The National Banner, Volume 7, Number 32, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 December 1872 — Page 4
The Farm and llonFehold. N SoRbOGTRD BY JOKATIAN Sons.
Eest Feed for Milch Cows., ' The following is from an essay read before the Vermont Dairymen's Association, by Alexander Hyde, of Massa¢husetta: ' The circumstance that most |affects the quality and quantity of milk js the food. The luxuriant apd succulant grass of June produces a great flow of milk, but the per cent. of water in it is much |above the average of 87. -Take a cow from a greenz pasture and feed her on dry hqy, and the quantity of milk will be greatly dimin ished, while the quality may B improved. Everything a cow eats affecty her milk directly. We have great faith in cabbages a 8 producivg an abundadce of) rich milk, but unfortunatecly the| lady who presides over our houschold hap keen sens es, and detectsin the milk thel lcast flavor of cabbage of turnip. We have sometimes evaded detection by feeding calhbinge leaves moderately at firat and immediately after milking, but the increased quantity and quality of the milk, if not the taste, are apt'to call out the question, |“What are you feeding your cows onnow 2" Sweet ‘corn fodder,we are confldent, giives a richer: milk than common corn. Indian meal, all {farmers agree, gives a richimilk, while buckwheat inereeaes the per cgnt. ot water more lapidly than 1t does the more valoa. ble properties. Clover; cut gieen, greatly improves the quality of milk. Being a leguminous plant, it should| add to its casein rather than to its butted. Pea vines, also leguminous,: are extengively -uvaed at the South, where the grasses o not flour ish, as food for cows, and are/said to pro duce excellent milk., Therel can be no question that grass cut befope it goes to geed will produce more and [better milk than after all its virtues are spent in their legitimate purpoess of producipg seed atter ita kind, Ifthe hay has beeb made from grass as dry and woody as ot straw, 1t may be benefited by being cut and moist ened, but 1t can never be restored to:its original nutrition .any more than the daughters of Tobiaa could re fivinate their aged father by culting him up and boiling him, i : i % All the roots add to the flpw of milk and improve its quality. Ley furnish both food and drink, being largely composed of water, The fecding of roots do not save as much hay aa some suppose, They keep the auimal in good health and appetite, and are valusble in|their sanita 1y aid manurial effects rather than as an economrzer of hay. The inctease of milk and manure is very manifest from the feeding of roots. Potatoes ninke-the best of milk,but at present prices we can hardly afford to feed those of & merchantable size and quality. The smsll potatocs can be put to no better use than food for 'young stock and milch cows. hey furnish much saline matter, thus adding to the specific gravity of milk and|to the mate ‘rial for building up the frame work of the foung animal. As an obsadriing dairy woman once said to us, “Potatoes give body: to milk,” . . It is cruel to tax cows in winter for milk and give them nothing but dry hav from which to manufacturd it. If cut before maturity, this hay containsall the elements of milk, but it is|dry fodder, and if it conatitute the only |food of ' the. cow, day after day for six mlonths, there ia's eumeness about’it whichfis not pro vocative of a good appetite. As men crave and need a good variety of fond, o do cows. A few beata, or tyrnips, orcar rota should be fed to them cdch day, and ‘the rlick coats of the apimals and the im proved quintity and’ quality of their milk will indieate teir appreciatfon of these roots. One of the best and most econom. ical kinds of feed f&r cows, Hoth 1n summer and winter, is the bran|of wheat and rye. The inorganic part of igrain. resides chiefly in the husk or bran, as may be seen by burnivg similar quahtities ot fine flour and bran. The ash of the- latter, will, on the average, bs six|timea that of the former, theash of dry, fine flour being about one per cent., and thab of bran six per cent. of the weight of the whole, — Bran, therefore, though adry looking sort of fodder, is rich in those elpments which form the frame work of an{mals, and Dr. Graham awas doubtleas corfect when he advocated making bread ffom unbolted flour. - Many dairymen pradtise puttiog a couple of quarts of wheat bpan into six or eight quarts ot whey, and| feedingit to their cows night and inorning, theteby improving: their milk, their cpws and-their pestures. Theimprovement of the latter i specinlly manifest, as the|bran restores to ther the phosphorus, sulhpur, potash, lime, #oda, ect., of which our old pestures have become exhaunsted, fhese essential constituents of & good soil having been carried off in the benes of amimale and the grain aed dairy products s¢ld.” 'i
How to Make Fienk Lay. There are many hens kepl through the winter which are nét” wordth their feed, because they are chilled hnd half sick from being forced to live oh food not auit ed to théir needs or are tdo old for use. A hen is an egg laying machine, and in order to keep it in running order, it must be fed with a variety of food, out of ( which it can combine th¢ various parts - of the egg—white, yolk and shell. Winter is the hardest sehson for- hens, sad they require more nttention at that time ; but if suitable food| is given and “the location of their houed is sunny and comfortable, one can =afely count on as many eggs in December,January and February as in the summer months. Their food must be varied ; this/is an essential’ item in the care of hens.| It is best to feed corn, wheat, oats, Buckwheat and potatoes. Having part of| the corn just from the cob and the rest|either cracked like hominy or in ground | meal, and we find it better to feed whole corn at night, and the more casily digested food at morn- ., ing and noon, : When the cold wosther becomes i gettled, it is best also to wet up the morn. ing and noon feed with gcalding water, and feed it quite hot.; for Mr. Cook adoodle doo and Dame Pattlett like a hot bit and sup of food when the sir is frosty and biting quite ae well ps you snd I; and they also love to feel comfortable and happy, -and will do thdir work much. more regularly if this little attention is . granted to them. 0 * Small potatoes, boiled 4nd mashed, are aleo valuable food for them, and it is a good plan to boil up a |large kettle of them several times a week ; corn meal or wheat screenings can be [mixed with' if, but with or without grain, it will prove a palatable dish and be greatly relished. A little palt sprinkled oyer the potatoes will make them more healthful. The old idea that salt wil) kill hens is not exactly a true one; perhapd if they ate large bits of rock salt it might/ prove injurious but we know from expefience that salt curd makes chickens thrive,and that hens eat of it voraciously. The practice of eating feathers from their own and each othex’s necks, .is also cured by an application of salt to their food, in liquid or bulk. tablespoonful of salt stirred into a gallon kettle of food makes it of better quality. : Scrap cake, which can|bs purchaced of " thebutcher at a cheap raté,is a very healthful food for poultry, as it will supply the place of worms and bugs, and gives more wsrm& to their systems. o - Unless we give food that will permit -the hen to manufacture the egg shell, it will often produce fat and no hen fruit; occasionally an egg without a shell may be dropped and then we know that lime, old mortar, bones or something contsiningshell material mnst be provided. If bone -meal can be purchosed, if is the best food, ~if not, we must burn all fhe meat bones 'we use, then pound themt and mix with | the boiling food. Oy shells pounded ‘are good ; and bits of Broken crockery are eateemed tif-bits by all “biddies,” |
Green food, such as cabhage heads, etc,, is also, very much relished, and farmers should alwaye remember to give ‘the refuss cabbage leaves to the hena rather than to the hogs. : ' Boxes of coal ashes, wood ashes, aud sand or gravel are also needful articles of furnitire in every hennery ; and air slaked lime—a shovelful every few days—isa dainty to the hens. If piles of ashes and lime are I»id in the corners of the houss, the hens will roll in them and keep them selves free from vermin.— Cor. Country Gentleman. ; i
P Caring Pork, ' ~ Bome {thirty years ago I lodged frem Beaturday to Monday with an inn-kedper in the coutitry, who was also & farmer. On the talile for Bunduy’s-dinner there . (¢ - s i ~was a nice plece of pickled. pork, boiled the day before. On tasting it I thought it the most delicious I ever ate, and re—quested him to givehis recipe for curing pork. He replied : e . “Asgecon as my bogs are dresred and cool encugh .to be cut,-I pack the side pieces‘in a barrel or pask, with. plenty of -salt on all sides of each piece, and when "y barrel is full I immediately roll it to ‘my,pump and pump in water until I can sce the water cenge to sink in the vessel, or to moisten the salt on top of the cask. I jhen'lay a flat atone, as large aa the ves eel will receive, on the contents, 80 as to keep the pork always shder the salt or pickle.. I put it in my¥.cellar, cavered so as to exclude the fliss, and there it remains natil a plece is wanted. Care mnst bie taken to keep the meoas urder the pickle, athorwise it will rast” . Here is' tho whole sccret of making good pickled pork for family use. We have used the above methiod, and we want’ 1o hetter, engict or more cconomical plan. It " has often happeued that when wE wanted to put down vew pork. there re mained some of the eld ip the bottom of the cagk. In that case-we poured off the pickle, took the undissolved salt, packed the freah pork on top of the old, using the aalt whicli had been in the ¢dsk, with the addition of [fresh aalt if necessary, and then poured on ‘the old pickle or water. In this way we have bad pork three or fr.;ur years in the bottom of our pork barrdl, and when used it was asfrec from rancidity as i was thres weeks after it was put down. Indecd, we seidom emp - tied our pork barrel, except when it wanted hoeping. We believe that boiling pickle is uscless if not injurious, Pork shoild not, if it can be presented, be frozen before it is put down.. . As a general thing it is a good plan to reject .p(')rir made from hogs that have iieen kept by distiliers or butchers, but if posaible get pork that bas been bred.and fed by a dairyman, and finished off ‘with cern, ‘ o
Keep the Cattle Growing. ' The most successful breeders of: horses, cattle, sheep or swine, know from experience that although they may possess the best breeding animals, they will not be succeasful in prodncing superior stock-it a continual growthiof young animals is not kept up. Inorder to begin.in time at this indispensable preparation, for sud- . cess, the brood mares, cows, ewes and sows ure most carefully and suitably fed while with young, and as soon as the ydung animals meke their. appearance, they are taken the greatest care of, tha dama heing suitably fed while auckling, end when the young ones are wesned, {hey are not supposed to want-for food or drink a single hour. By this means a coktipuous or rapid growth i kept up, and the animals attain & large size and heavy weight st an esrly age. When breeding animals are not properly fed and comfortubly sbheltered in -winter, the mad effect of such treatment is not confined to.their own want of condition—it As shared by their progeny, and can never be remedisted. When young stock: are not fed well and comfortably sheltered in winter, their growth becomes stunted, and no subsequent agll(>ullt of good treatment can repwir the damage. Young animals may suffer for want of proper provender in suminer and autumn, sa well asin win"ter, and when thia happens it etops. continuous growthand prevents ultimate auc~ cesa in the ohjects ot the breeders. — Wor king Farmer. | : : e<o e - e " Not (iex%_a‘rally Hnowmn. ~ Martin Van Buren is the only man who Leld the office 0f President, Vice President, Minister to England, Governor of liis own State, and member of Houes of Congress, - o Thomsas . Benton is the only man who held aseat in the United States Senate, for thirty years., : . The only instance of fathier and eon inthe United States Senatc at the same time, is that of Hon. Henry Dodge, Sena tor from Wisconsin, and his son, Augas tus C. Dodge, Senstor from lowa. - Gen. James Shields is'tbe only man who ever represented two| States in the United States Senate. At one time he was Senator from Illinois, and subsequently Senator from Minnesota. L John Quincy Adams held a ‘position under the government during every Ad ‘ministration from that of Washington ‘0 that of Polk—during which he died. He had been Minister to England, member of both Houses of Congress, Secreta--ry of Stateand President of the United States. He died while.a member of the House of Representatives, i : . The only instance where thres broth-. ers occupied seats in the lower House, at the same time, was when Elibu B. Washburne represented the First District of Illinois, Israel Washburne, jr., the Third District of Maine, and Cadwallader C. Washburne the Third District of Wisconsin, i
PENNSYLVANIA i 8 extensively engaged in the pardoning business. The Governotr,_ having released the notorious scoundrel and convicted murderer, Mara, to. gether with Yerkes, the President has now extended the executive clemency to Mr. Percy B. Spear, agentlemanly forger. Mr. Spear was appointed Indian Agent some time ago. He required bonds, and, not being ahle tn procure genuine.ones, he offered a spurious article in which be bad forged the names of a number of gentlemen of large wealth. Mr. Percy B. Spear became a martyr and went to the Penitentiary, where he remained till after the Preaidential election. ok
Axingenious drug-store clerk of Cleveland, who is a chemist in disguise, has discovered a now suicide article that not only makes him famous, but it will save funeral expenses, and entirely dispense with coroners and their ‘juries, @and rob genaational newspaper reporters of the pleasure of describing the corpse. The article is a combination of powerful chemicals, and when iohaled, changes the en tire body, clothes and all, into gasses in an instant,leaving no traces of the victim, not even the life insurance policy Being left. Several persons are missing, and it is feared that the clerk has been experimenting on them. ° : )
A rEW days since a needy person applied' to a wealthy citizen for help, and received the small sum of five cents. The giver remarked, as he handed over the pittance, “Take it, you are welcome, our ears are always open $o the calls of the distressed.” “That may be,” replied the recipient, “but never before in my life h;ve’ ’I seen 80 small an opening for such eATs,
A PROPOSITION has been ‘introduced in. the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention to compel attendance at public schools. The tendency of the age is toward compulsory education, and that policy will doubtless prevail eventually in all the States.
The Khedive of Egypt intends sepding a force of 5,000 troops, under command of an American officer, to aid Dr. Living. stone in exploring the scource of the Nile,
~ VARIETIES. i The fool's—win gold and ?end it. /The miser's—win gold and spare:it. The gambler's—win gold and loseit. * The railor’s—win gold and cruise it. - The merchant’s—win gold and nse it i G - The pawnbroker’s—win gold and lend it. e . . The yain man’s—win gold and wear it. : : ' The generous man’s—win gold and shareit. | = o The profligate’s—win gold and epend it. - o ; A regular loafer—a baker. Loose habits—dressing-gowns. A hostin himself—an innkeeper. .. Vegetable philosophy—sage advice. Bookkeeping in one lesson—stick to them : ; ey The worat tax of all—attacks' of gout. o o Wool gathering—fight between negr()f 8. ! ; . The “Pyramid” is a new square dance. o L ‘With topers, as with a good book, it is meet and drink. Qnery——Need a vendor of chessmen be a pawn-broker. | Sage gréen isthe lastest fashionable color in kid gloves. S Diamonds set in- jet are the latest fashionable novelty: L The height of impudence —asking & Jew what his christian name is. San Francieco has decided that roller skatitg is preferable to dancing, . Count Sclopis has to stand sponsor for 2 new siyle of gentleman’s scarf. Contentment is the trye philozopher’s stone ; neither have yet been discovered. - ‘
The sale of the Belmont collection of forcign paintings realized over $BO,~ 000. - - : " It was seid of a late horse that he died of intémperance, because the end of him was whisky. Misz Kellogg will write her autobiography, giving with varnish the-inside history of stage life. e " T'wo ladies in Canada West are running a store entirely in the interest of the English church. John Rogers has almost completed his mogt important work, “The Watch Fires of the Revolution. ; Musk is becoming the fashionable perfume again, and the boys have taken to hungng “muskrats,” i A panster challenged a sick man’s vote at the city election on the ground that he was an ill legal voter. ' Fashionable New York societies does not ellow marriage engagements to run longer than three months. The- beauntiful eshell . work of the West India ielands is uzed considerbly as graniture for ladies’ dresses. Soms young ladies just returned from abroad have adopted the fashion of wearing undresaed kida in full dress. It has been found that in nearly every civilized country tree that bears the most fruit for the market is the axle¢ tree. | i It ia singunlar how clorely ‘Burning Boston rerembles the old cuts of ‘Barning Chicago,” used by the illustrated papers. | : It was suggested that an advocate of onr government’s finterfering in the affairs of other nations should be award~ with a meddle. o ~“(Qandy-pulls” are the latest excuse for getting a number of young peoi)le‘ together and having a genuine, oldfachioned romp. . - a 0 ‘ 1t is coneidered a very polite thing when walking with a lady to pass around on the opposite side #o avoid ‘etepping on her shadow, : A young lady of Gratiot, Mich., still e minor, has two husbhands living to each of whom she has been married twice within a few months.
On a Deunver bridge is this notice: “No vehicle drawn by more than one animal is allowed to cross this bridge in opposite directions at the same time. The prettiess little knick-knacks imaginable, urns hunting -horns, tables and the like, in oxydized silver are now worn slung at the waist belt of our; belles. ° , - : * Mrs. Partington has been reading the health officer’s weekly reports, and thinks ‘“total’” must be an awful malignant disease, since as many die of it as of all the rest put together. A new shade of silk is "colored by a very deadly poison, andin a dress there is enough poison to instantly kill the most distant relative of the young man courting the wearer.—Danbury News. Sundry females of very advanced views are trying to carry the divorce system to its legitimate conclusion in Illinois by establiching a community on the basis. of polyandry at Lone Prairie. Many of the fashionable young ladies of New York are said to make and trim their own dresses, and some are paid by their parents the amount it would cost to?mve them made by drcesmakers It is reported that Miss Alexander a California actress who was for ten years a member of Brigham Young’s family, will be the next to tell on the lecture platform what she knows about Mormonism. : At the late meeting of the Western District Baptist Association of Maryland, held at Rockville, it was shown that there were fewer Baptistsin Maryland than in any State or Territory. in the Union. g : , . A veterinary surgeon who lives at Buffalo, New York' tried to ‘founder’ his mother-in-law by dancing a polka with her until she got warmed up, and then giving her all the iced lemonade gshe could drink. ; 5
A portrait of the Czar Alexander of Russia, painted by his order as a present for Hon. A. G. Curtin, late United States minister to St. Petersburg, is on exhibition at Philadelphia. The painter was G. Bothmann, the most famous artist of the Russian Capital, Two elderly ladies came into Deerfield, Mich., and framed and raised as good a house as there is in the neighborhood, not a bit of male labor being expended upon the structure.— They have now set about levelling the ‘primeval forests,’ S . The wife of a German dancing-mas-ter in Louisville. Ky., lately drew $l,250 in & lottery and gave it to her huss band. He took i, went to Germany, . and came back with another wite.— His first wife has divided the children with him and gone to Cincinnati,
HORSE-DISTEMPER. A COMPARISOR OF DIBASTERS. A LOSS TO THE COUSTRY OF #100,000,000.- " (Fromthe Cincinnati Star.) - It will be a question before we get done with it, whether the horse disease will not have proved almost as serious a disaster to the whole country as the Bos: ton fire. The loss by this latter calamity ia now pretty deflnitly Aecertained to be about '5100,000,000. This is an enormous sum, and it seems 28 if no mere tempora - ry withdrawal of horse labor frem the market could equal it in money loss. ' But let us see. It may be pretty safely calculated that every city,town, and even every considerable village in the United States either has taken or will take the horse diecase before it is stamped out. Again, it is generally admitted by horsemen that the average time that diseass necessitates the withdrawal of a horse from labor is about a month. o This may nced a little explanation. The actual timé that a horse cannot labdr at all while under the influence of the epidemic is not “over eighteen or twenty .days; in some casct perbaps less than two wecks. ‘But atter Leilig nominally put to work, it is two or three or four weeks more before the horse can begin to do his full amount of labor again. It 1s ag least five weeks since the horses of Buffalo took the disease, and we liear of none of them, which are- perfectly recovered. Very many of them are at work of,course, but they are weak: and thin, and still cough badly, and d 9 but balf their usual work, The first victims of the diseass in Pitteburg have now had it considerably ovdr two weeke, and none are yet recover ed.” Few have arrived yot &t more than the turning point of the malady. It is fair, therefore, takiog the percentage of horsea that die of the diseasc also into account to calculate that the average lose of horse labor from the epizooty is one month. © L : ~ . Now, there are about 11,000,000 bhorses and mules in the.United States. . The la bor of a ‘working horse for one month may he computed as worth at-least § 10 a moenth, - If, therefore, haif the horses of the country take the epizymosis and lose a month's labor in consequence, the direct loss to the country would be $55;000,000. But the direct loss to business caused by horee diseage is not half the -real loss. The clogging of the wheels of commerce, the embarrassment occasioned “in every 'line of business, the enforced idleness of hundreds of thousands of work ingmen, these things are a far more seri~ous loss, and would easily place the total loss far above $100,000,000, she amount of loes sustained by Boston. :
The IMorse Disease in New York—The Dropsy, Farcy, and Glanders. . The scourge that has been prostrating our horses for the past six weeks in the shape of inflnenza is now assuming & more fatal character in the form of dropsy, and in gome stables farcy and glanders have followed the epizootic symptoms. There 18 no question but that private horses bave been more free from the disease than those that have been overworked on rail - roads, etages, and carts; but thoss who have had palaces for homes havs not been exempt from the plague and have had all the varions stages of the dizease to' the last and fatal one of dropsy. Veterinary science has been all abroad about the diagnosis of the scourge. Mr. Dunbar does not believe that the disease was atmosphorically infectious, while Professor Taylor declares that it is contagious, and too much caution can not be used to keep dizeased horees away from well ones. It was argued by some scientific gentlémen when the dieease first broke out that there was no dangqr whatever, except relapsc by exposure, to the well-condition-ed horse but we have seen during the last tew days that the reverae ia the case, and dropsy, farcy, and glanders are now end - ing the miseries of many horses that were receiving the greatest care and were sup. posed to be improving a week ago. We hope that we have seen the worst of this horse disease, and that -the clear atmos—phere which we are now enjoying may stay the ravages of the scourge in our stables and that the debilitated animals’ may recuperate rapidly ; but we advise care 1n keeping the diseased animals away from the well ones, and where farcy-or glanders is discovered to destroy the horss at once.—XN. Y. Herald.
The city council of Cleveland passed an ordinance recently, annexing nearly eight square miles of territory to the city limits® The opject was to straighten the city boundaries, get sewerage outlet, etc., and the measure provoked no opposition.
T Yoy o 5 % : . gD, 9 ; SR letees -} ant leas? BZE O ‘e - ureativ QOOW e\\e‘.g ¢o o o e : Or Tasteless-Coated, Concentrated, Root and Nerbal Juice, AntiBilious Granules. THE “LITTLE GIANT?? CATHARTIC, or FMultum in Parvo Physic. : The novelty of modern Medieal, Chemical and Pharmaceutical Science. No use of any longer taking the large, repulsive and nauseous piils. ‘composed of cheap, crude, and bulky ingredientes. when we can by a careful application of chemical science, extract all the cathartic and other medi: cinal propertiea from the most valuable roots and herbs, and concentrate them info & minnte Gran ule, scarcely larger than a mustard seed, that can be readily swallowed by those o the most sensitive stomachs and fastidious tastes. Eachlittle Purgative Pcllet represents, in a most concentrated form, a 8 much cathartic powel as is embodied in any of the large pills fonnd fol sale in ‘the drug shops. TFrom their wonderful ca. thartic power, in proportion to their size, people who have not tried them are apt to suppose t{al they are harsh or drastic in effect, but stch is not at all the case, the different active medicinal prin: ‘ciples of which they are composed being #o har: monized and modifled, one by the others, as tc produce a most searching and thorou&h, yvet gently and kindly operating cathartie. X : : $5OO Reovvard is hereby offered by the pro: prietor of these Pellets, tc any chemist who. upon analysis, will find in them any Calomel o 1 other forms of mercury or any other mirera poison. ! Being entirely vegetable, no particula care is required while using them. 'Fhey ope: rate without disturbance to the consatitution, diet, or occupation. ForFaundice, Headsache, Constipation, Impnre filood,. Pain in the Shoulders, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomncfn, - Bad taste in mouth, Bilious attacks, Pain in region of Kidneys, Internal Fever, Bloated tecllng about Stomach. Rush of Blood to Hoead, High Colored Urlne, Unsochfi)un‘y and Gloom’y‘ Forebodlngs, take Py, Pierce’s Pleasant Pu rlgatlve Pellets, In explanation of the remedial power of my Pur fati‘ve Pellets over £0 great & variety of diccascs wish to say that their action upon the animal economy isuniversal, nots gland or tissne escaping thelir sana. ive imprens, Age does not impair them their coating and being enclosed in glast bottles preserve their virtues unimpaired for an length of time, in any climate, so that they are li ways fresh and reliable, which is not the case with the pills found in the drug stores, put up ir cheni) wood or paste-board boxes. Recollect tha' for all diseascs ‘where a Laxative, Altera. tive or Purgative is indicated, these little Pellets will fiive the mont perfect satisfaction t« all who use them. : : They are sold by All enterprisin Druggists at 25 cents a bottle? R . Do not allow any dm%g!st to induce you t¢ take anything else that he may say is fiut as good as my Pellets because he: maica a larger groflt on that which he recommends. If you ruggist cannot supply them, enclose 25 cent: and receive them by return mail from & R. V. PIERCE, M. D,, .B'ol)’f,"p i BUFFALO, N. v
Tats Band is prepared to furnish good must for Pic-nics, Conventions, &c., atreasonable terms Orders recsived by the Leader or Secretary. . . 8. K. KONKLE, LxiApzr. D. A. SCHATT, SEORETARY. 7-5 6m.
LIGONIER OORNET BAND, - Thisßandis nowprepared to furnish good music for PIC-NICS, '(?ONVENTIONB, &c.,onrep sonable terms. Orders received by the Leader and Becretary. . ' _WELLY HOLLISTER, Leader. Ligonier, Juue 7ih, 1871—6 m,
& . . " : ‘ : i . A’f.‘ oLo ; . : | . ‘ ! s e . « . . SFLL THE CELEBRATED - ' oou JEWETT & ROOT STOVES. |:;;»L 7 B e iR 2o 3 : ¢ : . R RREIE " A 5 s i ! ¢ 9 | . . i L‘; -3 n o ik T e : : P LT TCHEHE GRS G | T e W A : ‘ B L e T SR R SR e . ‘ .. : ; - .\ 5 i ol ’.@“ ity i f:jfi,‘i :;h Sk R i ) i B : : sl *";;!;hg'_‘é‘}g;'f:‘ o e < - . 3 ; i : Tl [ BGERRERS Eei e :;g-e] : AR R o ; - . oW L et il Bifikog A, e e ' € T e e _ 4 - B e - e fi.’f‘.;‘i::i:‘*“"f“:“' .r:_:‘,ea:,.———w.fi»’ n.’!‘ RaTaL PRI T i e I ~M Ro ey R 'wf; "'xh‘.f I‘% e ety & e T ‘ e e T U)ie R i i Wiy ot sE‘ i B i ey LR L U iR A R (e R e e : S F 45 iy :!izi",?'w,\@.‘vf’.f G'g f-fi“;’ »Y -'l’g" g "':'; *s{%*?" R e : / ["\‘L / {5 i ?i’"zf:;‘y?::i"@‘\-‘"r"xfigfii‘.«ifi ) i?’f )(o e 'J\\"\: Lot 1t F“} BRaey e et . ;,-‘ 3 ji":’\‘ 3g I 3’&%“ tw ,{' TR NN ,* 3 fif} flf}ifi'fi i ‘s,;;:*l ';' s o > i ' \ GTess iok e e B fp¥ R e d ) »ih 2 “',\» iy ee VR IR , A ITRet L ) Eaß A 8 fl@ sedey | 55;?‘}1 @j bl 1 it 1 ; AN (G A,._-,_‘..Wi«‘w&_»:%‘.‘f i gc"f{’ £y % ) {33 4;::?’5}:: i gp{; - : ‘ HEE RN BT eo R 1 ‘l'&#\ g sßt STR) 7 R "i‘ SRS e ’ : % ) §i g e BEE (18 3“?{ ERAYE S AN 3 i Seßma ol e o v ! . B §~; & 4.113;»’%‘2513"’ & ézé;{“"‘g fi‘.{?‘g: / ‘-?‘».“?55;5_'-' i BT e e i it {kißibey oTt TR <f ’2, F i Sesag 3 ‘;"‘,; L _:‘»..-_..A; SN | | :tc‘;',"‘.;?—., e A o N ”“/‘f/’fig “‘% e *Ki’f” §§3f i B s - : “ 't-,A__‘u-—v—":tZV'\‘ T 5 ’?"!‘fi BT |S et e ‘fl%fi?flpilaf‘;‘f‘ O] TOR 3 fi.’»“@‘ &l | e e L e nbibend e LRI [o g | : SR B Sion sS S eSste i TR S L R NG eLST e ‘-u-;‘;;zfl.fi’-i‘.,:&fl. Do e Y U el . 2.4-\ amW‘%‘i 'e e i y--L e e " FL L. e : : i afin._-.‘ e I e o R&y : o e qso, AR wiCHTMAN =N\ B for i B R ;?\ \ == o N : Set SR ¢ {it i ®\ | é;:féj'_:‘—n:z‘::xg 5 - g/S P ¢ :A', S
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WISHART'S PINE TREE TAR CORDIAL, NATURES’ GREAT REMEDY " yom7HE : i Throat and Lungs. It is gratifying to us to infofm the public fhat Dr. L. Q.C. Wiehart‘a Pine Tree Tar Cordia], for Throat and Lung Diaea'sos, has gained an enviable reputation from the Atlantic to the Pacific éoast.i and from thence to some of ‘the first families of Europe, not through the press alone, but by persons tfironghont the States actually benefited and cured at hisoffice. While he publishes less, 8o say our reporters, he is unable to supply the demand. It gains and holds its reputation— First. Not by étopz;lng éough, but by loosening and assisting’ natfire to throw off the.unhealt'hy matter collected about the throat and bronchial tubes, which cause trritation. - : Second. Itremovesthe causeofirritation (whicfi produces Eougix) of the mucuous membrane and bronchial tubes, assis_ta the lunge to act-and throw off the unhea]thy~secrefions, and purflies the blood. Third. It is free from squils. lob¢lia, ipecac'andv opium, of which most throat and lung remedies are composed, whlclf alla;y cofigh only, and disorganize the stbmach. It has_a soothing effect on the stomach, acts on the liver and kidneys, and Iymphatic and nervous regiona; thus reaching-to every part of the system, and in ‘its invigora:tingj and___plififying effects it has gained a reputation | which 1t must hold above all others in the markes. ]
INOTIOHE. i : ° : . ThePineTree Tar Cordial, Great American Dyspepsia Pills ‘ ~ARDL ,_ WORM SUGAR DROPS Beipg under my immediate direction, they shall not lose their curative qualities by the use ofcheap : and imputre articles. i HENRY R. WI%HABT, : PROPRIETOR. - FREE OF CHARGE. Dr. L. Q. C. “Wiafxart’s Office Parlors are _open on Mondays, Tnesdays, arid ‘Wednesdays, from 9 A.M. to 8 ». M., for consuitation by Dr. Wm. T, Magee. _With him are associated two consulting physicians of acknowledged ability. ;I‘hln opportunity is not offered by any other institution in the city. All Jetters must be addressed to - L. Q C. WISHART, M. D, ; o No. 983 NORTH SBECOND BT, ° ;" . PHILADELPHIA, .
¥ /gfi flggtqo% O : ‘ '}‘ -'U‘ ’\; IE <& = 7 . \)A// {v\\fi“i;? I('3¥ {‘\%:_\wi_‘{‘ *«t.? \"Q% (10 g N S REVLIGR STOHHREVLLTR.
i AFEr TEN REASONS WHY ' No Fapmily slonll be aithout a bottie of ft V’ll'},fl’f,/,b‘/f}’. in the house. 18ti—Tt will-rdlieve the worst case.of Billous Cholic or Choiera Rlorbus in 15 minutes. 2d,.—lt will. qure the most obstinate case of Dyspepsia and Indigestion in a few - weeks, ; : : 3d.—lt is the best®remedy in the world for Bick Headache, as thousands can. testify, if taken when the first symptoms appear! 4th.—lt is the best diurctic ever put before the public; curing those ' distressing complaints, Diabetes and Grave! and othen Urgnary difficultlies. ; Sth.—lt is a most cxcellent Emmena=&OBUO, and tg the Younsg Clris. middle aged Women, and at the fTurn of Life, this remedy-is ofiincajculable wvalue, (oo - Btfi-—h will [remove wind from the howels, and hence a few drops in stme sweetened water fiiver;_ to a babe is beotrer than a derzen cordiala to Relieve and make it 6leop. Contiining no anodyno. : =el Zth.—ltis a sure relief £or advlis and children’. affected with Worma sand Pin VWorms. It willibring away the werms, - - Bth.—lt will qure the Filos and tiemor= rhodial difficulties, i Oth.—ltwill cure Conetinntion and keep, the bowels regular,” Tt wiil al<o cise (b woust case ofSummer Co[m‘p!a:ne ard Pyrontery. 10th.—It will cure four fthmash, Stimulate the Lliver to Fealtiy action, Relieve Heart=Tlrp and act asva general Regulator of the evai . 4 When taken diljite the é-ce with Seoarand: Water to a V‘an e-ings fub!l and you havc:} pPleasant tonic. . ' Whittlesey (Dyspepsia Cure)i®l ne per hottle, Whittlesey Ague Cure soc, perber:la, Whittlesey Cough Granules p-o. per hottle, Sold by all drugeists and worruntod. | - hittlescy Pron. IZed, €6., Tolcdo, 0.
Py PURIFY YOU? .LOOD. 1. ' . For Scrofuln, Scrofn3. lous Disensem of (i Ny Eyes, or Merefnla in - gao @ny i’orm. L 1 Any disease or er: ziion- of PQS .the Skin, disease of the Liver, 00 o Rheumstism, Pimples, Old' aBy ¥ Bores, Ulcers, Broken-down ol B Constitutions. Syphilis, or any R 0 dizease depending on' a - de- & praved condition of the blood. &89 Wy A < ',:h S :5' DR. OROOK’S | B oo R | 99 POKE ROOT. 0 o It has the medicinalf)roperty | "-rf &/ of Poke combined with a prep- | ; aration of Iron which goes at o L once into the blood, performo . ing the most rapid and wonderful cures. Fo x' Ask your Druggist for Dr. Crook’s Com:* mlnd gymn‘ol ‘Yoke Root—take itand be | o. 1 e
OLD PAPERS! FOR WRAPPING PURPOSES, CLEAN ; ' AND UNCUT, AT Sevénty-Five Cents . Per Hundred, at the Banner Office
Dr. Crock’s Wine of Tar, , 10 YEREARS e =OFA - ;@: Public Test @j\@ G Ha_fiy.p'roye'd,,‘. o : ?? 'DR. CROOK’S + = WINE Q’%};fi%fi : T , _To_ have ‘more . ¢ merit tham any Q)&fi“}c' ~ mpimilar prefiarai S o tion - ever . offered . the publie. - . °: Ttis rich in the medicinal qualfties of Tar, and unequaled for diseases of the Throat and Lungs, performing the modt remarkable cures. - Coughs, Colds, Chronic Coughs. " Tt effectually cures them all Asthrma and Bronchitis, - . Has cured so many cases - o it has been:prohounceda -~ - specific for these pompla§n§s; ; For pains in Breast, Side or Back, . Gravel or Kidney Disease, Diseases of the Urinary Organs, Jaundiceorany\lee;'. Complaint, - oo man S has moequal. It 1s also a superior Tonic, @ - - Re%()res'the _Appetite, Strengthens the System, =. .= . - Restores thej,,We"akf and ‘ - L 7 Debilitated,; Causes the Food to Digest, L Removes, Dyspepsia and, s - Indagestion, Prevents Malarious Fevers, - - Gives tone to your fgutem.. TRY PR.CROOK’SWINEGFTAR
A sure and permanent: cure. for Liver. Complaints, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Bilious- - LIVER. ness, Fever: and Ague, Sick ' Headach?®, Jaundice, Piles, Loss of Appetite, Imperfect Digestion, @nd all diseases arising from a disordered state of the Liver and Blood. It acts directly on the Liver, increasing the flow of. bile !'into the stomach and bow--els, and by its cathartic properties purges the system of all diseased matter. As a family medicine, it has'no equal. ~ SOLD BY ALL: DRUGGISTS. Price;sl.oo peir Bottles . W. B. HURD & €O, - NASHUA, N.H, =~ SOLD'BY FISHER BROTHERS, AGENTS. FOR LIGONIFR, IND ~ALSO, SKINNER & MENDENHALL, ALBION, INDIANA. .~ JOB PRINTING . Neatly and oxpedtotu]y exoutea;tth. & NATIONAL BANNER OFFICE.
3T TR S NS O ot I, | -. = N _E) A o i \fWECAR \ 5 e lad] % : *q% ’ ek N ’( 3 5 s i - - R A P :LA i (/ S o X ,\\ &I:."fl -~ N 4 0 ; - " P ‘.¢ A 3 buneid) SEANT® TSI ! S (~ y tay £S P N 2 V. VINEGAR:RITTERS @ NWinegar Digters Gre nol & Vi kaney ‘Drink:. made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refase Liguors, doctored, spiced, and swectened: to picase the taste, called Sgentes Y Appetizera,” ¢ Restarers,!! - &c., thst legd the n?p:rvr on to drunkenness and | ruins butare:a.true Medicine, made from.the! pative ropte and herba of Caiffornia, free from all Alcoholic:Stimulants. . They are -the Great “Rlood Purifier snd a life-giving Principle, a Porfect Renovaior and Invigorator of the Bystem, carrying o all poisonons matter and restoring the bioed to & healthy-eondition, entiching it, tefreshing and Invigorating both ‘mimad,and body. They age casy of administration, prompt n their action, eertaln in their resujta; safe-and reliable in all forms of disease. » No Fersoncan take these Bitters according 1o directiona, and remain: longun well, proviged theit hones’are pot destroyéd by Atinerai potsén. or other means, and the vital “@ryans wasted beyond the polet orrr{vir. . " Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Hecadache,. Pain in.the Shonlders, Couzha, Tightness of the Chesgty Dizziness, Sonr Eructations ofthe Stom‘gch. Bad Tastp in tha Mouth, Bilious Attacks, PalFi;é‘umn of the Heart, Inflarimation of the Lungs, Saivifi the regions of the Kidneys.anda hundred | cotheßpainful svmptoms, ara2 the ofisprings of . Dyspépsia. Tn these dompliaints 46 hus no egunal, ~and ope Bisttle will prove a better guarantee oi | its pnerits thah a lengihy advertisement, . - . For Femsale Complaints, in yonug or c;‘:fi, £ Crmarvied Graingie, at tiedawn of Womanhood, | o thé-marn’ef life, thdese Tonic Bitters display o deeided an infuence that & marged JdiproveRICHEIS .firu»::&z:rr;*;\ thle. 3 e fFor Inflammatory and' Chronie RAacumailam and Gout, Dyspepaia-or Indlgestio, Bicus) Remitient amd Intermittent Fivera, Piseasesof the Biood, Liver. Kidneys and Biadder, these Bitters have been most suceessil. Such Diseaser are consed by Vatintedßlood, which | i geacrady. produced by Gerangement of tie Digegtive Organs. ; They nfo n Gentile Prurgative as well ‘ a 5/ T ontcs PORICHHINT &iso LNC Fecniiar Therit of acking, ad a posverful agent tnreheving CanCigesfion Sor: Tnfammation of the Liver and Vis- * o.corl Orzans and.in Bilions Diseasea, - ° $ “For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Ralt- | Thoam, Bintches, Spots, Pimmples Pustules, Boila, “Carbuncles, Ring-worins, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the ““SKin,> Humors and' Discases of the Skin, of‘ yhatever naing er nature, are literally dug up f atd catried out of the system tn'a ghort time by thé uselof these Bitters, Ono bottlein &uch cases |} Jwill ¢onvénce ‘the most ineredulous of their cur- \ ptive clfects., A 0 » Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever your find i 3 hmpuriiies bursing tirough the s cglvin i Pinples, Eruplions, ov Sores ; cieanse it Twiicn you find B .obsiiueied and slugeist in the X 8 peleanse jt when it i 3 foul 5 your feciings wiil-teld yoir:when. . Kecp the. biood pure, and - tha heaith.of the system will follow. : &iateful Thousands proclaim VINEGAR CBITTERS e miost woenderfal Invigorant that cyer sustained the sinking system. - Fin, Tape, and otlier Worms, lurking . Cin tike sysiem of so many thousands, are efiectaally destroyed and renioved. Says & distin«giished pliysiologist ¢ There i 3 scarcely an indi- ~ vidualon the face of the earth whose body iy ex~ ] empt-om the prescence of worms. Itis not up+ < “an theheéalthy ‘elernenis of the body that worms ¢ egists but.upon the diseased humors anid slimy z - «déposits thdt breed these living nionsters ‘of “Gesse; No'Bystem of mcdicine, no vernrifuges, no “anthiclminitica, will. free the gystenr . from T wornis like these Bittera, o : Mechanical Dl,(&sofl'-——f”,!‘hnfi»(‘l\p:{&}'.f"l Hin Paints-énd Minerals, £ueh o 3 Plumbers, Tipewottors, . Gold-beaters, and! Miners, a 8 they advance - life, are subject to pardlyvsis' of the Bowels, - To jruard azuinst this, tike a dose of ‘WALKERISVINEGAR BIiTTERS twvice a week. ‘ Bilipus, Remittent, and Intermit“tent Fevers, wlich ere so prevaient in the vallevsofour great rivers throuirhout the United “ Siates; egpecially those of tho Mississippt, Ohio, Kisseuri, Hiinois, Tennessee, Cumiberiand, Arkansas, Rad; . Colorado, Brazos, Rio -Grande, “Péarl,. Aldbama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, . James, and many others, wiih their vast tributarjes, - tliroughout our entirs country during “the Summer apd Antuinn, aud reiarkably 80 ,during seasbns of unusuul Heatand dryness, arg” iivariably accompanicd by exggrsive derange- * menfs of thé stonach and liver, and other ab.donhinal viscera. In -thiir trcatment, a 8 purga‘tive, -exerting & poweriul infiuence upon fhess various organs, 18 essentislly necessary. Thero - is'to catliartie for the purpose equal o, Dz, J. © WALKE®'S. VINEGAR -BIfTERS, &4 they will -gpeedlly remove the dark-colored viscid matter” with'which the boivels are loaded, at thie same time stimuating the secretions of the liver, and “o generally restoring the healthy functions of the _Qigestive organs. . Berofula, or King’s Fvil, White Swell. ~ ings; Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swellcd neck, Goitre, ‘Scrofulons Infammations, Indolent Inflamma- . tions; ‘Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc.,’etc. In these - msinallother constitutional Diseakes WALKER'S . VINEGAR BITTERS have shown their great curative powers in tlie most cbsinate aud intract- . _mbie cases, . i Dr.. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters ‘act. on all these ciases in a sunllar manner. | By purifying the Blood they remoye the cause.and by resolving away the effects of < the inammation (the tubercular deposits) the s affécted parts receive leulth, atd & pertuauneut cure is effected. o e ~ The properties of DR. WALKER'3 VINEGAR S BiiTERS -dre : Aperient, Diaphoretie, Carmin- . ative, " Nutritious, -Laxative, ‘Diuretic, Sedative, -Counter-irritant, - Sudoridc, Alteraiive, ™ “and Anti:Bilious. g o TheAperient and mild ‘Laxative properties .0f DR, WALKER'3. VINEGAR BITTERS are “the best safe-guard in cades of eruptions and malignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and - goothing properties protect the. humors -of the _faunces. Their Sedative properties allgy pain in - * the nervous system, stornach, and bowels, either - ‘fromjnflammation, wind, colic, cramps, ete, © Fortify the body against disease by .purifying” all its fluids with VINEGAR BITTERS. < “Np eopidemic caam take hold of a systein thus “fore-armed. i ‘ St Directions.—Take of the Bltters on going < to'bed at night from a half 1o one and one-half ‘wine-glassfull. Eat good nourishing food, such - as heef-steak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, .and vegetables, and take out-door exercisc. They are -composed of purely vegetable ingredients, and contain no spirit. o - R+H, McDONALD & CO., - : - Draggicts and Gen. Agts,, San Francisco, Cal., - &-cor. of Washington and Charlton Sts.; N.Y, - SOLD. BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS! .
-THE NEW DISCC: . ; ", Im Chemical and Medical Scionu s R ."‘ . 7 &> ’%% %’ ;1 i J.’{’/f : b flf?’ ~“‘ T A:’?’."g i '%/.'" - S sK Ao : 3 % D NP4 R= L Gy sl BT Spe TN ] g & XA “)W'.r, & 'i,? : ‘} ‘? i "; “‘?w;él‘. " “"" L .mm;:" N 5 _';" B 0 ,‘fi? ?)‘:} 5 B B IS R & zfiif;; I TA g ...f:;’.gg’?'?fi: = ,/ AN e i. & N, e e (L s HAnzMAH . PRI - .Dr. E. F- GAR VI}"I% i SOLUTION & COMPOUND ELITI} : : OF : i . T AR ' * FIRST AND ONLY BOLUTION sver mads. in one mixture of ALL THIF, T ELVR valuable*active principals of the weil known curative agent, e fio w 7 - PINE TREF TAR, . UNEQUALED in Conghs, - Colds, Caterrh, .-Asthma, Bronchitis, and eonsomptioa. CURES WITIIOU T FAYK. _A recenteold in thras tn rix houra;: "and alses i by its VITALIfIO, ¥ TRITYING and BTk MULATING efferta npon ths general systems. is remarkably efficreioua in all | - h DISEASES ©F THME nLOCD, | | . tgeluding Serotula aa Enspiigns of the skiny ? 18¢a8e3 O LlVel ¢ Sy : gg;gg%li::we?and QGeneral Debility. y:., . ONE TRIA-IZLSQNV|NOB9‘! o Volatile Solution of Tar For INHALATION, withont application of HEAT. A remarkably VA LUABE% discovery, as the whole apparatus can beoarried in the vest pocket; readv at any time for the most effectual and positively carative usein - All Diseases of the NOSI, TIHIROAT E and LUNGS, : THE COMBOTND e Tar and Mandrake Pill, for use in connection with the BLIXIR PAR, is a combination of the TWO most valuable ALTERATIVE Medicines known in ths Profeseion, and renders this Pill without ezception | the ver{best ever offered. s 3 . The SOLUTION and COMPOUND ELIXIR of } \ - -f8 without doubt:the Best remedy known in ~oases of : rs S If inaf ciflc for anch dismm'}«,r and should I*; kept i &e b hold of k ‘ i ‘ duging thoz?mtgs ig :k'x;:g h«‘mu" Srpadiniy are liable to prevail. A smnll g mffififi“ - daily will prevent mtnctiugq t';’».'u; .y‘tmfbh { disenses,, . . e " Bolution and Compound Elixir, §1 00 per Bottle | ,Voh'tfl;fiolifion for Inhalation, $3.00 per Hox - Tar and Mandrake Pills, Soctsper tor. ' Bend for Circular of POSITIVE OURES o you Dragmmorto, e . L.F.HYDE & CO., b = e SOLE PROPRIETORS, + 410 B, 224 Bty New Xork, =
