Jasper Republican, Volume 2, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 January 1876 — Page 4

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

lwm*wAPffl TH cU workhouse rnjf n » 4tM non I ’ g- tMcitson Qf Petersburg has a pafr of spectacles which are said to be wm groomiag. g living niter Kendallville, committed suicide the other morning, by* shooting himself through the' head., Judgb F. W. Mathes, a prominent citizen of Corydon, has become insane and been committed to the State Insane V_~ ' Bon Nixon, the .fighting Marshal of Rockport, was fatally Shot on the night of the Bth, in a quarrel over a trifling matter, by Chajleg Bullock. The ninth annual report of the Board of Trustees of the State Normal School shows that institution to be In a flourishing and easy financial cqpdttion. Jambs H. Schell, of Monroe County, has been arrested upon the charge of setting fire to his storehouse for the purpose of defrauding the insurance companies. Thomas Spaulding has been arrested at Union City on the charge of being concerned in the circulation of bogus $lO notes purporting to be issued by the Richmond National Bank. The Indiana Poultry Association has eleeted the following officers: President, *A. C. Shortridge; Vice-President,(Robert Mitchell; Secretary, Wm. H. Fry; (treasurer, W. F. Christian. * * Arthur W. Lewis, of Martin-County, aged fifteen years, was recently married to Mrs. Nancy Sheridan, aged fifty-five license. ~ S ; a fo an name< * P err V w * itru<s □j a falling tree, hd’had cut down, miles north-of Richmond. He was

held beneath the tree for three hours bediscovered, 'and received fatal BmoM Bingham, of Indiana whisky- " ring Tame, died, at his residence in Patoka on the of the, 10th. ‘ He had pleaded guilty and was awaitiogjSentence. The cause of his death was saidto be congestive chills. j . ~ ; ;\ ! The Bartholomew County Convention u met Sih, and instructcd th? delegates to tbegtate Oonvontion to vita foxiXwnles ’A. Hilbbard for State .Jjevuref, and Hon. Ralph Hill for Supreme. Judge. ta ....-J" 11 ThKX) wen Govgity Republican Convention met at Spencer ‘on the Bth, apd instructed the delegates to the State Convention to support N. W. Cumings for Treasurer and M. Cf Hunter for Judge of the SfipremACoert. '

Ata corn-husking dance on the night of Jhe sth, near Sedalia, Clinton County, about twenty mbn, all more or leas intoxicated, engaged hi a free fight in which clubs, knives arid fists were the weapons used. Three persons were cut, one of thejn fiktaHy. <• During a dance at New Brunswick the Other night Samuel Belcher quarreled 5 With a man named Adney. The former knocked the latter down, when he rose and, seizing Belcher by the head, stabbed him in the abdomen, almost disemboweling him. Adney escaped. The prominent Insurance firm of Beyress & Bolle, representing ten companies, at Evansville, came to grief the other night. Beyress jumped the town some days beforehand Bolle was committed to jail for obtaining money under false pretences. Both are old citizens. A LARGS majority of the newspapers of the State will probably comply with the . request of the committee and publish Centennial numbers on the 23d of Febr mary, and the information so published’ will make an excellent exhibition of the resources and history of the State. Charles Weathers, a young man from Greensburg, was accidentally killed near Shelbyville on the morning of the While climbing a fence with a gun in his hand the rail turned with him, the '* hammer of the gun striking the rail below and discharging the load in his head- J The State Board of Agriculture, recently in session at Indianapolis, elected the following officers for the ensuing year: President, H. Caldwell, Wabash; VicePresident, Stephen Davidson, Fulton County; Secretary, Alexander Heron, Indianapolis; Treasurer, Carlos Dickson, Indianapolis.

A remarkable wedding occurred near Goshen on the 7th. It was a genuine case of winter lingering in the lap of spring, the contracting parties being Mr. Christian Farber, a well-known elder in the Methodist Church, aged sixty years, and Miss Greenawalt,’ a blushing maiden of eighteen summers. Two Constables, named Barnot and Strdyer, made a levy on goods in a store at Cambridge City, the other night. In the attempt to remove and select goods hot words were indulged in, which finally led to a scrimmage, during the course of which Stroyer was thrown violently upon the ground, receiving injuries likely to prove fatal. > The body of John Evans was found early on the morning of the 9th, about two miles nor|h of Decatur, on the railroad track, hor£ibly mutilated. He had been, in town all day and when leaving was ’flowed to be under the influence of liquor. Several trains ran over him. He leaves a family in good circumstances, as he was quite wealthy, his father having left him a fortune a few yean ago. The following postal changes, exclusive of Presidential appointments, were made in Indiana during the week ending Jan. 8, IbTo: Established—Cornstalk, Howard County, George W. Rice, Postmaster. Dißcpntipned—Saltillo, Jasper County. Postmasters appointed—Cowan, Delaware County, ’Robert M. Ball; Epsom, Daviess County, Sylvester M. Hackler; McGrawsville, Miami County*John Younce. The Mexican war veterans met in the Sfeflate Chamlier at the State-House tin the afternoon of the 4th, Gen. M. D. Manson presiding. Several new members were elected. The following were elected officers fqj 1876: President, Gen. M. D. Manson; Vice-Presidents, Col. John M. Osborn and Gen. John Love; Secretary, Edward Palmer; Assistant-Secretary, Gilman Jordan; Treasurer, Dr. E. S. Gale. Jtte society accepted an invitation from MKe National Association to wear bronze medals at the Centennial.

What Gives Value to Paper Money?

or that the firm which issues it is very wealthy or powerful. The holder of the paper must have an acknowledged right -to the gold which ths bank is not going pass foe check will be able to get the gold • for lt then ths check will be depreciated. If it is certain that no one can ever get the gold for it its ritlue wfll be just that of a pretty picture for the children to play With, no matter how strongly it may be declared to represent SI,OOO. Now, with a single exception, which we shall consider presently, the value of the Government paper money is determined in precisely the same way with that of mercantile paper. In itself it has no value at all. Congress may stamp it $1 or SIOO, but nnless it entitles Che owner to claim something it is a mere piece of paper. If the owner can actually get a gold dollar with it it is worth a gold dollar; otherwise it will be more or less depreciated in value according to the hope of.future payment which the holders may entertain. Of course Congress can make everyone call it a dollar and receive it under that name; but wo have seen in the first lesson that this does not give ft real value —that is, purchasing power. If anyone is compelled to take it he simply puts up the price of everything he has to sell in proportion to the depreciation of the paper, so that the result is the same as if the paper passed at a discount. We must now point out the fallacy by which the supporters of irredeemable paper money often try to get round these

cdpsideratiqns. It is said that, the greenbacks, or their proposed paper are to- be issued “ on the credit of the nation,” and therefore must have value’ia-propor-tion to that credit,,even If the nation does not redeem foem.^. f <>'' j, ‘ . J The word “ credit” is here used in some peculiar sense which no one can fully explain, wholly different from its commercial sense. In the world of business “ credit” includes the ability and the obligation to pay all demands in c ish as they become due. A man or a firm that cannot do this has no credit* hov&ver excellent it may be in other respects. Buppose ymjt, should be traveling in a distant cim and going to the cashier of your hotel for change he hands you a ten-dol lar bill on the banking firm bf Spread, Brothers & Co. “Are you sure this bill is gbod?” you. inquiry. . 'JL.i.V “Good as golfi,-wir; the firm’of Spread; Brothers & CO.’ is the greatest in this Stele, possessed of unboiinded wealth, and its operations eitend over the whole globe.” * v/ “ Then,” you reply, “I suppose if I take this bilLto their counter they will pay it’” “Pay it! Why, no, sir; you would be hooted by the small boys in the street and laughed at by Spread’s clerks. The credit of th!' firm is so excellent, and all its debts so well secured by real estate and bonds worth millions of dollars, that both the firm and the community concluded, ten or twelve years ago, that there was not the slightest need of their redeeming their bills, and they are never going to do it.”

“I don’t understand that kind of credit. In my State credit paper is something which the party issuing is bound to pay when required; and if he does not pay he has no credit, no matter how rich he is.” “Of course twopenny firms must pay. But we claim that a firm so great, powerful and wealthy as that of Mr. Spread need not pay.” ... a “ Well, sir,” you would reply, “I don’t see what difference it makes to me how wealthy Spread’s firm is, or how well thair paper is secured, if I can’t get any of their wealth in exchange for toy bill. I always thought the advantage of having the paper of a wealthy firm was that it was surer to be paid; but if the- richer the firm, the less the need of paying, I would rather have the bill on some smaller house.”

“ Ah, you know nothing about finance, I see; and I’ll get you some foreign money rather than argue further with you.” If a hotel cashier should talk in this wayto you, you would be a little puzzled to say whether he was joking or in earnest. And yet great statesmen do argue in just that way about our greenbacks. There are bills to the amount of $400,000,000 afloat, reading: “ The United States will pay the bearer dollars.” Yet if you should take on* of these bills to the Government’s counter, asking that this promise should be redeemed, the clerks would laugh at you. A year or two since some-one-did this very thing, and the newspapers speculated on the man’s sanity,, while a Treasury official thought he was only trying to make himself notorious. If a politician tries to justify permanent nonpayment he will talk about the credit and wealth of the nation exactly as the hotel clerk talked about Spread, Bros. & Co. Now it will be a very profitable mental exercise if the reader will ask himself what is meant by the promise: “The United States will pay the bearer doland if, also, for each theory of the subject he may form, he will consider how it will look for a banking firm to put that sime interpetation upon its promises. To gits the reader time to think this matter over I will here close this lesson.*—Prof. 8. Newcomb, in Harper'» Weekly.

.. . About 100 years ago Mrs. John Adams wrote to her husband: “Our money is very little better than blank paper.” Yet the Continental currency was a legal-tender, based on the faith and resources of the nation, battle-born, bloodstained, etc. Our inflationists wish to show their reverence for the fathers of the Republic by going back to the sort of shinplasters that made the fathers bank rupts. It was the collapse of the currency that threw Robert Morris, the financier Of the Revolution, into a debtor’s prison at Philadelphia.— Chicago Tribune. .. An intelligent trade journal,: the Boston Commercial Bulletin, prints the following in capital letters in its editorial column: “ Supposing the weight of a ton or a pound were to be liable to daily change, at the dictation of speculators, do you think business would long be conducted against such odds? And is ft not the same thing with the currency* Is it not this constant fluctuation of the greenback that is killing business’”

Women and Art.

ments are anything but frivolous if they y, WSOS, WHtpy.j/q turn UionmghJw. md least she will be competent to take a second in a duet, to transpose a song or improvise an accompaniment —all charming and rare advantage* The ordinary young lady can only play set pieces on the piano that she has learned at the price of heaven knows how many valuable hours’ practicing; she never remAnbert anything by heart, could not compose two notes to save her life, and cannot repeat by ear the simplest melody out of an opera, though she has heard it a hundred times. She is perfectly ignorant of the history bi mrisic, hates classical works,

knows few of the master’s names, save Verdf, Donizetti, Offenbach and Mo/art, the latter only as the composer Of ' Don Giovanni.” Gregorian or Latin chants convey ho especial meaning to her mind; all shAehiFtfell jrou about them is that they are used in the church; as for orchestration, scoring, and. such like, they ye only fit matters for professionals; - Bhe -will call Wagner horrid, Gounod lovely, Mendelssohn dull and Beethoven pretty, without knowing why she likes or dislikes anything. She yawns at an oratorio, is bored at a concert, and only enjoy* the opera because she knows everybody that sits in the boxes, and because it is an opportunity for wearing fine clothes, and fills up the Saturday evening, on which there are no balls. BtiH more deplorable is the younglady artist who dabbles in painting. Landscapes are possible; for skies may ba any arrangement of blue and white; trees can always be concocted with different splotches of green and brown; and stones and rocks every; one snows need havvLno particular shape. But when it comes to figures art is impotent; proportion tad perspective are again left to professionals, and the result is—what TA- series of simpering dolls with vermilion-and-white cheeks, vacuous in expression and unsteadjrabout the legs, draped as much as possible, partly from a view to propriety, partly from the inherent difficulty of drawing a hand, an arm or a leg correctly or to look like anything but a bit of wood. The artist’s (sfo) time is chiefly spent in copying a few lackadaisical models of her master’s style or in depicting a shepherdess or a Marquise on a bit of silk intended for a fan or a handscreen--Though our grandmothefs', J ~good, simple souls, were not artistic in the modern sense of the word (for their accomplishments consisted only in playing moderately well qq the harp, chiefly cultivated because it displayed a well-rounded arm to great advantage, and in working monstrous roses and lilies la woodwork, much admired by that generation), yet what knowledge they did possess was both thorough and practical. They could make all manner of dainty preserves, decoctions and distillations; they were conversant with every detail of the dairy, the bakehouse and the kitchen ; they loved flung needlework and took a pride in-the house-linen. They ruled the men and the maids with a firm and gentle hand and were not above giving an eyb to the arrangements when their ford, and master feasted the neighboring gentry.

Of Interest to Riflemen.

Riflemen will be glad to hear that there is at last a reasonable prospect of the introduction of an instrument by means of which the ranges of distinct objects can be determined with sapidity and accuracy. Capt. Poste has designed an apparatus for this purpose, which is so promising that a trial has been accorded by the War Office authorities. Capt Poste’s “macrometer,” as it is called, consists Of two mirrors, disposed somewhat similarly to the mirrors of a marine sextant, the observations also being taken much in the same way. The movable mirror, however, is fixed to an arm, on which are marked the several distances, from twenty to 2,000 yards. The arm moves over a peculiar curve placed on a part of the instrument called the fan, and indicates the distances answering' to any given inclination of the mirror. The arm, moreover, is fitted with asljde, so as to be capable of being set to any length of base, and this base may either be measured by a chain or may be paced,' the slide being set to the line marked “ yards” or “ paces,” as the case may be. The result is given in yards. When it is required to make an observation two men take up positions so as to form a triangle, with the object the distance of which it is desirable to ascertain. One of the two observers, by means of an optical square, places himself so as to be set at right angles with the distant object anAthe second observer, by whom the macrometer itself is used. The time taken by this system is so short that the distance of moving objects can easily be ascertained with very great accuracy. When the object to be measured is statioriary the error has been found to be less than 1 per cent.— Pall McM Gazette. A novel clock has recently been placed Tn the tower of the Albany (N. Y.) Savings Bank. By an ingenious arrangement the dial is illuminated by a gas-burner, lighted automatically at early twilight and extinguished at daylight. This is accomplished by means of the mechanism itself, without the attention of any person; and what is still more wonderful, although the time of daylight varies very greatly from month to month, the clock lights the gas at precisely the proper time from day today.

Instead of putting a gilded ball on the steeple of a new church at Vestal Center, N. Y., the cheating contractors substituted a gilded earthen jug,, put on bottom upward. One of the good church members was incensed at this discovery, and to show his contempt seized his rifle and shot—the contractors * no—shot at the jug and brought it down m fragments with the first bullet. His aim was to bring the contractor’s work where it could be inspected, and he did it. A correspondent of the Motional Baptiet, of Philadelphia, tells a romantic story of a young man named Randall, formerly a resident of New -York, Who wak captured at Syria by the Bedouins, married a sheik’s daughter, and has converted her and others of the tribe tp the Christian fhlth. * J A eadwdl trance-action—Getting out of bed’ in onW keep Add tf&Si&Otlt of a third-story window.

HOUSEHOLD HINTS.

M»lamb» Cak«.—Twp ssipsofmolawaHqintacwip eT twwlmy water poured oa two tablespoonfals of soda, a Itrthp of alttmthe tad onecup" of butter. Let tifo> cold before" “kfc .a '.tote ButternvwCaw.—Four eggs, beaten separatefy- rwoeupe sugar, one of butter, 1 oneot butternut meats, one-half cup sweet mßk,two andone-half cups flour (heaped), one teaspoonful soda, two of crea W tartar. Rub the black scales off from, the meals before putting them in th® cake. Bake in two loaves. '■ Lj-- .:. l 4: t *» Mutton Cutlets.—Trim off all superfluous fat from each cutlet, dip them in an egg beaten up with aiittle oil, some pepper and salt,, then cover them withbreadlet them rest for aeon pie of hours. Fry them in plenty of butter or lard to flight brown color. Arrange them in a. ‘circle on & dish and pour some tomato-sauce ip the center. \ Keeping buckwheat batter is often very’ troublesome, especially ih mild weather. It can be kept perfectly sweet by pouring cold water over that left from one morning, and-which is intended to bp used for raising the next morning’s cakes. Fill the vessel entirely full of water and put in a cppl place; when ready to use pour off the water, which absorbs the acidity. Tomato Sauce.—Melt a piece of butter the size of an egg, and mix it well with a dessertspoonful of flour; add the contents of a ,can of tomatoes, mix well, tad then ptftlh pepper and salt to taste, a pod of garlic, a bay leaf, a sprig of thyme, another of marjoram, and some parsley, tied up together. Keep the sauce hot until it is wanted, When the herta should be removed. Oysteh Sauce.—Parboil the oysters, in their qwn liquor, beard them and reserve all the liquor. Melt a piece of butter in a saucepan, add a little flour, the oyster liquor and enough milk to make as much sasee as is wanted. Put inablade of mace and a bay leaf tied together, pepper and sn to taste and the least bit of cayenne. • LSthe same boil, add the oysters, and as soft as they are quite hot remove the mfte and bay leaf, stir in a tew drops of lemon-juice, and serve. A CORRESPONDENT gives the following recipe for scrap-book paste: Dissolve a teaspoonful of alum in a quart of water; when cold, put in as mttch flour as will give it the consistency ot thick cream, being particular to beat up all the lumps; stir in as much powdered resin as will lay on a r dime, and‘ add also six cloves: pour a teacupful of boiling water into the flour mixture, stirring weß all the'time. It will be soon like, mash. Let it cool, and keep it cool. Lay a cover on ■ it. For use, soften with warm water. It will keep twelve months.

Ric®. Waffles.—One cupful of rice boiled done, three cupfuls of flqur, three eggs,.one teaspoonful of soda and .a piece of lard or butter the size of a walnut? The ingredients must dll be prepared separately, for negligence on the part of a cook will prevent the success of any recipe. Be sure to beat your eggs very light. Bee that every particle of soda. is thoroughly dissolved, and that after it is added the baking be hot long delayed, lest the effervescing properties of the soda be destroyed, and consequently the cakes heavy. This batter may be used in waffle-irons; or else baked like flannel cakes upon the open griddle. ■ ’

Stewed Celery.—Trim and cut to the same length a number of heads of celery; split them in two lengthwise; tie them in bundles with thread, and parboil them for ten minutes m salted water; ditain them and arrange them in a saucepan over slices of bacon, with a bundle of sweet herbs, a couple of onions, pepper and salt to taste and a blade of mace; add enough stock just to cover the contents, and set the saucepan to simmer gently till the celery is quite tender. Having removed the string, dispose the celery neatly on a dish; take some of the stock in which it has been stewed, remove all.fat from it, add a small piece of fresh butter, pour it over the celery and serve.

Boston Cream-Puffs.—One tumblerful of water,'one-q rarter pound of butter, one and a half tumblers of flour. Boil the water arid butter together, and stir in the flour while the mixture is boiling hot. Take it from the fire to cool. When cold add five eggs, one at a time, mixing well; add one-half a teaspoonful cold water. With a tablespoon drop the above on the pans to bake. Let the oven be very hot. The cakes must remain in fifteen minutes. Do not open the oven door. If you do your cakes will be flatter than wafers. Cut a small opening in the side of each cake and, with a teaspoon, put in the following mixture: Qne-half coffee-cup flour, one of sugar, two eggs, two tumblers of milk. Beat the eggs, flour and sugar together, stir them into the milk, while boiling, Until thickened and smooth.

Positive Knowledge Needed.

Farming, as an occupation, will never attain to the high position to which It is by right entitled until a series of accurate experiments determine facts. If asked how much a pound of beef, pork, mutton, wool or grain costs us, we cannot answer. What would we think of the manufacturer of cotton goods if he could not show the exact cost of. a yard of cloth ? We would at once concede that bankruptcy would inevitably result, or at least would be likely to result, by pursuing such a course. The need of closer calculation in regard to the cost of production becomes more and more obvious the longer the country is settled and the population increases. The farmer should farm intelligently, should learn what each crop costs him, so that he may be enabled to diversity his crops, and grow only what will pay the best, without permanently exhausting the soil. A contemporary very wisely remarks “ if we were to count up the losses incurred every year by the farmers of the United States, from a want of accurate information in the practical conduct of their affairs, it would aggregate a fearful amount. The earth yields so generous a return for ah intelligent labor bestowed that,it balances all losses from unskilled labor, and produces a surplus upon which all the wealth of the world is based. If farmers could be induced to study their processes with the same accurate observe tion‘tliat‘manufacfufeis o do the processes of their business, agriculture would soon

-upontawaida of atatasta'hwnta vn.iw?” edge. It was hu»iiik»gto h«!ter #£ forties’of New' York,' *'"thH 'of progress In our agricultural colleges. by i th*t ‘ agriculture is not science,’.»that ‘no Dne can tell him What it costeto make ayiound of beef,’ tad, by inference, that these schools are to be excused for not hefylfa& the fanner to a knowledge of what lie has all .hislife neglected to.observe for himself. Just as if that were not precisely what these schools were endowed for—to redeem the want of common observation on 'the part of farmers, aqdteacfithfefr sbni foe'value of accurate knowledge.”—CWwtan’s jRunU JForifo s h- : .

Houses Without Nails.

The steamship Alaska, which arrived on the 19th inst., brought from Japta most of the exhibits, national tad private, which Will be made by the Japanese at the CentennialK Dfoers wjjl follow, butlfojtlapanese are prompt and are taking time, by the forelock. Two Japanese officials have been delegated to supervise foe exhibit#, ' wfll be many and. varied. On the Alaska were 150 tons, or fifteen car loads, of material for. Japanese houses, to, i>e erected on the. Exposition grounds. Tern Japanese carpenters accompany the material, which is, Iti foe main, bamboo, the. chief wood used for hbmses in foe Enipirp of foe Sun. The, material is ready prop med in »'great measure; all the hewing, toe dressing, etc.,' has been done and no labor remains for the swarthy carpenters excepting the task of finishing the inaterial .and putting the frames together. Hcveral styles of houses will be on exhibition. A singular fact, in connection with the houses is they «re entirely devoid of nails. The wood ISpacked in tight cases'; almost hermetically, sealed, and in consequence of the Japanese Consul’s uncertainty in regard to the contents of the cases.they have been detained at this: port by the custom officers since their irrival. The necessary formalities have been complied with at last, however, qnd the Japianese houses will soon beontheir way to Philadelphia. —sm Fran«isco Call. .

Pitman's Sun-Dial.

Old Mills, the optician at New Castle, sold a sun-dial to Pitman a few weeks ago, with the assurance that it was quite a' reliable'tlxae-keeper. Afxmt a fortnight afterward Pitman called at the Shop and said: “ Say, Mills, that sun-dial is not worth a cent. It's no good as a timepiece, anyway.’’ “Maybe you haven’t got, ft.fixed in g gpqd place,” Mills. “ Yes, I htwe,” replied Pitman; *‘.bnt I tell;you ft wdn’t work. There must’ be> something wrong about it.” “Nqf it’s in perfect order,* said MilWf ever time it by your watch?” “Certainly I did. I’ve stood dost to it a hundred: times exactly at the even hours, and the cussed thing has never struck the time one*.” Moses! Why; djdfl’.t expdct .ft to 'strike the hours, did you?. Thunder! why, it don’t strike, ofcourse. It has no works inside.” “That’s what gets me,” said) Pitman. “If itain’t got no insides how is it goiri’ to 'gdF’ “ Jtr. Pitman, where have you located that sundial? In the garden?” ‘.“Garden! .Be gracious, no! What do I want with a timepiece in thagarden ? It’s hung in the setlin’-rooin, agin the wall.” Then Mills explained to him, and Pitman has since traded the sun-dial off for a fourdollar.clock.—Max Adder. ■C' f’ . <1 -w . **-■ »(i <■;; V . ( ig frat A lad named James McCullar, aged fifteen, was tossing up a penny piece and catching ft in his month, at Wolverhampton, in England, the other day, when the coin slipped down his throat. He was taken to the hospital and, after lingering for two nights, the lad died in great pain .

What Shall We Dot It fa ho wonder that’ we hear this question on every corner. So many 1 are dying anddenlyof diseases of the brain in these days that everyone is alarmed, and is asking: “AVUat shall we.do?” There is alarm on account of dizziness of the head, a whirling sensation when rising up suddenly, a bad, j “ all-gone” sensation at The pit of the stomach, like the gnawing of ah-uk-er, with a feeling like a load after eating,, pains in the back,-sides and chest, At times, with costive bowpls, scanty, bigh-colorcd urijic, sometimes voided with pain, appetite poor, and when food is eaten it oftentimes distresses; • the Skin, after a time, becomes dark, •cold’. i and clammy, eyfes sunken and tinged with yellow, spirits dejected, with.evil forebodings. When any of these symptoms are present no time should be lost in using s . proper remedy. The one that we have known to operate with the most certainty h the Shaker Extract of Roots or Cura(not a patent medicine), sold by Druggists and A. J. White, &1U Pearl street, Mew York- ■ V ‘ >■ * Soap. It will not . waste nor become'sort like ordinary yellow soap when used in warm j water, nor is it cheapened with article* injurious to clothes. Aememter, you obtain a full one-pound bar if you. purchase their brand. To protect their brand from imitators Procter & G am hle patented it, and the patcift was sustained in the United States Courts. Azamiws the stamp on the bare when you buy. Take their Soap only. Simon Morgan, Secretary of the Weavers Committee in the late strike at Fall River, has applied to the Overseers of the Poor of that city for relief. A Western man says that flguresvron’t lie unless they happen to be on a

——wear through al the toe. Money la thrown awav by al SCREW M ne* M? DfflM good* bear the Parent Stamp. ffiE LADIK’.FRIEND! KS’t'.-gaSIS! SSS&nVE&'S’fJS: Aobxts Waxtbd. NOON A GREEN. Manufac hirer*. West Waahlngton street. ChicagoSandwich Manufacturing Co., SANDWICH, D« KALE CO., ILLINOIS. • ’

ScaxNCK's Pulmonic Bnfo Ska Who Tonic Mratted of delerreoMvjicianx from attemntttnr To find reme■reconciled themselves to death without making an effort to escape from a doom which they supposed to be unavoidable. It ta sew-proved. however , Of cSw Pulm<mic l^™ t Xn?; l^nd t Tn otW same medicine in connection with Scbenckfe Sea .Weed Tonic and Mandrake. Pills, one or both, ac.rood health W Xopj- years, wm sup Dosed, at one time, to be at the very gate or death, gaphyricUns havingWreaonwced’hisease Iwpeiess. and abandoned him to hie fate. He was nsed Dr. Schenck s preparations with the«ajn?,re“rrtl ta'eMkme accompany each, making it pot absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Schenck unless patients wish their lungs examined-and for thia purpose he is prwfesaiouaily at his tyinejmitat be addressed. Schenck's medtetaee ar® sold by all druggists. Obmtan was our grandmothers' bobby for a tonic, and no bitter would be considered complete without it; hence it entefs into nearly all. But experience has provid that it il'injurtoßS to. foft stowuffi if (-equentty used. Asa better tonic is. found m ffuarane

see A4xerti»etnent headed HO! FOKTOWA.H* work 1 Kl All Book*, Knrfons GoMs, Pporttmr AnftlSsj 0Q A JNO. A CLARK, Inventor, NeWaHgJr. ii (pfo/U Addrert JAY BRONSOK,!DeIgoit, Mteh. MONET ' Fbbk S. M. Spencer. 547 Washington etrpet. gMkCKISSSra *SSMX SjVKF,»W Bdok, Wble aid-Mwi-HoiMe,- Ckjcago. EVERYBODY SEND IS STS

Ivins Patent Hair Crimpers. REVOLVERS! I $3.00 fuiX NteKXL Plate. Satiafrietien ramfeUriL 4 Illwitroted C.talorte Fnna >A Addw KSRTIRN ffUX WORKS. Chicago. 11l Meeker’s PcHUMOjMCIM ! ’S H. L.F LETCHER, 111 Ngw t York. ~ sogsaissg S2sofglßiS3g nn Vflli Fertile. Rend your address rtlf PER. WEEK GUARANTEED TO 877 f . F. C. VICK URY & CO., Augusta. Maine.

SCHOLARSHIPS Chicago, 111. WXUAXM E, BowniTCU,6I3 Warren St, goston,Mass. trtSSJ YSrtf IFMSSftW.TI’® CORMACK * CO, P, O. Draper Ml 9, New.AQrJc.Citj.

Sls SHOT GUN fun, tarKfraU Milon lock,; nmnUd pnoiM tlrtrtJ??,'? • P od so MU; ”»•>■ rart. pouok >nd w d oion, S- D ’ W Gu» PmUt«. ra M.in Bu.rr, Cincn.ti,O. rtSRSSttrtWMS! ... ... ..... - j ; ~U ymaT&r.fe-Ms.'isi: ais* Wf rtfuSTRATEn SEEDbAVALOGUE for UWI age. English and .German Edition. Address JOHN KERN, 2 i I-Market Street, St. Louis. tG HTState whereyoa mw thia advertisement.

CTOP AND LOOT/

worthy COME AND SEE tracts or Colonies. Come or send committees to

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OLIVER DITSON ft CO., BOSTON. C. H. mtaon « Co. P r ,,w, L * Gieeeware, Feaer Goods <I,OOO articles) end-ell deSMW lighted patrons testify to the benefits of dur obkat ba lb, aadln our paper hundreds oC-lattoss arewriated from our patrons 4a tee Wt Owtejears, Rradkb, you can ba vs, monrtrT you am toke *lO go as far Mar-AMavrig a,** naffe. 40-colnmn paper. IHußtrated* OTd. Ailed with charming itories, tales, pwfiis, hnnwrimd three columns fJP?* 0 cf Swindlers, Quacks andHumbmts. Ufebyall odd* Kbarmlng Nienbh £tambdi4e mounted ready to hang or frame. Reader, you want ; four beantKuhWtW Cbromoe, all agnt prapajd. BamplS?or, better? ?0 cents and romtoe U'« aaouths. AddreM B ANNER^. IMWMOIAW ■ jjpmcy.A jjut IfIINBUSKIWSfRASRANt Jilwi TZ IT

Oft 'W TEETH Ans invigorates and hardens the gums I It imparts k delightfully refreshing taste and feeling to the mouth, removing dl TARTAR and SCURF from the teeth, completely arresting the pro. gross of decay, and whitening such parta ag have become black by decay. r ? - IMPURE caused by Bad Tfeth, Tobacco, Splrita, or Catarrh, is n&itndtaed by the ■ used* oaf*. 1 ”-'*:- SOzoDONT It is as harmless as water. < One bottle wfll last atx month*.

Atlantic Hotel* • rvr ;i CHICAGrO. ' - f 75c. Per Day to $2.50. Carter Vtnßnren and LaSalle 8t»„ within three minutes’ walk of the business center. Chamber of Commerce, railroad depot* and place* of amusement. The Only Firs t-claasFire-p roof Hotel A.N. K. I. L.d ' ptl Ik paper to Prtnu d with 1W mahnlaet ire*£ $ 1 G.BKANE A CO., Ml Dearborn St.. Chicago. For sale by A. M. Kmllom, 7 8 Jackson 6U t Aicafs