Jasper Republican, Volume 2, Number 6, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 October 1875 — Page 4
Financial Fallacies.
1. that a promise of the United States to pay a dollar la ft dollar. It does not make it ft dollar because the Government obliges you take it for one at a discount of twelve or fifteen cents, in fact failing of its promise to pay and settling by its note for, say, eighty-six cents on the dollar. 3. That the aggregate and growing resources of the United States, the immense wealth of its - citizens, their enterprise and capital, stand behind its greenbacks and other national currency called legaltender. All that stands behind it is the credit of the United States Government, and all buoys np that is the confidence of die world that it will redeem its promisee in honest money, and its power to tax directly or through imposts, Mid the willingness of the people to be taxed. It most redeem its promises to pay, if it ever does pay, by paying. And all it has to pay with it gbs out of the people. Taxation is its only method of production. And when taxation becomes extortion, or extravagant Government expenditures necessitate more promises to pay, and the people begin to wince or refuse, then comes repudiation, the credit of the Government collapses, its legal-tender is flat, and its promises to pay are no better than the old French assignats, or the Continental or Confederate currency. 8. That the people need more currency to move the crops or for any other business exigencies. There is the greatest plenty of it now waiting for customers. Anybody can have all they want, provided they can pay for it in honest work of any kind, in land or products of any kind. Bat as to manufacturing more of it oat of paper, and then giving it away or forcing it in the form of legal-tender, sure to depreciate, it is a swindle too patently foolish and immoral for Uncle Sam to wink at.— Springfield (Mast.) Republican.
Is the Continuation of Specie Payment Impossible!
. Mr. Schorz, In his reply to Wendell Phillips’ latest screed, punctures one of the most common falsehoods of the inflation school, and that is that in times of Cic the Government of Great Britain given relief to the country by authorizing the Bank of England to suspend specie payments. Here is what Mr. Scliurz says on this point: “ The inflationists are also fond of telling us that such panics lead sometimes to a suspension of specie payments by the banks. This is true as to this country, bat when Mr. Phillips informs us that again and again in specie-basis English history the permission given by the Government to the bank to suspend specie payments has been the salvation of the business community, he glaringly betrays the greatest ignorance of financial history or a deplorable disregard of the truth. In charity we must accept the former. Every well-informed man knows that, since the resumption of specie payments in 1821, specie payments have never been suspended again in England. Mr. Phillips, in his evidently somewhat careless reading, found that now and then in times of panic something was suspended, and he jumped at the conclusion that it was specie payments. It is, perhaps, well to inform him that, instead‘of the suspension of specie payments, it was the suspension of the Bank act of 1844, authorizing the Bank of England to issue notes beyond the amount of specie reserve prescribed by law. That permission has been given several times, but specie payments steadily continued all the while. It is urgently recommended to Mr. Phillips to commence his historical reading at the beginning.” We submit this statement to the consideration of those who maintain that a continuance of specie payments is impossible. —Chicago Tribune.
How to Get Additional Paper Money Out.
Obviously there are two ways to set additional currency afloat One is by buying up United States gold-bearing bonds in the market, or by buying gold to pay off the bonds aa they fall due. But nis certain that this method will answer only in a very limited measure, for this single reason: As you put out new greenbacks with the prospect of a large emission the greenbacks will rapidly depreciate as to gold, and as the bonds are payable, principal and interest, in gold they will maintain their gold value, and their price in paper money will thereby become so high that the method of putting out greenbacks by purchasing bonds will soon become very unpopular and be dropped. Or if you mean to repudiate the bonds, ot which, as I understand, there is at present no declared purpose, then of course you will simply repudiate them and not buy them up at all. But there is another way to put afloat new issues of greenbacks. It is by carry, ing the expenses of the Government beyond its revenue, and this, I have no doubt, will be resorted to as the favorite method. Do you know what that means ? Imagine a Congress making appropriations of money for the avowed purpose of getting out, putting afloat, spending as much money as possible, and adopting systematic extravagance in expenditures as a necessary measure of financial policy to the end of making and keeping the volume of currency equal to the wants of rade. What a day of jubilee there will be among the thieves and rascals who think they can gain not only wealth but respectability by stealing as much as possible of the public money.— Schtmt.
Promises to Pay.
A sound paper currency, that is, a paper currency redeemable in gold or its equivalent, is the best, because the most convenient currency that a people can have. Its value, however, depends upon its ready convertibility into something ot positive value. An irredeemable note is like a promissory note with the time of payment omitted. The party issuing it may be good, but the party holding U has nothing of value, for the reason that at no time, present or prospective, can he hope to obtain for it the valuable consideration named on its face. It is simply a promise to pay without any assurance that payment will ever be made. As long as people accept it in exchange for goods it has a commercial value, but it is subject to depreciation and is liable to become, through a lack of confidence in the drawer or other causes, practically worthless. Every promise to pay should have attached to it the date at which payment will be made, or some pledge should be given that the time will come when the promise to pay will be followed by payment when demanded.— Republic Magazine. .... The counterfeiter, by issuing bad money, shakes public confidence in that which is known to be good. If undisturbed in his work he would soon destroy the value of the paper money in circulation. The inflationist would do the same thing openly. He would keep adding to the paper money until the whole volume became worthless. .... All experience teaches that greater expansion brings greater distrust, gam. bling and fluctuation. This evil expansion cannot and does not pretend to cure. Yet it is insisted that jnore money is required by the wants or trade. • Our researches into the financial experiments of nations have convinced us that the more rags the people carry in j£ l
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
The potato crop is simply enormous all over the State. Cambridge City talks of sending a colony to Tennessee. There are rumors of another strike ha the Brazil coal region. It snowed briskly at Logansport sot two hours on the 11th. And now they say a email insect is injuring the growing wheat. Throat diseases are quite prevalent just now throughout (he State. The receipts of the Bartholomew County Fair amounted to over $5,000. Dr. Lambert, of Goshen, is making a collection of North American birds, stuffed. A fatal disease is carrying off hundreds of hogs in the western and southern portions of Madison County. The old Western brewery, near Evansville, was burned the other night, involving a loss of about SB,OOO. The report of flie State Prison South for the quarter ending Sept 30 shows receipts $26,285.05, and expenditures $26,158.83. The inmates of the State Prison South now number 492, with fair prospects of increasing to an even half thousand in a few days. Starting a fire with coal-oil at Lawrenceburg was the cause of it. Her name was Mary Kertegen. It is hoped her burns are dot fatal. Some Spencer County farmers think the acreage of wheat sown in that county this fall will be from 50 to 75 per cent less than usual, owing to the drought. The Indianapolis Journal was sold on the 13th to Judge E. B. Martindale and W. R. Holloway. E. W. Halford takes the position of managing editor. The children of the Soldiers Orphans’ Home, at Knightsville, to the number of about fifty are suffering from an aggravated form of the whooping-cough. Tinkler’s grain-elevator at Wea Station, seven miles south of Lafayette, was burned the other morning. The fire had incendiary origin. Loss about $30,000. The soldiers’ reunion at Indianapolis on the 14th and 15th was a magnificent success. It was estimated that fully 50,000 veterans were in the city on the 15th.
Noble County gets the red ribbon on pumpkins. The largest measured seven feet two inches in circumference. They also produced a beet thirty by thirteen inches. The officers of the Monroe County Fair, after paying expenses, found that they would be enabled to pay thirty-three and one-third cents on the dollar of the premiums awarded. The saw and planing mill at Hicks ville, a few miles east of Auburn, was set on fire by tramps a few mornings ago and totally consumed The loss was about $17,000, on which there was no insurance. The prisoners in the Vigo County jail were discovered* the other day in an attempt to escape by sawing loose the iron clamp which held a large stone in its place. Many tools with which they had been working were recovered. Deeds have been filed for record conveying $500,000 worth of real estate to Willard College, at Evansville—the donation of its founder, Willard Carpenter—and the project is now entirely in th« hands of the trustees. Work will be commenced next spring. The claims of the parties who figured in the Deaf and Dumb Institute investigation are beine allowed by the State Auditor, the Board having complied with the instructions of the State officers concerning the same. The proportion of the expenses paid by the State is $2,500. While A. N. Custer was pitching off the stack to a threshing-machine in Clay Township the other day he slid off and struck a pitchfork leaning against the stack. One tine pierced his right side, passing entirely through his lungs. The injury was thought to be fatal. A new phase of the old conflict between the judiciary and the management of the House of Refuge has arisen. Supt Ainworth refuses to receive John Day into that institution, who is sent there under special instructions of Judge Buskirk, of the Indianapolis Criminal Court, because the offender is over sixteen years of age. The matter is to be carried to the Supreme Court for final adjudication. On the evening of the 7th the Indianapolis Banking Company received a telegram from the manager of the Bank of British North America, located in New York city, directing the arrest of any person presenting a circular letter of credit numbered higher than 151. Next day a well-dressed stranger answering to the name of Henry Saunders presented a letter numbered 169 at the bank counter and asked for $3,000. He was locked up. The following postal changes were made in Indiana during the week ending Oct. 9, 1875: Established—Benham’s Store, Ripley County, Aaron H. Neburgger, Postmaster; Given, Clinton County, Frederick Roush, Postmaster; Hanover Center, Lake County, Frank Massoth, Postmaster; Waterford Mills, Elkhart County, Henry Snyder, Postmaster. Postmasters appointed—Bloomingport, Randolph County, Joseph T. Lanun; Otwell, Pike County, Benjamin E. Dillon.
Thomas Stout, a cattle-dealer living near New Market, in Montgomery County, recently bought $16,000 worth of cattle of Darnall & Carver, of Putnam County, giving a check for $5,000 on the First National Bank of Crawfordsville as part payment. He then shipped the cattle from Indianapolis to Pittsburgh and Buffalo, receiving advances of SIO,OOO from the railroad, and up to the Bth nothing had been heard of him. He had no money in the bank and of course the check was not paid. Geo. Negley committed suicide at his residence in Evansville a few days ago. Negley lived alone, having had trouble with his family, and was well off. When found his body was upright in bed, with revolver in hand, one chamber having been •discharged in liis mouth. On the table, near the bed, was a loaded rifle pointing directly toward him. He had drawn the ramrod and fixed it so that a slight touch would discharge the gun in case the revolver failed, and close by his side was a huge butcher-kflife; but the revolver (lid He work,
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Spread cloths over cucumber pickles la keep them under brine. They keep better if treated thus. The surplus heat wasted from a common stove will, if conducted through a drum into another room, warm the room almost as much as a stove would, and will compel the fuel to do double duty and give nearly double results. The brilliant colors of autumn leaves may be preserved by dipping the stems in melted yellow beeswax. The leaves should be well dried. By piercing the leaf near the stem with doubled thread wire you can weave them on coarse wire, or on large cord, into any description of garlands. Crackers.—Take one large capful of bread dough, very light, roll it out on your molding-board; then spread on it a piece of butter and lard together, as large as a goose egg ; dredge a little flour over it, fold it up and pound it with something heavy a long time; take a small piece at a time, roll out very thin, stamp with a clock key and bake quickly.— Rural New Yorker. An open fire with a large chimney throat is the best ventilator for any room; the one-half or two-thirds of the heat carried up the chimney is the price paid for immunity from disease; and large though this seems from its daily draft on the woodpile or coal-bin, it is trifling when compared with doctors’ bills and with the loss of strength and efficiency that invariably results from living in unventilated apartments.—Col. Waring, in October Atlantic.
Cheese Fritters. —Slice thin a halfdozen large, tart apples, and prepare as many thin slices of cheese. Beat up .one or two eggs, according to the quantity required, and season high with salt, mustard and a little pepper. Lay tbe slices of cheese to soak for a few moments in the mixture, then put each slice between two slices of apple, sandwich style, and dip the whole into beaten eggs, then fry in hot butter, like oysters, and serve very hot. These fritters are an addition to any breakfast-table. Vert pretty house rugs are made from the ravelings of odd pieces of Brussels and other carpets. Odds and ends of carpets may be purchased at carpet stores and the little ones of the household given the task of raveling such remnants. The threads or fiber should be cut in strips about four inches long, doubled and knit together with cotton twine. Rugs made in this way are coming into very general, use. They are very expensive when purchased at the carpet stores in New York city, as the work of making them is slow. To ladies who have leisure, the work of making these useful and ornamental articles is a pleasant and easy task.
Cut Feed for Teams.
A farmer who keeps excellent horses writes as follows: I have tried cutting straw about an inch long. I kept a team on the oat straw which grew on less than three acres of land, from last of August to first of April, without using a pound of hay. It was mixed with about three quarts of cornmeal and bran in equal proportions, by weight, to each horse three times per day, feeding about a bushel of cut feed at night and a little over half a bushel in the morning and noon. I find that 2,500 pounds of corn-meal and bran, mixed in equal quantities by weight, will last a pair of hard-working horses and keep them in first-rate condition for three months. The hay or oats are cut rainy days and stored in a bin, and enough is always thus kept on hand to have an abundant supply. The meal is kept in tight bins and locked, so that each teamster knows that no one but himself is using the feed and a regular entry is made of the amount each teamster uses. lam fully satisfied, from a careful the amount fed teams, that the expense of feeding a team of working ha|pes on cut feed, and corn-meal and bran, mixed as before mentioned, is less than two-thirds of the expense of keeping them on dry hay and whole grain. Cornmeal alone, especially for summer use, is not as good for the health of horses as when mixed with bran, and, better still, with ground oats. Horses subject to the heaves are either much relieved or entirely cured while using the cut feed. The power of digestion seems to be greatly increased by the straw or hay being cut and mixed with meal before feed ing, as every part is then acted upon by the stomach. Not so when thrown into that organ in a concentrated mass, which before being half digested is passed out. No doubt one of the reasons why oats are so valuable as whole grain to feed is that the husk which surrounds the seed itself acts a distender, so to speak, and keeps the particles of meal separated so that they are better acted upon by the gastric juices of the digestive organs. A horse working hard will require about thirteen pounds of meal and bran per day.
Cabinet or Parlor Organs.
These have become the most popular ot large musical instruments. There are now about two hundred and fifty makers of them in the United States, who produce more than forty thousand organs per annum. Most of these are very poor instruments. This is naturally so, because there are few articles in the manufacture of which so much saving can be made by the use of inferior, improperly-prepared material and inferior workmanship, and yet which, when finished, show so little difference to the average purchaser. The important parts of ah organ, made as well as they can be, cost two or three times as much as if made as low as possible. Yet, when the organ is done, it is not easy, from casual hearings, to tell the difference between the best and a very poor one. Especially when shown by one who knows how to cover up defects, to one who has not special skill in such matters, it is not difficult to make a poor organ appear a good one. to makers, then, to produce, at, a fraction of the cost, an organ which will sell almost as well as a good one is almost irresistible. Hence the fact that so few good organs are made and so many poor ones, and that the country is flooded with peddlers and dealers selling these poor organs, which pay such large profits. The buyer of the poor organ does not fail to find opt his mistake after a
while. The thin, reedy tone of his cheap organ soon becomes offensive, it works noisily and rough, is constantly out of order, and becomes useless by the time a really good instrument would have been getting into its prime. * A good organ ought to last a generation, at least; a poor one may last five years, with considerable tinkering, or may break down much sooner. There is one safe way. G%t a genuine production of one of the very best makers and yon cannot go astray. Among these undoubtedly stands pre-eminent the Mason & Hamlin Organ Co., whose organs are so well known that other makers are generally content to claim that they can make as good an organ as the Mason & Hamlin. They invented and introduced the Cabinet or Parlor Organ in its improved form, started with and have always closely adhered to the policy of making only the best work, have shown such skill as has given their organs the highest reputation, not only in this country but also in Europe. At the Great Exposition at Vienna, in competition with eighty of the best makers in the world, they obtained the highest medals. To enumerate the competitions at which they have received similar honors would be to give a list of the fairs at which they have exhibited; and to mention the prominent musicians who recommend their organs as unequaled would really be to give a very good list of the most illustrious musical names in the country, with a good representation in Europe. One who obtains a Mason & Hamlin Cabinet Organ need have no doubt that he has the best instrument of its class which can be made. —New York Independent. _ _ _
Consumption Cut Bo Cored. Schexck’s Pulmonic Syrup, Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic, Schenck’s Mandrake Pills, are tbe only medicines that will cure Pulmonary Consumption. Frequently medicines that will stop a cough will occasion the death of the patient: they lock up the liver, stop the circulation of the blood, hemorrhage follows, and, in fact, they clog the action of the very organs that caused the cough. liver Complaint and Dyspepsia are the causes of two-thirds of the cases or Consumption. Many persons complain of a dull pain in the side, constipation. coated tongue, pain In the shoulder-blade, feelings of drowsiness and restlessness, the food lying heavily on the stomach, accompanied with acidity and belching np of wind. These symptoms usually originate from a disordered condition of the stomech or a torpid liver. Persons so affected, If they take one or two heavy colds, and if the cough in these eases be suddenly checked, will find the stomach and liver clogged, remaining torpid and inactive, and, almost before they are aware, the lungs are a mass of sores and ulcerated, the result of which is death. Schenck’s Pnlmonlc Syrup Is sn expectorant which does not contain opium or anything calculated to check a cough suddenly. Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic dissolves tbe food, mixes with the gastric juices of the stomach, aids digestion and creates a ravenous appetite. When the bowels are costive, skin sallow, or the symptoms otherwise of a bilious tendency, Schenck's Mandrake Pills are required. These medicines are prepared only by J. H. Schenck & Son, N. E. cor. 6th and Arch-sts, Philad'a, and are for sale by all druggists and dealers.
The Strange Disease.
Like the thief at night, it steals in upon us unawares. The patients have pains about the chest and sides, and sometimes in the back. They feel dull and sleepy; the mouth has a bad taste, especially in the morning. A sort of sticky slime collects about the teeth. The appetite is poor. There is a feeling like a heavy load on the stomach, sometimes a faint, all-gone sensation at the pit of the stomach, which food does not satisfy. The eyes are sunken, the hands and feet become cold and feel clammy. After awhile a cough sets in, at first dry, but after a few months it is attended with greenish-colored expectoration. The Satient feels tired all the while, and sleep oes not appear to afford any rest. After a time he becomes nervous, irritable and gloomy, and has evil forebodings. There is a giddiness, a sort of whirling sensation in the head when rising up suddenly. The bowels become costive, the skin is dry and hot at times. The blood becomes thick and stagnant, the whites of the eyes become tinged with yellow, the urine is scanty and high-colored, depositing a sediment after standing. There is frequently a spitting up of the food, sometimes with a sour taste and sometimes a sweetish taste. This is frequently attended with palpitation of the heart. The vision becomes impaired with spots before the eyes. There is a feeling of great prostration and weakness. All of these symptoms do not make tneir appearance at one time, but during the various stages they are in turn present. It is thought that nearly one-third of our population has this disease in some of its varied forms. It has been found that medical men have mistaken the nature of this disease. Some have treated it for liver complaint, some for dyspepsia, others for kidney disease, etc., etc., but none of these various kinds of treatment have been attended with success. It is found, however, that the Shakbr Extract of Roots (not a patent medicine), when prepared properly, will remove the disease in all Its stages. Care should be taken to procure a good article. Sold by A. J. White, General Agent, 319 Fear! street, N. Y. Agents wanted.
A strong article in favor of the wet sheet in scarlatina appears in the London Lancet from the pen of Dr. John Taylor, of Liverpool. His plan, which appears to be at least a thorough one, is to immerse a night-gown, slit up at the front, in half a pint to a pint of hot water, pure or medicated with a dram or two drams of tincture capsicum, or in the infusion of three or four pods, or in mustard water, the clear, supernatant fluid from a tablespoonful ot mustard to a pint of water; extending the gown aver the feet by means of a towel immersed in the same fluid—both to be well wrung out and suddenly applied, and the patient quickly packed in two blankets previously placed on the adjoining sofa or bed, another blanket or two pillows covering all. Dr. Taylor speaks enthusiastically of the amazing relief procurable from the wet sheet, in its simple form, in pyrexial and glandular disorders, and, from the medicated form, in zymotic and spasmodic affections; as potential also in diphtheria, simulating croup, and, in strong doses, in inflammatory croup. A farmer brought into Birmingham, Conn., a few days ago, a pumpkin which weighed 115 pounds, and which he sold for $1.75. He explained tha£ the pumpkin was an unusual kind, he having paid five cents apiece for the seed, and offered to buy the seeds of the pumpkin from the purchaser at one cent and a half each. The offer was accepted, the pumpkin cut, and the seeds counted. There were 618 in all, but the farmer purchased them. The telegraph states that the Servian “skupochtijna” has replied to Prince Milan’s speech, but doesn’t state whether the “ skupochtijna” is best with Worcestershire sauce or is itself only some kind of a dressing. The Lynchburg (Ya.) Republican reports squirrels migrating southward in large numbers, saying “ they maybe seen above and below the city just before nightfall crossing the river on their bark boats, using their tails as sails when the wind is favorable.”
SILVER TIPPED SHOES
There is nothing like leather TltvEß TIP for children. They never wear through at the toes. Also try Wlre-Qollted Soles.
Do yon want the best Bhoe ever miulß—that will not rip or leak, and la easier than any machinesewed or neeeed shoe? Buy the CABLE SCREW WIRE make. try Wlrp-Quiltefl oole*
The Tubular Lamp la a wonderful thing. Bead the advertisement, sore. Foe pickling or table use Prassing’s White Wine Vegar is unrivaled. Try it Cramps and pains in the stomach are the result of imperfect digestion, and may be Immediately relieved by a dose of Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. A teaspoonful in a little sweetened water is a dose. Heavt oats are good for hones; none will deny that; but oats can’t make a horse’s coat look smooth and glossy when he Is out of condition. Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders will do this when all else falls. When you go to Chicago stop at the “ Barnes House,” corner of Randolph and Canal streets. The fare is excellent and everything in the house is new. Only $1.50 to $2.00 per day for transient To have good hbalth the liver must be kept In order. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator has become a staple family medicine, purely vegetable —Cathartic and Tonic —for all derangements of Liver, Stomach and Bowels. Win clear .he complexion, cure sick headache, ete. See advertisement Wilhoft’s Fever and Ague Tonic. —This medicine is used by construction companies for the benefit of their employes when engaged in malarial districts. The highest testimonials have been given by contractors and by the Presidents of some of the leading railroads in the South and West When men are congregated in large numbers in the neighborhood of swamps and rivers Wilhoft’s Tonic will prove a valuable addition to the stock of medicines, and will amply reward the company in the saving of time, labor and money. We recommend it to all. Whbelock, Finlay <fc Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. Fob sale by all Druggists.
ClftsCO C p«r day. Bend for Chremo Catalogue. H. Buftokd’s Sons, Boston, Mass, (DK. S> ayatnome. samples worn n sent P «p2SV free. Stiesoh & Co.. Portland, Me. $290 De?rojt?Michf * Ott SALARY only. Agent* wanted. Male and Female. Address G. B. Christian, Marion, Ohio. TUL 1 W BOOK. “ Bible for the Young." Agents ■PI Hi TV address LOUIS LLOYD A CO.?Chicago. <fiQA.P* r Week Salary, Male or Female. ClrcuHwUlar free. Address Crystal Co., Indianapolis, Ind. pVBRY FAMILY WANTS IT. Money init. Hi Sold by Agents. Address M. N. LOVELL, Erie, Pa. <2l O a Day at Home. Agents wanted. Outfit and dPAZ/termsfree. Address TRUE * CO.,Augusta,Me. * montn to energetic men andwomen 51st _4l II |everywhere. Busmen*honorable. ExcelqrwvWsior M’fgCo., 151 Mlc’oigan-av.Chlcago. $3 SAMPLE FREE M fi&fi everywhere. Address The Union Pub. Co. .Newark,N.J. i non uss I ,UUU BQOK AM) MAP HOUSE, ChicagoJlL diOfft A MONTH.—Agents wanted. 24 best-sell-Jk'(nil ln 6 aracl esinthe world. One sample free. (jhIUU Address J. BRONSON, Detroit, Mich. WANK AN AGENT in every county. Picture and #A*w I frame Business. SIOO a Month. Geo. E. TED. IPEEUtE, Pub., 66 Reade Bt., New York. TO/YITG Make Moisey at Home. Transfer JL & Scrap Pictures, Toys, etc. Send 2 stamps for 66-j)age Book. J. JAY GOuLd, Boston, Mass. Dailv to Agents. 85 new articles and thebest TELEGRAPHY'”™'^- I.™”* 1 .™”* PORTER’S National Telegraph College, Chicago, 111. . nrUTfi £0 Elegant Oil Chromos mounted size Al 9EL NIS 6xll for sl. Novelties and Chromos of every description. National Chromo Co., Phila., Pa. MSap g% A MONTH.— Agents wanted everyOIE til where. Business honorable and flrstclass. Particulars sent fre T e. Address UfaJV/v JOHN WORTH A CO., St- Louis, Mo. Goodrich & ttouston, to Adam* st. CHICAGO.ILL H UTHire the but and tateit-ielllng articles forAgenU «f jl any house in tbe world. Quick sales and (ETLarge ProtttsU.Quarantced. Bend for Oavalogna, THE WHAT IS IT.—Something new. Sells at sight. Big Inducements to Agents. Samples 25 cents and stamp. Agents wanted. Send for Catalogue. U. S. SPECIALTY CO., 7 Kulton-at,, Boston. inn ITflKi All wart it—Thousands of fives and 1 lilVi Yrl \ Millions of property saved by it—Foriiullll 1 0 tunes made with It Address Lie. ieotoe Bros., New York or ChicagoII ru DEN’! The White Chief, or A White Man twelve II | n yean an Indian l not a Romance but Fact utran11U ger than Fiction. The most fasoinattng and best selling IX book out. Agents Wanted. C. V. VKNT, Cincinnati, O.
AGENTS AGENTS
P ffe fill C Chicago Suburban Lota at ■ fa © bCi SIOO each—sls down and $5 monthly for balance—within a short distance of city limits, with hourly trains and cheap fare. Send for circular. IRA BROWN. 149 La Salle St., Chicago, HI. ATkTTTUtnd Momhtne Habit absolutely and lIUI II nn speedily cured. Painless-jio puDllcl|lr | II 111 ty. Send stamp for particulars. Dr Vi X V AUCarlton, 187 Washingtoss-st,Chlcago f 1 fMVS try the Celebrated EGYPTIAN CREAM, for Beautify. L A ill hft Ing the Complexion, removing Ten. Freckle., Pimple* MMIVK A Moth Petcbe*. Send tSc. for bottle, or sl. for recipe. Agent* wasted. T. J. WBOK, 41 L» B*Ue .tra.(, Chica*o, 111. arm week guaranteed to Agents, Male and Female, In their own loo# # cality.Terms and Outfit Free. Address Ml M F. O. VICKERY & CO.. Auc»~°ta» Malhe. HAT AkßffffßEE trial bottle of Dr. Lane’s \jJxl. Anflll (catarrh Cure given away, with testlCvr ▼> -n Imony to wonderful cures performed. UEED ,(SenatoH.Reed&Co.,643Hdw’y,N. Y. fIDIIIII 1 S a 1 IWfl moderate. 1.000 testimonials. sth w B ■Vs ■<■ year of unparalleled success. Describe case. Address Dr. F. E. Marsh. Qulncv. Mich $15.00 SHOT-GUN A doubfo-barr-t *um, bar *r from action lack*; warrant,* nnaln* trrWtb*rr*l« and a food abcotar, on no uu j with Flaak, Pouch wad Wad Cuttcr, for *l6. Can bt aaat C. O. D., with vrlrUan to oiamiao boforo poyiwf MU. Band atamp for airtralar to P. POWELL k SOX. One Doalore, MB Main Strtot, Cincinnati, 0. Centennial Exposition of ■ K, MP w American Presidents--Most magniflw ■ ■ cent and salable picture ever offered 1 1 B* toag’ts. Send for our special circular H and secure territory. National Copy- ■ ■ »Ik ■■ Ing Co., 384 W.Madlaon-st., Chicago. MAPS* CHARTS. Latest, Most Ornamental and Correct. Special Agent wanted In each township. Send tor free Catalogue and Terms to E. C. BRIDGMAN, 5 Barclay St., N. Y.,or 179 W. Fourth St.. Cincinnati, O. BABE CHANCE.
IHI Itr $ n FREE Ride (and return) to all l l l L l Y A V who buy land, leaving Nov. 8. ItA fill About half-rates to land-hunters. X JUaUJLIJIFor particulars concerning lands address Jno. W. Maddox & Co., 54 Clark-st. Chicago. Good prairie land 31c. per acre. For particulars concerning excursion and certificates giving reduced hotel rates, address N.B-Hayxxs. Com..Chicago.
FREE
stops the leaks in an old Shingle Roof and makes a new one last twice as long; la also the moat durable paint made for Tin and Iron. Send for pamphlet. Agents wanted. WILLIS G. JACKSON. Genoral Agent. lfl» Washington street. CHICAGO. ILLINOIS. iSnISB These Rich Prairies. Near one mllllcfß acres for sale on the Sioux City ft St, Paul Railroad and on the McGregor ft Missouri Raver Railroad. Several large tracts for Colonies Come or send committees to examine. Everyone who sees the land likes it. Apply to DAVIDSON & CALKINB, Sibley, Osceola. Co., lowa, * P.TRIr &ESDERED CEELESS! A 1 Voi.ta’s Electro Belts and Vv \ f / xy • Bauds are indorsed by the A ft fkl B ?° 8t eminent physician* in the'worldforthecureofrheu—y vX Vs// matisrn, neuralgia.livcrcomplaint, dyspepsia, kidney disAfMn ease,aches, pains. nervous d isorders,flts.femalo complaints \ jaBW nervous and generi-1 debility, and other chronic diseases of QgjSßl the chest,head, liver, stomach a a |7r p. kidneys and blood. Book with 19 LIT Li full particulars frrehy Volta Bklt On , Cincinnati, Ohio. C AGENTS WANTED FOR THE - EIMTENNIAL HISTORY °r the U_ S. „ lnt «rest in the thrilling history of our fiahSn 7 the CMtest-sellinghook ever pub£2**2: - I A I c ° nUlna °»er 40b fine historical engrav--1 900 pages, with a full account of the apF oachi ng grand Centennial celebration. Bend for a at l Pn£r T P CJ o ™? d *®Agents. NATIONAL PUBWSHpNq tQ., Chicago, HI, pf 8(. LoaU, Mo,
CABLE SCREW wiHit;
For the best-selling line of goods In America. Profits large. Circular* 'ree. Address GEO. F. CRAM, West■rn Map and Picture Depot, 66 Lake Street. Chicago, 111.
| 100 page Book and samples ol (Rubber Roofing. Complete materials for new roof, 4#c a ft. Fire-proof,durable,cheap. Easily applied with positive satisfectlon, Write at once and save money. N. Y. Slate Roofing Co.
THE $50,000 BONANZA! gm « AHA Invested in Wall Street free. AddressPODLETOW^lfjß AD^Bnnken, ÜBITII ISO MEW MOM pits d!popular’’works’oa'eJery subject? Why Mi one doubtful book, when you can make success sere by offering customers choice of 150 J Our Agents have the inside tract and are delighted with their quick Mies. Fail not to stud for particulars Monos to r. A. Hutohiksoe A Co- Cg;oAeo. Ills. ASTHMA. XJR X Popham’s Asthma Specific. fMMBUr ~«% Warranted to relieve any case in Y TF.S MIXUTKS. / SJffimLjSV ili'i! |j H!» “ Yonr B|*cMc has alont enred I 1,1,11 u ~iis relieved all whom 1 * Eg<B> fill have ever heard from.” Cabsoh ■uFTP. ._Llll'll llwlf 111 Louisiana, Mo. jjaMßtfSiPPEpllf Sold by all Druggists. U pel box, by mall, postpaid. trial package free. - -etKfJr Address, Inclosing stamp, r T.ropHAM*ca, PHiLAOKLrma. Pan. A NEW BOOK BY MARK TWAIN! Just ready for Agents. Bpleedidly Illustrated. 20.000 EDITION IN PRESS TO START WITH. Now is the time to get Territory. Don't stop to experiment on other books. Take one you know will SELL. Prompt action will give you choice offleld and Golden Returns. Get on the course st once antFyou will wie. Outfit costs eothiiio, everything furnished. Send la your names, towns you want and for circulars aAence. Address AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO., Hartford, Conn., or 118 Randolph St., Chicago; 111. This new Truss I* worn fasten. With perfect comfort, n P o( exercise oi sevc-eat atrain until permanently \ vtr' W Cured. Sold cheapbythe ELASTIC TRUSS CO,, ID&aeaitaymaJL CaUMWsSiuroroircufar andfecured. The office tor the sale of the Elastic Truss In Chicago, la at 235 State street. Send for circular to C. J. REED, Moore, Weeks & Co., BroHartford, Ct., say: ‘“Sea Foam takes the lead of all llread Preparatione. Our sales arc four-fold what tbjy were a year a*o.” AUlIkeU. “Have sole! I 1 mmm I your Sea Foam for the past three AJ d y®*™ wtth perfect satisfaction to all who A have bought it.” “ Its economy is wonI derful ; one year’s savings will buy a cow.” Send for Circular to WfllMf GEO. F. GANTZ Si CO., aJahl'6 Duane St~ New York. CUSHING’S MANUAL Of Parliamentary Practice. Rules of proceeding and debate In deliberative assemblies. This is the standard authority In all the United States and is an indfspensable Hand-Book for every member of a deliberative body, as a ready reference upon the formality and legality of any proceeding or debate. “ The most authoritative expounder of American parliamentary law.”— Chas. Sum.veb. Price 65 cents. Sent by mall on receipt of price. Address THOMPSON, BROWN «Ss CO., Boston, Maw.
THB FAMU.T LooMlle COURIER-JOURNAL. VB~ Forty-flveyears established; able, newsy,spicy, literary, agricultural, wide-awake and progressive. tWSplendid Books, Magazines, etc., virtually given awiy; to new subscribers. Unusual inducements to AGENTS. FREE sample copies and full descriptive circulars sent on application. Only S 2 a year singly, and 91.60 to clubs. A AAA ln handsome presents distributed to (JjXVjVW subscribers D ec e mber^3l^lß7s. Pres’t Courier-Journal Co.. L< rnbruOy.
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WIFE NO. 19 BY ANN ELIZA YOUNG, Brigham Young’s Rebellious Wife. The only complete Expose of all the SECRETS of BRJCH AM’ SH ARE M ever written. Born in Mormonisnx, ANN ELIZA now exposes to the world, AS Illustrations beautify the work: It t. the beet wfiing book puMiihed. t 0,000 more Agent*, men and women, can have employment and make from $5 to $| O dally. ALL UVE ACENTB are writing for nTuatrated Circulars Hastfobo, Ct., Chicago. Ili~, or Cihoixxa.ii, Ohio. tSJUIA UTIPUI. invention for marking Clctking handprinting Cards. Ac. An article that ev.O Kh Psi,. crybody wants. Type to print any name, BM /j eP business or address. Very profitable, amustf ing and instructive for the young. K0.1.5l ' Ai&UtagidM. r with S alphabets type. No. 2, sf. Kith 6 alphabete. Ne.S.S3, with 11 alphabets. K 0.4 aEffirSShijge \ s4 ,wilh 16 nip. Case, Ink A Pad included. Delivered by mail free. Agents wanted. "Co L DIN C & CO.W »*hi»gto« Sg, Boatoa Do Your Own Printing for Catalogue. Outfits from $1 up Golding A Co., Manufs,Washington Sq, Boston Printing Press lAKYI AKY Self-Inhing A Self-Delivering. Band, Foot or JefsSil _ Steam Power. New improvements. For pnntr WffqWrrf ing cards, billheads,labels, circulars, etc..it has ■ no superior. It is unequalled for ease and rapidity of operation, compactness, beauty of AtM&SjSSb sign and mechanical construction. Prices, 9 H M to tnt. Send 3 cent stamp for Catalogue. L OOLPifIO StOO. tfiNa*fclagtoa B<], Boatoa
500*000 ACRES MICHIGAN LANDS FOR S ALB! The Lards of the Jackson, Lansing* Saginaw Railroad Company are Now Offered For Sale. They are situated along Its railroad and contain large tracts of excellent FARMING and PINE Lands. The faming lands include some of the most fertile and well-watered hardwood lands In the State. They are timbered mainly with hard-maple and beech; soil black, sandy loam, and abound In springs of pnrest water. Michigan is one of the least Indebted anil most prosperous State In the Union, andJts farmers have a greater variety of crops and resources than any Western State. While some of the prairie States uray pro-du-fl corn In great abundance, they have no other resource, and when this crop falls destitution follows, as has bees the case the past year In Kansas and Nebraska. Price from $9.30 to $3.00 per acre. Send for Illustrated Pamphlet. Address O. H. BARNES, Commissioner, Lansing, Mich.
Smith Organ Co., BOSTOnT MABB. These Standard Instruments Sold by Music Dealers Everywhere. AGENTS WASTED IH EVEBY XOWB. SOLD THROUGHOUT THB UNTTHD ST6.TXS OH THX INSTALLMENT PLAN; That Is, on a System of Monthly Payments. Purchasers should ask for the Smith AhxbtoakDp. Gan . Catalogues and fall particulars on appUcauoa.
The Homan Telegraph. The nerves are tclepaphlc fibers, operated by the brain; but if the stomach, the great vitalizer of the system. Is disordered, the whole nervous organization is partially shattered for the time being. y 1 Tarrant’s Seltzer Aperient works wonders in cases ofnervousdeblllty arising from dyspepsia, by rcotoringthe stomach to Its normal condition, aim keeping the bowels free, bold by all umgg-tt-
BEST IN THE WORLD Any Shade fMzßh REABV Desired, ForJJse. .. T. . vSpBBKSm.o’ Send for Adapted to Sample All Classes Cards and es Work. Circulars. Be sure that our TRADE-MARK fa fac-dmUe of Which is given above) is on every package. Branch Offices and Factorirs: 506 West Streets New York. No. 910 South 3d Si., St- bools* Mo. He* 9$ West Yn Barm Chicago.
nym’jTO uSL&toil from the .y.t.m' '7 m divfd'ul’mioitlsxf'Ssst "gissausre ess’kje;.•£ pjn issssrffS tag the stomach, ‘ " feet. IMillift causing food to UJ J fectiona at the digest well l PU- I*l M LIVER, irregu- d RIFYIN6 THE a H lari tie 8 ofStOmBLOOO, giving A ach and Bowels, tone etna health r diseases dependto the whole mt- UJ —eut on or caused chtnery, remov- ' *Ej by such derange - ing the cause of u ■ ■ ment sm Billons the diseases, es- attsteka, Costivefee ting a radical ness, Chronic Bicure. As a FAN- . ELY MEDICINE CO L— sia, Jaundice ant It U UNEQUAL- *0 Z Female We«kr ED, and Is AL- 22 fl nesses. 1 tableways am, rt Hmnwwu ww at commencement of a a ssttack of SICK HEADACHE*!“?•*? J* minutes. JtLLLOW or SALLOW SKIM MAPS YOUTHFUL by 1 bottle. TRY IT I For pamphlet containing useful Information and a|l about the Liver, address DR. SANFORD, Hew York. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTSra _ TUBULAR HAND LAMP, I H SL Your best kerosene lamp Will lln TV and smudge, and go out. If subjected to IS Ift in wind or motion, ahd hence is worthII IB II less as a hand lamp. Try the TilIf II H BDLAB HAND LAMP side by tUf jl side with any other kerosene lamp, snb\S\tM M jectlDg both thoroughly to wind and |||L FI motion, and you will be astounded by wm—lk the contrast. Pure and powerfui hghtv difficult to put out; no smoke; burner « saissißSß«sasgß: same man who invented the Celebrated Tabular Lantern. You know what that is; this Is equally remarkable. Find one andiUV, it, or send torn descriptive pamphlet. Manufactured »y DENNIS A WHEELER, 42 Canal St., Chicago. No r Sale by All Dealer a.
HALL'S -wi.rmKn^jg cApr Ik# -iSdHft JL dwr at 'hard pah prices. HALL’S SAFE & LOCK CO, C h-i /CATC, / LL.
“The Bert Thing in the Veit” * ATCHEOH, TOPEKA ft SAHTA FE R. R. f^ARTPS nr Kansas. 3,000,000 ACIIEB Of the best Farming and Agriculture Lands In America, situated in and near the beautiful Cottonwood and Upper Arkansas Valleys, the garden of the West, on 11 Years’ Credit, with 7 per cent. Inter* est, and 20 per cent. Discount for Improvements. WATIEI R.BFTJWDHD To Purchasers of Land. tWCirculars, with Map, giving full informatlo sent free. 'Address A. ». JOHNSON, Acting Land Commissioner, Toteka, Kansas,
n I" I (ERSE YOUR PUN! ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Leave off purgatives and ■ ■ ■ ■ violent medicines that prOsKaP pi ■■ trate the vital powers, and n I If for a BLOOD Purifier, try 11 1 I¥B*4 Mi & Dandelion I I ■ which acta on the Kidneys, Llverand Bowels, and removes impurities of the system, by opening itaoutlets. Kress Manufacturing Co.. Cincinnati, O. OPPM THE SEWERS!! X JLill When the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels do not act healthfully, the wastes from the action of the system remain in the blood, and produoe irritation and disease. These organs are the outlets of the system and under the influence of Hamilton’s Buabuand Dandelion, are kept in good running order. Kress Manufacturing Go., Cincinnati, O.
$25? SSO per Day CAN ACTUALLY BE MADE WITH THE wilJeMir. WE MEAN IT! And are prepared to demonstrate the feet. OUR AUGERS are operated entirely by HORSE POWER, and will bore at the rateof TWENTY FEET PER HOUR. They bore from 3 to 6 Feet in Diameter, And ANY DEPTH REQUIRED. They will bore in All Kinds of Earth, Soft Sand dc Limestone, Bituminous Stone Coal, Slate%nd Hardpan, And we MAKE the BEST of WELLS in QUICKSAND. GOOD ACTIVE AGENTS Wanted in every State and County in the United Btates. Send for our Illustrated Catalogue, terms, prices, etc., proving our advertisement bonafidt. Address GREAT WESTERN WELL AUGER CO., Bloomfield, Davis Co., lowa. prStote in what paper you saw this advertisement. VANBUSKIW’S FRAGRANT,®
M/ml ••’ Bl'
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TEETH A mm. Jam. Jm,. M irm, AND INVIGORATES AND HARDENS THE GUffiS! 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 decay. IMPURE BREATH caused by Bad Teeth, Tobacco, Spirits, or Catarrh, is neutralised by the daily use of SOZODONT It is as harmless as water.>7 Sold by Dragglrte and Dealers Mt Fgncy Qoodi. , rv ue bottle will last six months. A.K.K aai-j. x, l ,
a AND PRESERVES THE Lt .vVAVViw In,
