful shells, Indian beads, petrifactions, coal and other objects of interest have been unearthed.
The detectives of Indianapolis are accused of having released three prisoners arrested for robbery and receiving stolen goods on the payment of S3OO. The affair is to be investigated. The wife of Jesse Artis, a colored man living in Lost Creek Township, Vigo County, had her throat aut a few nights ago while she lay in bed. At last accounts her murderer had not been discovered. Charles Ford was found two miles south of Borne City the other morning, where he had lain since the night of the 20th, having taken a large dose of morphine. The supposed cause is separation from his wife through the influence oi her friends. Charles Ageno, a clerk In the wholesale confectionery establishment of Heing Bros., at Terre Haute, while swinging in the rear of the house of one of his employers the other evening was thrown twenty feet by the breaking of one of the ropes, and fatally injured. The following postal changes were made in the State during the week ending June 26, 1875: Established—Beechwood, Crawford County, Mrs. Sarah J. Jenkins, Postmistress. Discontinued—Canby, Putnam County; Fish Creek, Steuben County. Postmasters appointed—Alert, Decatur County, Miss Jennie Taylor; Slate, Jennings County, Charles N. Taubman. As the Toledo train of the Flint & Pere Marquette Railroad was approaching Leonard’s Crossing, a few miles north of Highland, a few mornings ago, a man was observed by the engineer standing about twelve feet from the track. Just before the train reached him he ran up to the track, laid his head upon the rail, and before the speed of the train could be checked it had passed over the man, severing his head entirely from his body. His name was Oliver W. Armstrong. He was twenty-eight years old, and had previously threatened suicide.
In an appealed liquor case at Indianapolis the other day, under the new License law, Judge Perkins held that it was not within the ordinary judgment of the Commissioners to decide whether the applicant was a fit person to be connected with sale of liquors, but that such fitness or unfitness must be judged by sound legal discretion upon charges made and proved. Concerning remonstrance, it must be one by voter or voters, in writing, who must specify with reasonable certainty the grounds of unfitness, and, if they do not in themselves constitute legal unfitness, the Commissioners may strike them out or refuse to hear proof of them. If they constitute legal unfitness they must be legally proved, and, if legally proved, license shall be refused. Charles Pbobst, living near Terre Haute, owned two valuable horses, and a thief caught one of them, put on a bridle, and rode away. The other horse then began neighing and afcting so strangely as to attract Mr. Probst’s attention. Seeing that one horse was missing he went to the field, when the remaining animal began to neigh loudly. Presently Mr. Probst heard an answering neigh from the missing horse far in the distance. Saddling the remaining horse he at once gave chase, the two horses, singularly enough, keeping up that kind of horse language at frequent intervals. He galloped over hills and through gullies in this manner for about two miles, when a turn in the road brought him in sight of the thief and the horse. A last neigh disgusted the thief, and, abandoning his stolen animal, he took to the woods on foot.
Some time ago J. R. Buell and Susan R. Gilbert, residents of Indianapolis, took out a license and in presence of certain witnesses and themselves solemnized a ceremony of marriage and took each other for husband and wife respectively, so long as the union of love and life shall last. They were subsequently indicted for maintaining an adulterous connection. It was claimed that the marriage was not legally solemnized, and that, therefore, the parties were living in open violation of the law; but Judge Chapman held the marriage, although irregular, to be valid, since the parties themselves believed it to be so, and lived together as husband and wife. The Judge, in concluding his decision, said: “I conclude that the defendants contracted a valid marriage, such a contract as can only be dissolved by death or decree of a competent court; that their agreement to dissolve the contract by their own consent, incase their respective love natures failed to harmonize, is in law void and in morals vicious; that if the parties should act under this stipulation for a termination of the marriage contract and thereafter enter into a similar marriage contract and relationship with other parties they would be guilty of bigamy; and that good morals mid sound political ethics, as well as the statute law, require that they shall be held firmly to the marriage contract they have assumed, and to all the duties and responsibilities the law attaches thereto; mid, therefore, that the parties are not guilty as charged n the indictment"
Music by Electricity.
The acme of machine music appears to have been reached in an ingenious instrument which was exhibited to a select few at Philadelphia one day last week. The apparatus reads notes and plays upon an organ with absolute correctness of tune and touch, the only assistance given it by the operator being to feed in the end of a roll of music and start the machinery in motion. Organs have been played by electricity before, but.the only part performed by the electric fluid has been to transmit the power from a distant bank of keys to open the valves of the instrument. Such mi electrical organ has been exhibited in London for some time past. Inthe Schmoele instrument the electric current is endued with a seeming intelligence and distinguishes the notes in the same way that a blind man does—by feeling. Marvelous as this appears at first thought, it is simple enough. The score is written on a long roll of stout paper by cntting boles through it in the form of squares and parallelograms. The reading instrument, which is about as large as a sewing-ma-chine, is provided with a multitude of small brass fingers, each of which is connected by a wire with the pipe of the organ which it operates. The roll of music is fed in over a brass tube. When the fingers rest on the paper no electric current is transmitted, because paper is a nonconductor; but whenever they fall into the holes cnt in it they touch the brass below, the current is transmitted and the sound prodnced.
The length of the note is governed by the length of the slit in the paper. A noiseless fellow-machine, run by wind conducted through a pipe from the organ, works the feeding apparatus. To aid in producing orchestral effects, drums, cymbals, bells, etc., are added to the ordinary pipe organ and operated by electricity in the same manner as the pipes. A greatly increased volume of much richer harmonic combinations can be made by this instrument than it is possible for a single performer to produce upon an organ, in consequence of the fact that the performer has only his ten fingers, while the electrical machine has 200, and can strike as many notes at once as desired. All the notes on the organ that can be combined into a chord can be brought out together. The overtures to “ Scmiramide” and “William Tell” were performed last evening with pleasing effeqj;. As the reading instrument is mechanically accurate, and the score correctly written, there were, of course, no false notes. It was obviously machine music, however, but machine music of the highest order, and might readily have been mistaken for the performance of a well-drilled but rather spiritless orchestra. The inventors hope soon to apply their device to a piano. —Philadelphia Paper.
Balloon Reconnoisance.
In his history of the civil war in America the Count de Paris relates the following anecdotih, “ While the two hostile armies observed each other between Arlington and Fairfax Court-House a balloon was sent up every evening to reconnoiter the surrounding country. It was the only means of getting sight of the enemy. As soon as we rose above the primeval trees which surrounded the former residence of Gen. Lee the view extended over an undulating country, covered with- trees, dotted here and there by little clearings, and bordered on the west by the long range of the Blue Ridge, which recalls the first lines of the Jura. Thanks to the brilliant light which illumines the last of an autumn day in America, the observer could distinguish the slightest details of the country, which appeared below us like a map in relief. But in vain does the eye se6k the apparent signs of war. Peace and tranquillity seem to reign everywhere. The greatest attention is necessary to discover the recent clearings, at the edge of which a line of reddish earth marks the new fortifications. However, as the day declines we see to the south little bluish lines of smoke, rising gently above the trees. They multiply by groups and form a vast semicircle. It is the Confederates cooking their supper. You may almost count the roll of their army, for every smoke betrays the kettle of a half-section. Further off the steam of a locomotive flying toward the mountain traces, by a line drawn through the forest, the railroad which brings the enemy their provisions. At the same moment the strain of military music is heard below the balloon. All the clearings where we sought in vain to discover the Federal camp are filled by a throng coming out of the woods that surround them. This throng arranges itself and forms in battalions. The mgsic passes in front of the ranks with that peculiar march which the English call the ‘ goose step.’ Each battalion has two flags, one with the national colors, and the other with its number and the arms of its State. These flags are dipped, the officers salute, the Colonel takes command and a moment after all the soldiers disperse; for it is not an alarm nor a prelude of a march forward which has brought them thus together, but the regular evening parade.”
The Grape-Cure.
The grape treatment has been employed with favorable results by patients suffering from bronchitis and consumption in its pretubercular stages. It is especially practiced at Meran, in the Tyrol, whither large numbers of German, Russian and Italian invalids resort to experience its benefits. The patient begins by eating one or two pounds of grapes each day, dividing the quantity into three portions, one of which is taken an hour before breakfast, another before dinner —which occurs between twelve and one o’clock—and the third in the afternoon or evening. After two or three days the quantity is increased by half a pound daily, until it reaches three or four pounds. This amount often proves sufficient, the patient finding, as a rule, that he gains in weight and strength upon it Chronic liver complaints, especially when due to excess in wine-drinking, are, it is said, notably relieved by this treatment, the potash salts in the fruit supplying the element which the wine loses in the process of manufacture. Hepatic dropsy has also been mitigated in this way. One feature in favor of the “cure” is that no exclusive diet is prescribed. In fact the grapes themselves are so nourishing that other food is scarcely needed. A Kentuckian who won’t mortgage his farm and go barefooted for the sake of owning a short-horn heifer is no patriot.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Borax Hair Wash.— To cleanse the hair and scalp: Borax, one ounce; camphor, one half ounce; boiling water, one quart. When cold filter for use. Burt Carr.— One pint of milk, one quart of flour, one quart oi berries, one cup of sugar, two eggs, a little salt, butter size of an egg, one teaspoonful of soda or three of yeast-powder. Currant Marmalade.—Pick over the fruit nicely, and allow mi equal quantity of white sugar; put a layer of each alternately in a preserving-kettle and boil ten minutes, or boil them the same length of time in a rich sirup boiled like candy. ' A simple mode of keeping butter in warm weather is to set over the dish containing it a large flower pot or unglazed earthenware crock, inverted. Wrap a wet cloth around the covering vessel, and place the whole where there is a draft of air.
A dark house is always an unhealthy, mi ill-aired house and a dirty house. Want of light stops growth and promotes scrofula, rickets, etc., among the children. People lose their health in a dark house; and if they become ill they cannot get well in it. Lamb Patties.—Mince cold cooked meat, season with pepper, salt and nutmeg. Line a pie pan with good rich crust, put in your meat and some rich gravy or bits of flour and butter worked together, nearly fill the dish with water, cover with a crust and bake.
Common Preserved Cherries.—To twelve pounds of good cherries, stoned, add six pounds of nice brown sugar; cook slowly for two hours. These are very good for common use, but wilk not keep so long as where one pound of sugar is allowed for one pound of fruit. Ginger Cookies.—One teacupful of butter, one teacupfal of molasses, one and a half teacupfuls of sugar, one teacupful of sour milk or cream, a tablespoonful of ginger, and one tablespoonful of soda dissolved in warm water. After the rest is added, roll and bake quickly. An excellent, Well-recommended pickle for caring hams is made of one and a hilf pounds of salt, half a pound of sugar, one-half ounce of saltpeter and one-half ounce of potash. Boil all together till the dirt from the sugar has risen to the top and is skimmed. Pour it over the meat and leave the latter in the solution for four or five weeks. Scalloped Veal.—Take three veal steaks, and boil very soft; take them out and save the water in which they were boiled. Chop the meat very fine; put into a deep dish, with alternate layers of the meat and bread crumbs, salt and pepper each layer, and add small lumps of butter. When the bowl is quite full add the liquor, of which there should be about a pint, and a teacup of milk. Yorkshire Cakes.—One pound of flour, one-fourth of a pound of butter well rubbed in, one-fourth pound of currants; beat one egg to a froth, add a teacupful of cold milk, and mix well with the flour with a wooden spoon to alight paste. Lift t out with the spoon to a floured board, cut it into six pieces, and notch them around the edge with a knife. Then have the oven very hot, and put them in immediately; in a few minutes they will be done; take them out, split them, and butter them. The only way to have them light is to avoid touching them with the hands. —The Queen.
Should Batter Be Washed?
We have known excellent butter-mak-ers wash their butter thoroughly, and we have seen others who were accustomed to make butter of a prime article refrain from washing it. The keeping qualities of butter depend principally upon two things—first, the buttermilk must all be got out; and second, the grain of the butter should be kept as perfect as possible. It is an excellent practice, as soon as the butter has fairly come, to stop churning, then drain the buttermilk from the chum through a hair sieve into a tub, after first wetting the sieve in hot water and then in cold, and then the butter will not stick to it. Let the butter remain in the chum after the buttermilk is drained out, then wash it by pouring the water upoD it from a sufficient height and stream of sufficient size to force its way through the butter. Keep moving the stream about upon the butter as it keeps rising upon the water. Pour in water enough to dilute what little buttermilk there is in it to that extent that it will not be necessary to change the water, and the result will be that you will have rinsed the buttermilk all out of the butter without injuring or mashing a single grain. In working in the salt the ladle, or worker, whatever it is, should never be allowed to slip on the butter, but to go on at the butter in a pressing or rolling motion. If allowed to slip on the butter it will make it look shiny, destroying the grain ahd injuring its keeping qualities. One ounce to a pound is hardly enough to pack to hold; and then some churnings of butter will work out more salt than others, to which will have to be added more before packing.— H. T. Herald.
Willie’s Nap.
What do you think happened one day last week to our Willie? I supposed he was with his father, and his father thought he was with me. After awhile I walked out and called him. No answer. Walking on to the meadow I saw something lying on the ground in the distance. Soon I knew it was Willie, and not far from him was our terrible old ram, quietly feed-, ing. Willie did not move. My scream brought his father, and my heart stood still as he lifted our dead boy, as I sup posed, from the ground. His eyes opened and he said: “ Papa, is it you ?” “ Yes, my son; what’s the matter? Did old Bill knock you down?” “ Yes, sir, he’s been a bunting me ever since you sent me to the house.” “ But that was more than an hour ago, my son; he would have killed you.” “ I know it, papa, but don’t you ’member telling me that if ever Bill bunted me I must lay right down and ’tend I was ’sleep?” “ Yes, and did you?” “ Yes, sir. First he ran. He knocked me down. I shut my eyes and never moved, Then he’d eat grass awhile. By
and by I got ap and run a little farther. He’d knock me down again. I’d shut my eyes and lay right still till he’d go to eating again, and after awhile I got so tired I sped I got asleep sure enough, but as long as I was awake I ’membered what you said mid ’tended I was asleep.”— Ex change. It was an Ancient Custom of fee Spartans, in order to inculcate among their youth an abhorrence of intemperance mid its kindred vices, to make their slaves drunk wife wine in fee public marketplaces, so that the rising generation, upon whom would some day devolve the honor and safety of the Lacedemonian Republic, might see before them all the ghastly details of the drunkard’s disgrace, his loss of reason and of physical strength. ’Twere well, perhaps, today , could some of our young men contemplate a similar instructs lve lesson drawn from the life, showing them, by a sharply-drawn contrast, the advantages and true loveliness of abstinence and virtue. For such as appreciate these, Vinegar Bitters is fee beverage best adapted, it being purely a vegetable draught, devoid of alcohol or mineral poisons, and possessing all fee virtues, but none of fee damning curses, of fee different poisons which year by vear are sweeping away thousands of dollars and lives. 42 Wilhoft’b Anti-Periodic or Fever and Ague Tonic.— This invaluable and standard family medicine is now a household word and maintains its reputation unimpaired. It is indorsed by the medical profession, and prescribed daily in the Charity Hospital and other hospitals in New Orleans. Wilhoft’s Tonic is thus highly recommended by the leading medical men of the country, and is worthy of such indorsement. Whbblook, Finlat & Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. For sale by all Druggists.;
Almost every newspaper man in America has transacted more o( less business with Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Advertising Agents, of New York, and we venture to say that not one ever received any unfair or dishonest treatment at their hands. —Galena (III.) Gazette. ' A gentleman afflicted with the chronle rheumatism says: “No description of my case can convey the vast amount of benefit I have received from the use of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment. I believe it is the best article In fee world for rheumatism.” If a horse has a good constitution and has once been a good horse, no matter how old or how much run down he may be, he can be greatly improved, and In many respects made as good as new, by a liberal use of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders. Grocers who sell Prassing’s White Wine Vinegar will never hear a complaint about it. —However aghast some “ fine ladies" may regard the idea of working in the garden I consider it one of the most wholesome means of exercise within oar reach. Wholesome especially because we have an object—and an interesting one in taking this exercise—which is the growth of flowers and plants. Before commencing work in the garden put on a pair of worn-out leather gloves, a broad brimmed sun hat and a pair of good stout hoots; if not stout then wear a pair of thin gum over-shoes. The dampness of the soil is very liable to produce a “ cold.” Don’t be afraid that the labor will hurt you, even if you should become very tired; on the contrary, it will strengthen you, give you rosy cheeks, and may add years to your life. There is not a spring that Ido not spend two weeks at least at work in the garden, and I tell you that to me there is nothing so agreeable, I may say fascinating; and this feeling is doubled when I see the fine flowers and good vegetables growing and put upon the table from my own handiwork.— Margaret, in Germantown Telegraph. —Mush Waffle*—One quart of flour, one pint of corn-meal mush, two eggs, a tablespoonful of butter and a little salt. Make a thin batter with sweet milk. Separate the eggs as for rice waffles; it makes them, lighter.
All the advancement In science, art and civilization has not prevented children from kicking holes through the toes of their S shoes. Only SILVER TIPS Prevent this. Try them. Have yon seen the |SM9MpaagnMS| CABLE SCRHW W J KF,#B 23 Boots and Shoes? Millions are being worn; all say tliev are the P-IW.wBuZ’J easiest and best Shoe ever made. Look out for the Patent Stamp. All other* are base imitations. 0 d.qn per day at some. Terms Free. Address tfiO P JfiiwU bio. Stiksoh A Co., Portland. Maine. A A Bristol Cards, 5 tints, with name, 20c., posttcv paid, by J. B. Hosted, Nassau, Benss. Co., N. Y. fflil A per Day. Agents wanted, either sex. CapiSbiUtal required 15c. City Novelty Co.,Buffalo,N.Y. CHAoiO C per d*." Bend for Chromo Cstalague, l])lw ** iPauJ. H. Bur roan's dons, Boston. Mass. 17VERY FAMILY WANTS IT. Money in it. HiSold by Agents. Address M.N.LOVELL, Erie, Pa. paaa a month to Agents everywhere. Address & £ U ÜbXCELSIOB M’F’G CO., Buchanan, Mich. 'KTE’W XTOVELTIES for Agents. Address iX JElff ll H. Miller A Co., 54 LaSalle-st,Chicago. A»A A DAY. SOW TO MAKE IT. SampU «b/5U FREE. COE. YONOEdt CO.. St. Lout*. Mo. d»QA PER WEEK. Balaiy sure. Circular free. Address CRYSTAL CO., Indianapolis, Ind. THE WEEKLY New Years, Address Thb Burr, N.Y. STI DI PI A Yhs Florida Agriculturist. 10c. for specimen. Association—meeting of 1875—25 cts. Address Wai,toi A Co., Jackaonvllle, Fla. Say where you saw this. I AAA to 10,000 Dollars in 8 months foi 111 111 male or female who will address at once, |UU WF.MoOmbeb A Co.,Berrien Springs,Mich IA A A AGENTS WANTED. Addrwa 111 111 GOOnSPEED’S EMPIRE BIBLE, ,U U U BOOK AND MAP HOUSE. Chicago. DL C D OAR ET Chicago Suburban Lots at * Wtf OAlaEa |IOO each—sls down and $5 monthly for balance—within a short distance of city limits, with hourly trains and cheap fare. Send forcircular. IRA BROWN, 144 La Salle St., Chicago. IIL A GENTS WANTED for Lossing's Centennial J\. History of the United States, written down to 1875. Outselling any other book now offered. Send for circulars. Address W. E. BLISS, Toledo, Ohio. HTANTED, AGENTS - Everywhere, for the TV Centennial History—BOO pages, *44) engravings, selling well. AddreswH. O. HOfiGHTON * CO., 1 Somerset street, BostonrMass. AA SAMPLE Free and BIG PAY to Male and Female everywhere. Address THE UNION PUB. CO.. Newark. N. 3. ww ■ W ■ cent and salable picture ever offered ■ 1 f f» to ag*ts. Send for our special circular t PC P" and secure territory. National Copy- ■ ■ fca ■n. ■■ lng Co» 381 W. Madison-st, Chicago. Mfkt* A A MONTH—Agents wanted everya? *]£ n 1 where. Business honorable and firstftil/sa S 3 f class. Particulars sent free. Address WbIVV JOHN WORTH A CO., St. Louis, Mo. Meeker’s PaUM Opffl (116 ! aass 10 vmmm tit vhw-hzxiip&si r. * ■" ? SHUTTLE Sewing Machine Address Johnson, Clark ft Co., Boston, Mass.: New York City; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Chicago, 111.; or fit. Louis, Mo. Agents Wanted for a New Book. iSWSSHSSffif. HeHinjfVCTT tiut. Sftkilsrdmlsra. r. W. ZIEOLEE a CO, *» South fflsrk Street, Chicago, m.
stfsSjftML aoej9jSlfc(> ri# <r (Hi |(J I Ihi Whether for nee on man or beast, Merchant’s Gargling Oil will be found an invaluable Liniment and worthy
OPIUM : SOMETHING 52 ! 2S, B SI-,.Sg We have work and money for all, men or women, boys or girls, whole or spare time. Send stamp for Catalogue. Address FRANK GLUCK, New Bedford, Maas ■ ( A ni7'TKr r Male and female, to canvass for Pictures to enlarge and copy to i WANTED ) any slie.inlirjt.WATaßor Oil Colobs. Largest commissions given. Address Chicago Photographic and Cop’g Co., 523 Wabaah-av., Chicago. AGENTS LARGING w A TfiTiYElTEare paying larger commissions, if JUT 1 JkLP doingflner work and making a greater variety of Pictures than any other copying Eouse in the United States. LH. NASON, d»in fn invested In Wall Stree tPJLU LU WuvU often leads to fortune. A BBEKPEBmEMBEi 7»-page book, explaininj iverything, and copy of the Wall street Review fiEMTFBCC John Hickling* Co., Bankers i 9CH I mC Ci Brokers, »iißroad way, N. V. TBT A A —The choicest in the world—lmport- ■ era’ prices Largest Company in America—staple article—pleases everybody—Trade i continually increasing—Agents wanted everywhere— i beet inducements—don't waste time—send for circular I to Robxbt Wblls, 43 Vesey-st., N. Y- P.O. Brer MOT- 1 WANTED IMMEDIATELY 1 ticlng. Address,with stamp, Sup’t U.T.C., Oberlin,Ohio ! SENT FREE ALL ST. i successfully with a capital of SSO or SI,OOO, Com- I plete instructions and illustrations to any address. TVMBRIDGE & CO., Bankers AND Bboknbs, i Wall street. New York. EVERYBODY BUYS IT! c_i One Agent made sls in three hours. EN TIRELYNEW. Nothing like it being sold. > Eg LARGE PROFITS. The beet-selling article Et! ever offered to Male and Female Agents. , SP Address <1 HOOD & JOSEPH, Indianapolis, Ind. i hHHUI'WUMimi This new Truss Is won. with perfect comfort, night and day. Adapts Cnr £ L A S T I C II itself to every motion of fpL T RTT ft « Wm the body, retaining Itup-VVi-i OOP, ture under the hardest I rareatf&Bieiaexercise or severest 1 strain until permanently \ * cured. Sola cheap by the VJ I/ ELASTIC nUL, '
Cash Salaries OAin to Aomrra selling “A I ft# OUR SPECIALTY. ITO OOHPE=aS2O Per Week DU>D SfeS-& p Sgir to * FREE Indianapolis Custom Shirt Factory; Indianapolis, IND. UVINCSTONE’Q F E and EXPLORATIONS with Ulb“ Last Journals,* now ready! The only complete Life and thrilling adventures in Africa of the great hero Explorer in his own language. Cheapest and best—only $2.50, splendidly illustrated. Outsells everything. Agents wanted. Send for extra terms and proof; or, if In haste to begin work, send SI.OO for full outfit to genuine address, Livingstone’s Publishers, Chicago, 111. 1 I MOODY AND SANKEY. Witness Extra No. 2. Just issued. Contains Sermons by Moody, John Hall and others, with engraving of Old Dutch (Fulton Street) Chureh, now being pulled down. Price #2 per 100, 13 llshed every morning. All the News. Only 84 a year. Try it one month for 33 cents, postage paid. JOHN BOUGALL, 1” . 2 Spruce St., New York. BUBS MILLS FOB, COHN, FLOUR ft FEED, IlfKJl REVISES EDWARD HARRISON, New Haven, Conn. #ZI. SMITH «*j GO., MANUFACTURERS OF Plaster Center-Pieces, Brackets, MOBILLIONS, AND ALL KINDS OF PLASTER ORNAMENTS, 184 «fc 186 STATE ST., opp. Palmer House, CHICAGO, ILL. tayPartles wishing Centers would do well to send size of rooms. We manufacture ScagliolaColumns,Pilasters,etc. Perfect imitation of the different-colored Marbles.
Reject All Violent Purgatives. They nun the tone of the bowels and weaken the digestion. Tarrant’s Effervescent Seltzer Aperient Is used by rational people as a means of relieving all derangements of the stomach, liver and intestines, because it removes obstructions without pain and imparts vigor to the organs which it purifies and regulates. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
nriIERSE YOUR PLAN! 11l 11 Leave off purgatives and 111 |l violent medicines that pros- §■ || trate the vital powers, and « | If for a BLOOD Purifier, try 111 V ¥» Mn & Mellon | | ■ which acts on the Kidneys, Liv- ■ " " erand Bowels, and removes impurities of the system, by opening its outlets. Kress Manufacturing Co., Cincinnati, O. DPimSr THE SEWERSI! JL Julxi When the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels do not act healthfully, the wastes from the action of the system remain In the blood, and produce Irritation and disease. These organs are the outlets of the system and under the Influence of Hamilton’s Buohuand Dandelion, are kept In good running order. Kress Manufacturing Go., Cincinnati, 0*
Iks Largest Manufactory of Threshing Machines in the [ United States. Over 1,500 made and sold annually, J. I. CASE A CO., MANUFAOTunsns or impboted THRESHING MACHINES, Mounted and Down Horse-Power*. PORTABLE THRESHING ENGINES
fiJOC PER DAT Commission or S3O a week Sal* upary, and expenses. We offer ft and wtll pay It. Apply now. O. Webber Si Co.. MarionTQ. WOVDEIIFI. I, Economy, 40 lbs. more Bread to bbl. Flour fVSSZ&VW SAVES MILIC, EGGS, Ac. T /.yitAa ’ Oae year’s savings will buy acow. nSQITI vo more sour bread. The Ladies are all in love with it. S t|y i § , Jrid 1 atmice < fl«-CinnUarto i3Pt GEO. P. OAIVTZ & CO., 17ft Duane St., Slew York. STOCKS dealt in at the New York Stock Exchange bought and •old by us on margin of five per cent. PRIVILEGES negotiated at one to two >er cent, from market on members of the New Tork Exchange or responsible parries. Large-sums have been realized the past 80 days. Put or coll costa, on 100 shares $106.25 Straddles 8250 each, control 200 shares of stock for todays without further risk, while many thousand dollars profit may he gained. Advice and Information furnished . Pamphlet, containing valuable statistical information and showing how Wall Street operations are conducted, sent FREE to any addiess. Orders solicited by mail or wire and promptly executed by us. Address TUMBRIDCE A CO., Bankers and Broken, No. 2 Wall Street, New York. (Sa tUL *s3fSSs>bhx ; ** ss Every Man His Own Painter. AITCSEALEfhnPTOEOTEtoJEIBIACE Onr RUBBER PAINT has been used on many thousand bnildingß and has always proved entirely satisfactory. We have numerous testimonials like the following, viz.: M. F. SHEPPARD A CO., Penn Yan, N. Y.» “We believe it to be the BEST PAINT manufactured.** W. W LELAND, “Eutaw House,” Baltimore: “Having used your Paint on the Grand Hotel, Saratoga, and this Eutaw House, I recommend its use to all.” Be sure that our TRI DE-MARK (a fac-sim-il eof which is given above) is-ort every package. . Prepared ready for use and sold by the gallon only. Send for Sample Card and Price Lied. Branch Offices & Factories, 506 West-st., NEW YORK. 210 South Third St., ST. LOUIS, MO. 83 West Van Buren Street, CHICAGO, ILL.
NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.’S “IratofTtalier. The BRILLIANT SUCCESS Of this GrainSaving, Time-Saving THRESHER is un precedented in the annals of Farm Machinery. In a brief period it has become widely known and FULLY ESTABLISHED a* the “ LEADING THRESHING MACHINE.” GRAIN-RAISERS REFUSE to submit to the wasteful and imperfect work of other Threshers, when posted on the vast superiority of this one for saving grain, saving time and doing fast, thorough and economical work. THRESHERMEN FIND IT highly advantageous to run a machine that has no “Beaters” “ Pickers,” or “Apron;” that handles Damp Grain, Long Straw, Headings, Flax, Timothy, Millet and all such difficult grain and seedKvrtth ENTIRE EASE AND EFFECTIVENESS. Cleans to perfection: saves the farmer his thresh-blll by extra saving or grain; makes no “Litterings;” requires LESS THAN ONEHALF the usual Belts, Boxes, Journals and Gears; eaiiier managed; less repairs; one that grain-raisers prefer to employ and wait for. even at advanced price*, while other machines are “out of Four sizes made, wltk fl, 8, 10 and horse “ Mounted” Powers, also a specialty of Separators “ alone,” expressly for STEAK POWER, and to match other Horse Powers. If interested in grain-raising or threshing, write for Illustrated Circulars (sent freeyj with full particulars of sizes, styles, prices, terms, etc. NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.. Battle Creek, Michigan*
VANBUSKIRK’S FRAGRANT SQSSDONT
GSMmmsjmmm
TEETH AND INVIGORATES AND HARDENS THE GUMS! It imparts a delightfully refreshing taste and feeling to the mouth, removing all TARTAR and. SCURF from the teeth, completely arresting the progress of decay, and whitening such parts as have become black by deeay. IMPURE BREATH caused by Bad Teeth, Tobacco, Spirits, or Catarrh, is neutralized by the daily use of SOZODONT It is as harmless as water. Bold by Druggists and Dealers ia Fancy Goods. One bottle will last six months.
egar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the native herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of California, the medieinal 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 Bitters?” 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 the history of fee # world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Vinegar Bittbss in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of fee Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious Diseases.
The properties of Dr. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irritant, Sudorific, Alterative. and Aut: Bilious. Oratefal Thousands proclaim Vnregar Bitters the most wonderful Iqvigorant feat ever sustained the sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or 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, Bed, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so daring 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. Thera 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 qf 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, Pam 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 Langs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painfiil symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia; One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. Scrofula, or King's Evil, Wbifo Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Soros, Eruptions of the 6kin, Sore E'—*, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker’s Vinegar Bitters have shown their great jjurativo 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, aro subject to paralysis of the ?owels, To guard against this, take a dose of Walker's Vinegar Bitters occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Rhemn, Blotches Spots, Pimples, Phstulos, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-head, Soro. Eyes, Erysipelas, Itoh, Scurfs, Discoloratious of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally du<j ~p and carried out of the system in a short tirno by the use of these Bitters. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually desti jyed and rcmoYed. No system of medicine, no vermifuges, no *•’ thelminitics will free the system from worms like these Bitters. For Female Complaints, in 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 is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin ia Pimples, Eruptions, or Sorest' 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 tho health of tho system will follow. a. a. Mcdonaltd st co., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and cor. of Washington and Chariton Sts., N. Y. Sold by ail Druggist, and Dealers.
&ND PRESERVES THE
£'i er JI? W^l i edi BS P °ver ‘-250 Illustrations; SI .*SO. Thousands Buy It at sight who could not bo Induced to purchase the high-priced books treating of Domestic Medicine. UnUke other books sold through agents this work is thoroughly advertised throughout Norm America. This fact, together with the large size, elegant appearance, and many new features of the canaesltwsell more rapidly than any work ever published in this country. Those of my agents who have had experience in selling books saythat in all their previous canvassing they never met with such success, or made so large wages, as since commencing the sale of my work. For terms and territory address (inclosing two postage stating experience) „ ’ „ . Dispensary, Buffalo, Jf. Y. Note. —Mark envelope For Publishing Dep’t.’* fCENTENNIAL PRINTING PRESS eSSutarfrre Agents wanted. Joski-ii WatsoH 73 {iinl | I j|| t Boston; 63Murray fit., Ncvr York. A.K.K aifr-J. X. L. > PHIS PAPER is Printed with INK manufactured
