The National Banner, Volume 7, Number 44, Ligonier, Noble County, 27 February 1873 — Page 4
The Farm and Household. © CONDUCTED BY JONATHAN SIMMONS. ——T—————-———_——:_________‘—-———_-—‘ “I’ll Not Work for a Living.” The above declaration was made in our hearicg a few days since by a young man of just ordinary abilities, fair education and not worth fifty dollars in worldly goods. “I'll not work for a living!” Viin and insipid boast! Miserable vagabond of the world to -make it! .= What sort of beings do such propose to class themselves with? Take the clergyman tor example; he must rack and ransack his brain to produce something new each and every week of the year, else he.is set down as a prosy old stage horse, always running over the same round, and his hearers soon neglect to attend divine worship where he occupies the pulpit. The lawyer must work, and work earnestly and carfully over indictments, demurrer’s replies, and all the “crooks and corners” and quibbles with which the profession is so abundantly supplied, or else ‘his clients will segk other parties who are not afraid of labor. The physician must ride from the most pretentious mansion -to the most humble cottage, night and ‘day be ready te respond to the call of the high or low, rich or poor, else his patients will seek their pills and powders of some other one not regarded as too shiftless to work. The author oft site down with a throbbing brain * before the midnight lamp to record the facts or fancies with which his mind is stored, and ever regards hisstudio as the work shopin which his daily bread is earied by earnest toil. The merchant, the banker, the broker, the salesman and the soldier, alike, must work “day in, day out,” or else their failure is inevitable. In holy writ we learn that the Almighty himself wrought for six days, and “on the seventh rested from all His work which He had made.”
“I'll not work for a living !I” Most unreasonable and conceited of mortals!— What would you do and what would you make of yourself if the opportunity sbould ever present itself? You would like to be a traveling sign post for some ambitious tailor, if ’twere not for the trouble experienced in walking. You'd enjoy yourself dressed in your best leaning sgainst some friendly lamp post gazing upon the passing throng and puffing away at five cent cigars it twere not too much trouble to “lean” and to suck the smoke through the fragrant (?) leaves. I fear our inventive powers will fail us in trying to imagine what sort of employ‘ment is suited to such as you. The simple, undisguised fact is that such young men as ybu are unworthy the place you occupy in the universe. You ought to bave been left out from the list of created things, and toadstools allowed to grow up in your place. We are not sure but that you are ene of Nature’s great mistakes, or else to evade a vecuum (which is said to be Nature’s greatest abhorrence) you were brought into existence as the least of all things that would -prevent it. o “I'll not work for a living!” You might steal did it not require too much exertion to draw from the possessions of other men. If you chance to be blest by -some rich uncle with no other relative in the world, you could ingratiate yourself into his favors and inherit his wealth if it were not it would require too much of an effort on your part to reteive the legacy. | s “I'll not work for a living I” The time will come when you will change your mind, be assured of that., It will not take you long to become apprised of the fact that the world detests no class of men so thoroughly as those who feel themselves above employment of some kind. Tt will not soil your fingers any worse to handle the saw, the hammer or the plow than it will those of your neighbor who is worth his thousande. Your mind will be no worse wearied by active employment than is that of the banker, the merchant, the author or the lawyer who possess of this - world’s goods sufficiént to support them in luxury through life, yet work from choice rather than remain idle. No, you will not always look upon life dnd action in the same light in which you mow re--gard it.; The time will come when to engage in employment of some kind will be a privilege highly prized ; wheh the mind will grow weary for want of something to do; when cares and trials, anxieties and troubles will come upon you and forgetfulness will be earnestly sought in the -whirl and turmoil of business. Wait not for “something to turn up” but look about you, and “What thy hand findeth to do, do it with all,thy might.” No matter if it is not just suited ‘to your taste; you must: yet learn that high positions of trust with the accompanying large salaries are only reachied by paving your own way step by step with deeds of honesty and honor, until the eminence is reached ; then your reward is'certain. But, on the other hand, if you persist in lying idle, waiting for the opportunity to gain all by one great stride, you may be sure that the world will go on just the same, and at “the last grain death will come along with his scythe and sickle and find you still waiting. : “The glea, flelds are turning now, With a bountigl harvest to reap; There nre‘::tf;;‘:skbqor a work 80 vast-— Do not like an idle feep. ' C. T. LEONARD
The Influence of Vegetable Perfumes. - An Italian Professor has made researches which lead him to assert that vegetable perfumes exercise & healthful influence on the atmosphere, converting its oxygen into ozone, and thus increasing its existing influence. The essences that, -develop the largest quantity of ozone are those of cherry laurel, cloves, lavender, ‘mint, juniper, lemons, tennel, and bergamot ; those that give it'in less quantity are anise, nutmeg, cajeput, and thyme. The flowers of the narcissus, hyacinthe, mignonette, heliotrope, and lily of the valley develop ozone in closed vessels. Flowers destitute of perfume do not develop it, and those which have but slight perfume develop it in small quantities. As a corollary from these facts, the Pro~ fessor recommends the use of flowers in marshy districts, and in places infested with animal emanations, as the powerful oxidising influence of ozone may destroy them. The inhabitants of such - regions should surround their houses wilh beds of tie most odorous flowers. : !
: Coffee as a Disinfectant. Roasted coffee is well known to be one .of most powerful means, not only of rendering animal and vegetable effluvia inocuous, but, it is also said, of actually destroying them. A room in which meat in an advanced state of - decomposition had been kept for some time was instantly deprived of all smell on an open coffee roaster being carried through it containing a pound of coffee newly roasted. In another room the effluvium eccasioned by the clearing out of a cesspool, so that sul - phuretted hydrogen and ammonia could be clearly detected, was completely removed within balf a minute on the employnient of three ounces of fresh coffee, The best mode of using it as a disinfeot ant is to dry the raw bean, pound it ina morter, and then roast the powder on s moderately heated iron plate until it agsumes & dark brown hue, when it is ready for use. It must, however, beremiembered that for the remedy to be effectual, the coffee should be pure. Adulterated rubbish will only make matters worse. |
. Ameriean Nickle. i In the arts, nikel is rapidly growing into favor as a substitute for silver in plating steel, iron, and other metals, Its commercial demand israpidly increasing, and as it is much cheaper than silver, it will undoubtedly be adopted in the manufacture of many articles as a substi tute for that more precious metal. One mine, the Mine La Motte tract, Missouri, was worked from 1850 to 1855. The ore
was the sulphuret, associated with lead and copper. About $lOO,OOO was realized from the croppings of the vein. Croppings of nikel ore are found in Madison, Iron and Wayne” counties, Missouri. The refined metal is worth three dollars per pound. For small coins, it is very useful. The principal supply is at pres. ent derived from a single mine in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania. It has been worked for seventcen years, and developed to a depth of two hundred feet. The length of this lode is between two and three thousand feet, and it produces from four to six hundred tons per month, employing in the working of the mine a force of one hundred and seventy five men.
Treatment of New Dwelling Rooms. The dampness of newly finished rooms; is not due so much to the water used in| mixing the plaster, as to the water of hydration of the lime, liberated by the action of carbonic acid. The action of the smal) quantity present in the rormal atmosphere, would, however, be so slow, and the water be'liberated so gradually, that no injurious effects could result. But as soon as the rooms become tenanted, the large amount of carbonic acid given off in respiration causes such rapid displacement of water, and with it other matters indicated by the peculiar odor, that un ‘pleasant and injurious results may follow. Treatment of the rooms with carbonio acid, before occupying them, suggests itself at once, as a means of rendering them rapidly tenantable. Although, by calcu. lation, it would require the carbonic acid from the combustion of about 320 pounds of coal, to displace the hydrate in water in the walls of a room of about 1,500 equare feet of surface, ir practice the consumption, in a suitable way, of about five pounds of charcoal per day, for five days, in the room, would answer, because the interior portions are protected from rapid action of carbonic ucid, as soon as a layer of about onetenth of an inch has been acted on. This is proved by the fact that Prof. Fuchs has detected caustic lime in ‘walls centuries old,
- How to Measure a Tree. ' It is oftcn desirable to know the hight to which a tree will work into ‘timber below the branches. If vne has a choice lot of timber he does not like to cut down at random. If he wants a stick of some particular length he would : choose a tree which would just make without cutting to waste. A writer in the Country Gentleman gives a simple rule tor determin. ing the point, which we transcribe in brief. Measure from the tree the num: ber of feet you want your stick in length, onas level ground as possible. Then place a stick in the ground at the point of measurement, exactly your own height, and . exactly perpendicular. - Now lay down flat on your back with your feet against the stick, so a 8 to bring itina line with your eye to the tree, and where the line of sight strikes the tree, over the top of the stake, that point will indicate the length desired.
Utilizing the Stumps of Trees., | Walnut stumps are getting valuable:as articles of meichandise. Somg one has discovered that the curly grzfin of the Toots can be used for veneering purposes with great success, and the result is that they are 1n great demand, and are worth $l5O per stump. Some of the backwoodsmen of the forests of -lowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin are getting out the stumps rapidly, and are creating a new and valuable trade, The ‘veneering made of these roots issaid to be most beautiful, and can be used in® the finest work, and is particularly adapted to use in the manufacture of musical instruments. . )
Echoes in Public Bpildings., . The American Railway Times describes & novel method which has been adopted to prevent the recurrence of an echo in the new court-house at Blooming--ton. A Mr. Carlock /suggested that the stretching of small wires at a proper height and at suitable distance would be of great benefit. The theory is, that the wires (8o small as to be hardly visible) break the sound waves and prevent the reverberation, hitherto the chief obstacle and annoyance. Three or four ‘wires cn. ly, crossing the room, were found suffi cient to effect this wonderful change. o ;e B— o e The Reason Why. “Boss” Tweed has never appeared to claim his seat in the New York Senate, since his election in 1871, and, to the query why the Sepate does not declare a vacancy, the Albany 7%mes answers: The Hon. Noah Davis—a staunch Res publican, formerly of Orleans county, where he was elected a Justice of the Supreme Court and afterwards to Congress, and then appointed United States District Attorney in New York City, where he is now again on the Supreme Court Bench—has stated that six republican members of the last Senate were bribed to vote for the present charter of the City of New York (passed in 1870) by the payment of $lO,OOO to each of them, and that five of those six republican Senators, so purchased by Tweed, are now sitting in the present Senate. Samuel J. Tilden, 1 in bis recent voluminous historical letter, } commemorates this statement of the Hon Ncah Davis. These five Senatorsare men of experience, and have great influence in the Senate. : s
~ Effect of Cold Weather on Rails. Some interesting experiments have been made in England and Sweeden, under the supervision of eminent scientists, relative to the effect which the cold weather exerts upon the rails of iron and steel which are used for railroads. Contrary to the popular impressions, it was found that, when the thermometer is at zero, the iron and steel are about three per cent. stronger, and capable of bearing about that proportion more of weight than at sixty degrees Fahrenheit, or ordinary temperature, The reason assigned for the morc frequent snapping of rails in cold weather is, that they lie imbedded in frozen ground, and the impact of the weight on the rails and their connections is increased by this rigid support.” These experiments may possibly lead, at someé future time, to some means of prevention for this frequent cause of railway disaster. : :
A Faithfal Dog. i The Nashua (N. H.) Telegraph relates that not long since a Newfoundland dog belonging to a family was left for a few minutes in a room with an open grate, in which was a child beginning to creep. The child crept toward the fire, and the dog, who apparently saw and understood the danger, at oace laid dowa between the child and the fire and remained there until the mother came to the rescue. The hair was burned from the dog’s side, and his body was blistered, and yet, noble dog that he was, he did not budge.
TaE Brooklyn Union(Henry C. Bowen's paper) thinks the exposure of Senator Caldwell’s infamy, the evidence of Senator Harlan’s $lO,OOO checks, the election of Pinchback, ete., ete., “will be employed with tremendous effect by our conservative friends in Great Britain as arguments in favor of an hereditary Senate, like the House of Lofds. But may not our conservative friends inthe United States employ these “arguments” with tremendous effect for quite another purpose?
Ruskin truthfully end beautifully writes : “Do you think you can make a girl lovely if you do not make her happy ? There is not one restraint yov put on a good girl’s nature, there is not one shock you give to her instinets of effection or effort, which will not be indellibly written on her features with a hardness which is all the more })ainful a 8 it takea away the brightness from the eyes of innocence and the charm from the brow of virtue.
; GENERAL NEWS, L A cafe at Smyrna, located on the shore, suddenly sunk and was swallowed up by the waves, causing the death of 200 persomns. ’ ! A resolution in favor of woman suffrage passed the House in the Maine Legislature on the 18th by a yea and nay vote of 64 to 59. : 2 Mr. Horace White, of the Chicago 7Trib une, has abandoned his proposed European trip, and is now in the South for his bealth, i Stokes will not hang. Judge Davis has granted a writ of error and stayed execution of sentence until the decision of general term. - » ' The project of erecting special . prisons for females, to be wholly under the charge of women, 18 attracting favorable consid - eration in several States. . : The total value of the property destroyed by flood in the Monongahela River on Monday, Feb. 17th, is estimated at three hundred thousand dollars.
The Senate of Maine, by & majority of one in a vote of twenty nine, have decided that cider, if not of the intoxicating kind, may be sold and drank within the State. The value of a cow tail has been ascertained in Bedford county, Pa., two young men having recently paid $l2O for the fun of cutting off about twelve inches and nailing it to a school house. : The Constitutional Convention of New York proposes, as a constitutional provision, that the Erie, Champlain, Oswego, Cayuga, and Seneza Canals be held asthe property of the State forever. = ' The sexton of a church at Reading, Pa., having found and restored to the Juancas: ter Bank $129,000 stolen therefrom, has received from the officers of that institu tion the munificent reward of $lO. = ° The lowa Legislature has adopted a Railroad law limiting the rates for passenger travel to three and a half cents per mile upon all roads where gross earnings exceed four thousand dollars per mile per year. : . The Supreme Court of Massachusetts has finally decided, after several years of litigation, that the orthodox Medical Society of that State has a .right to exclude homeeophathic practitioners from its membership, = . : A new planet was discovered on the 17th ult. by -Dr. Charles Peters, of Clin - ton, N. Y., at ten hours, no minutes right ascension,and north 13 degrees,4o minutes of declination: Rapid motion north ; eleven magnitude. The Re 7. Dr. George 8. Vallandigham, of New Lishon, Ohio, brother of the late CsL. Vallandigham, died suddenly of consumption, at Cincinnati, on the 13th inst, where he was arranging for the sale of his brother’s biography. ) ~ The case of Phelps, Dodge & Co. is still in doubt. The United States District At torney at New York has devised a compromise between them and the Govern~ ‘ment, and it is now under consideration by-Secretary Boutwell., : It has been decided that the stockholders in the defunct Republican Insurance Con:pany must pay the new sixty per cent, assessment. It places the stockholders in ‘this State in a particularly happy frame of mind just to think of it.
. The jury in thecase of Theodore Brown, charged at Indianapolis with ‘the murder of his wife in December' last, after being out thirty-five hours, returned a verdict of manslaughter. The prisoner was sentenced tq twenty-one years in the penitentiary. . ~ ' It appears by careful computation that there are more people engaged in liquor selling in New Haven than are employed on the new postoffice building in New York.. The Government has been notified and will immediately put more men on the postoffice. : . A Vermonter is going into the business of raising bears for market. ITe gets a bounty of $l5 for each one to begin with, the meat will bring $3O, the skin $2O, and the bear’s grease will swell the total to $lOO, which, with a well stocked breeding farm, would yield more than a bare living. e The medical world on the other side of the Atlantic is somewhat excited over the success of a remarkablé operation performed by Dr. Joux, a Belgian police surgeon, on an apparently drowned man. The victim had been dead scemingly for three bours; but the doctor resuscitated bim-by placing three iron plates heated to-a white heat over the vital parts in the upper part of the body. | : The Minneapolis. (Minn.) Zribune has the following special from Faribault, Feb. 19th: “A man just in from the scene brings the account of a horrible double murder and suicide at Meriden. ‘A man, name not given, murdered his wife and child by cutting their throats. The knife slipped in cutting the throat of the child, slashing open the shoulder, exposing the bone. 'To complete the tragedy, he then cut his own throat. The cause, jealousy.”
Gentiles of moderate views and liberal Mormons are said by despatches from Utah to favor the proposal brought before Congress by Senator Pool, to legalize all polygamous marriages in the past, for the sake of the women and.children who are concerned. The Mormon priesthood have not yet abandoned the horrors of the blood atonement system, and in one place are reported to have violently urged their followers to tear limb from limb those who have dared to apostatize. —— - —— : Cure for Consumptives. Dr. J. W. C. Cuddy, of Baltimore, writes to the Carlisle Herald that smallpox is a cure for consumption! He instances several cases in which persons in the last stage of consumption were cured by catching the small-pox, among others the case of Commodore Lynch, of the old U. 8. Navy, who was in the last stages of consumption, and while on an expedi-. tion with his squadron to a foreign country, was attacked with small-pox, from which he recovered. After that time he did not suffer with a single symptom of the disease. He lived many years there. after and then died of some other affliction. The doctor mentions anether gentleman that took the small pox while ly~ ig on his death bed as was supposed, from consumption. He recovered from the small-pox and was never troubled with his lung disease afterwards and is now a hearty, robust man, At the time the doctor wrote to the Herald he was attending “a case of confluent small pox of the _worst type in a men who has been for a year past (at intervals) under my treatment for congestion of the lungs, with hemorrhage therefrom. His general heaith was fast giving way, and be was rapidly drifting into consumption. He will recover from small pox, and I certainly expeet an amelioration, if not an entire cure of this pulmonary effection.” Consumptives, we imagine, will hesitate a good while before willingly attempting 8o desperate a remedy.
. - A Smart Man., | There was 8 “run” on the Chicago Ger:man Savings Bank the other day, and a German fell into the line of depositors at nine o'clock in the morning.- He had not reach the cashier’s desk until three o’clock in the afternoon, when he withdrew $1 60 which he had deposited there. He lost his dinner and a day’s wages of two dollars to save that dollar and sixty cents,
DrsErTEßs.— By the late decision of the U. 8. Court of claims at Washington, D. O, giving deserters bounty, who had returned to their regiments, and received’ an homorable discharge, the amount they will receive will vary from two to fou:_‘ hundred dollars each, .
Letter from Stark County, - Wasmn~erox Twr., BTaRk Co., Inp.,} . February 2ist, 1873, } EDIITOR BANNER:— It just came into my mind that a few words from Stark county to my Noble and LaGrange county. friends, through the columns of the BanNER, would be nothing more than neighborly. | : Although Stark county bears a very hard name, and seems to be a kind of forsaken place ‘but only by those who have never seen it) I can’t tell why it is so, unless it is prejudice. I was a resident of Noble county about twenty years, and the Hawpatch is a very good country, and if I could have bad plenty of that which is most needful when it comes to paying for a farm, I would like to be there yet.— But, sometimes we would better cut pur clothgs to suit the cloth; so, considering my circumstances, I would rather be here. I would say to my friends whose means are limited, and who want to go West to get homes where land is cheap, come to Stark county first and see for yourselves, Land can be had here at from five to seven dollars per acre, according to quality, location and improvements, When we moved to Noble county our wheat market was Sturgis—a distance of about twentyfour miles, land was cheap, schovls rather poor, and but little gocd society. Time has made a change. Men came there with limited means and, using a little industry and economy, they have grbwn up with the country and are now wealthy citizens ; having good schoal houses, good society, good markets, good roads and almost everything a sound mind could wish for. : :
- -A great many of the settlers .of Starke are composed of fishermen and hunters ; they devote most of their time to fishing and hunting, and if they have sny spare time, and the spirit 'moves them, they will go to work on their farms. I think if some others would come in, buy farms, and use a little industry and enonomy, T believe Starke would make a change.— There are three railroads in operation, one graded, and another surveyed through the county. . Land lies high and dry, water from fifteen to forty feet deep in lakes and streams, and I think it isabout as healthy here aslndiana is generally; but we have one patient at present and that is the old blue hen. I fear she has taken the cholera; probably only tired of living. ' " I think time will- makea clange in Stark. The prospects are good. Ithink as we grow up with the' country, we will have better schools, better society, and a good county. ¢ . . LONGFELLOW.
A MAN WITHOUT AN ADVERTISEMENT —An exchange thus happily describes the man who does not advertise: “Talk about a woman without a baby, a man without a wife, a. ship without a, rudder. What is the lack of each of these individuals and things to that of 8 man without an advertisement? He is a hopeless cuss, a ‘goner in the community.’ Talk of being suceessful in business. You might as well talk of ascending to the moon on a greased moonbeam, People point at him in the street, and say: ‘Poor Cassius bas'a hungry look. It may, however, be consoling to him to reflect that when he dies he will be advertised at lust end gratuitously at that.”
A mentionable old lady died in New buryport, Mass, last week. This was Mrs: Abigail D. Cook. - Bhe died on the 72d. anniversary of her wedding, and in the same foom in which she was married. Singularly enough her a®e is not given, but she was one of the choir which sang at the welcome to Gen. Washington on his visit to Newburyport, and she also sang at the commemorative services on the occasion of the General’s death. She was the mother of niue children, and for sixty five years a member of the church. She is said to have been'a very handsome woman in her prime, and she retained her sprightliness-to the last. . : —— - P—— _ ; “Where are Our Hens ?*° Inquires the London 7:mes, upon bes ing informed that over five bundred and fitty eight millions of eggs were imported. into.the United Kingdom from abroad daring last. year. Our cotemporary naturally becomes alarmed for the welfare of the British fow!l, when it finds over a amillion and a half of eggs coming into the kingdom every day fo compete with the domestic article, at a cost of something like twenty-five thousand dollars a day thus spent abroad out of the British pocket. ¢ i
B W, O N o G s Qe o 0 » G %& WrßLeteey AR )o T B z % e Leasant SI2E \Eay , S - Tor YO ?éa%\fl s PELIEISNA oA 0008 = \IeTS 00 O B Or Tnltel(tSS-Coated, Concentirated, Root and ¥erbal Juice, AntiBilious Granules. TIIE ¢ LITILE GIANT? CATHARTEC, or Ninliuam 4n Parvo Physic. 5 : The novelty of modern Medical, Chemical and Pharmaceutical Science. No nse of any longer taking the large, rcpalsive and naugeous pills. .composed of cheap, criide, and bulky ingredients. when we'can by a careful application of chen:ica science, extract all the cathartic‘and other niedi cinal properties from the most valuable roots anc herbs, and concentrate them into a minute Gran ule, searcely larger than a mustard seed, that can be readily swallowed by those o the most sensitive stomachs and fastidious tastes Eachlittle Purgative ¥eliect represents, ing most concentrated form, as much cathartic pewel as is embodied in any of the large pills found fol sale in the drug shops. From their wonderful ca thartic power, in pronortion to their size, people who have not tried them are apt to suppose that they are harsh or drastic in effect, hut ®uch ig not at all the case, the different active medicinal principles of which they are composed being o har monized and modified, one by the others, as tc produce a most secarching aud thorou%h, yvet gentiyand Kindly operaing cathartic. $5OO Reward is hereby offered by the .proprietor of these Pellets, to any chemist who. upon analysis, will find.in them any Calemel o 1 other forms of mercury or any eother minera poison. : Being entirely vegetable, no particalar care is required while using them. They ope rate withont disturbance to thie coustitation. dict. oroccupation, ForFaus lico, #eqasuehe, Constipation, Empurs ¥iocd, Bain inthe °Shouh’lerfl, Bl uitiscss OF wine Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructa:ipn' of the Stomncf\, Bad taste ' i: mouth, ®Bilious attacks, Pain i: region of Kidneys, Internal Fever Bloated feelln% about Stomach Rush of Blood to Head, ¥High Co! ored Urine, Unsocin’bilit‘y an: Gloom’y - _Forebodings, take Pierce’s Pleasant Purlgatlve Pellet In explanation of the remedial power of my Py gsti\?e Pellets over £0 great a variety of disease - wish to say that their action upon th animal economy is universal, not; gland or tissuc escaping their sans ive impress. Age does not impair then: their coating and being enclosed in gla: bottles preserve their virtues unimpaired for an length of time, in any climate, so that they are & ways fresh and reliable, which is not the ca: with the pills found in the drug stores, put mp i thear wood or paste-board boxes. Recollect th: for all discascs where a Laxative, Altery tive or Pn:‘-gatlve is indicated, these litt! Pellets will fi ve the most perfect satisfaction all who use them, : 4 They are sold by all enterprisin Druggists at 25 cenis a botile. " Do not allow any driigeist to induce you t. take anyt,hm% else that be may sn% is. fflm & good as m‘y_ ellets because he makes a largc groflt on ‘that which he recommends. If you ruggist cannot supply them, enclose 25 cén. md”mgeceive‘them by return mail from i . . R, V. PIERCE, M, D., Prop'r, | pipa e e S OBUMRALO NX ¢
Love and Matrimony. ' The affections may be gained b{lfollowing simple rules, and all may marry happily without regard to wealth, age, or beanty. Address, with. tamp, Madam Lucille Demarre, Bible House 8““0" N. Y.,‘ f 2 :
WISHART'S PINE‘TBEB : TAR CORDIAL, MTURES? GREAT R,EDIEDY Throat and Lungs.
It is gratifying-to us to inform the public that Dr L. Q. C. Wishart’s Pine Tree Tar Cordial, for Throat and Luné Diseases, has gained an enviable reputation from the Atlantic'to the Pacific coast, and from thence to some of the first families of Enrope, not tlxrough the press alone, ‘but by per-gons-throughout the States actuhny benefited and { cured at his office. While he publishes less, so say oéu'- reporters, he is unable to supply the demand.'; It galns and holds'its reput@tion—-' ‘ First. Not by stopping cough, but by lodsening } and assisting nature to throw off the unhealthy mat{er collected about. the throat an‘d bronchial tubes, which wuse irritation. : : §econd’. Itremovesthe c:}_fiase ofirritation (which produces cough) of the mucuous membrane and bronchial tubes, assists the lungs to act and throw off the unhealthy secretions, and purfiies the blood. © Aird. Tt 1o froo from squiles lobolia, Lcis i opium, of which most throat and lung remedies are composed, Wh}ch allay cough only, and disor= ganizc the stomach, IL has a'n‘oqthing effect on tl{xe ‘stomach, actson the liver Bm{ kidneys, and l){‘mph'atic.and nervo{xs regious, thus reaching'to ef’ery part of the system, and in its invigorating | alhd purifying effects it h'a‘is gained a reputation ; which it must hold above all others in the market. |
; INOTICHE. . | r.. q 8 1 The Pine Tree Tar Cordial, Great American Dyspepsia Pills ’ —AND— : WORM SUGAR DROPS Being under my immediate (lire_c'tion, they shall not lose their curative 'qdalities by the use ofcheap i . .and impure articles. HMENRY R. WISHART, e PROPRIETOR, ' ~ FREE OF CHARGE. .Dr. L. Q.'C. Wisha_rt‘s‘ Office Parlors In-e open on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays, from 9 A.m. tosp, M., fbf consultation by Dr. Wm. T, Magee. With him are associated twoconsultin g physicians of acknowledged ability. This opportunity is not ofi'cred_by any other institution in the city. All letters must be ad&reésed to I.Q O WISHART M. D, No. 232 NORTH SECOND ST,, - PHILADELPHIA. 5 November 20, 72.-6m-30 =
, JB3OOOK j : . AGENTS t : FOR THE OF THE UNITED|STATES. > 1300 PAGES AND 500 ENGRAVINGS, PRINTED IN ENGLISH AND GERMAN., WRITTEN| BY 20 EMINENT AUTHORS, INCLUDING JOHN B. GOUGH, HON. LEON OASE, EDWARD HOLLAND, REV. E. EDWIN HALL, PHILIP RIPLEY, ALBERT BRISBANF, HORAOE GREELEY, F. B, PERKINS, ETC., ETO. : This work is a complete history of all branches of industry, processes of manu{acture, etc., in all ages. Itisa complete encyclopedia of arts and manufactures, and i the most entertaining and valuable work of information on subjects of gen= eral interest ever offered to the public. Itis adapted to the wants of the Merchant, Manufacturer, Mechanic, Farmer, Student and Inventor, and sells to both old and young of all classes, The book is sold by a%ents, who are making| large sales, in all parts of the country. It is offered at the low price of $3.50, and is the cheapest book ever sold by subscription. No family should be without a copy.— We want Agents in every town in' the United States, and no Agent can fail to do well with this book, Our terms are liberal. We give our agents the exclusive right of territory. OE@ of our agents sold 138 copies in eight days, another sold 363 in two weeks. Our agent. in Hartford sold 397 in one week. Specimens of the work sent to agents on receipt of stamg. For circulars and terms to agents address the publishers. i
. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE FUNNY SIDE OF PHYSIC. 800 PAGES, 250 ENGRAVINGS. An interestin% and amusix:ig treatise on the Medical Humbugs of the pastan: present. It exposes Quacks, Impostors, Traveling Doctors, Patent Medicine Venders, Noted Female Cheats, Fortune Tellers and Mediums, and giwes interesting accounts of Noted Physicians and Narratives of their lives. 1t reveals startling secrets and instructs all how to avoid the ills which flesh is heir to. We give exclusive territory and liberal commissions., For circulars and terms address the publishers, : J. B. BURR & HYDE, - HARTFORD, CONN., or_CHICAGO,: ILLINOIS. : S——— | KEKNOTS UNTIED, Or, Ways and By-Ways in the Hidden Life of AMERICAN DETECTIVES. We want agents for this book. It discloses all thé mysteries of the Detective System, It isa record for the past 20 years of the most skillful detectives of this country,in which the|crafts of bank robbers, thieves, Pick-pockets, lottery men, counterfeit money dealers, and swindlers of all classes, are exposed and brought to justice.. Price, $2.75. Send'forcirculars and terms to agents. e ettt 1 5 = WE PUBLISH THE BEST In the English Language, BY WILLIAM SMITH, LL.D. It is written by 70 of gle most distingunished' divines in Europe and Arerica, and is| the only edition lxlmblished in this country ;condensed by Dr. Smith’s own hand. It is illustrated fwith over 125 steel and wood engravings. It contains everg name in the Bible of importance, and is a boo needed by every Christian family. Iz i 8 printed in ggtégle column, in one large octavo volume, Price, We want agents for these worksin all cities and towns in the country. We pay largeLcommisgidns and give exclusive territory.” For circulars’ and terms address the publighers, Sample|copies of any of our books sent to any address on receipt of price. J.B. BURR & HYDE, Publighers. ; Hartford, Conn., or Chicago, 111. .. 38
REMOVAL! Having moved into my New Brick, onthe corner of Cavin and Second Streets, opposite my former place of business, I will be pleased to have myfriendscalland see my stock of FURNITURE OF ALL KINDS! : alsothe great A "~ i = T e ST T | T RS TR R, TS et BT Lo o \{‘*\f;‘a Ve YEOMAN’S and JONES’ sy e RS a | SIS St ey ‘;;" Ao . ; Spring Bed Bottoms which only need to be used to beliked. Posi- . tipely NO HUMBUG@, _ ‘ TSR e COFFINS Ofall sizes constantly kept on hand, and trimmed to order. Funerals attendefl with Hearge when desired.. Bell pullinside the door. '’ f'. i 3 W- &- BROWN. 4 ~ Ligonier, Aug. 2,1871.¢f. | . s T r o I d\ CATARRH, CONSUMPTION & RHEUMATISM,' Immediate relief and a permanent cure guarans teed in every case. Particulars sfint free. Address, Clinton Medical Institute 147 East 15th Ml Do e P 8
HARDWARE EMPORIUM! o + ¢ Desire to call attentionltq"theil-' splendid assortment of - - 1 Shelf § Heavy Hardware, . Wagon and Building Materidvlj,..} "" vi SRR L eal aa-s;/._ o= e e mm_fiflgk é‘éfll“‘"{%‘é} Y y@[&*’/’ w‘,g\\\k\: J v ST N \l%:%'7?’*?*‘ o NN AT el w.;;if...' et iR e S The COQUILLARD WAGON, Buggies, Carriages, Plows, Horse-rakes, Drills, - Cradles,,\’Vood‘enware, Tinwhre, Doors, Sash, Cgtfipgnter’s 'l“grlo‘is, '~ ALL KINOSCF.STOVES. Agents for Fairbanks’ Scales, which we sell at Factory Priges, Persons desiringf to purchase a.uytk)ifig in the Hardware Liue, ‘are earuestly requesied?lb‘lel and examine our stock and prices before purchasing elsewhere. e LA ~ Ligonier, Ind., July 10, 1872.—1 v : JWEIR & CO.
ENGEL AND COMPANY'S ADVERTISEMENT. CHEAP FOR CASH! We are élos}ing‘out,‘ Cheap', —f—(_‘);ash,‘ our entire Sto(/kofF all 1 . and -Winter. Goods. et e
Overcoats, ‘ Dress Suits, . Boys’ Suits, l Cloths, Beavers, |
' - AND ALL OTHER il e GOODS for MEN’S and BOYS WEAR. . Ifuringour Closing Out Sale we will - 4 cey .' _ . AlStylesof Fashiomable = CLROTHEHING! At a Reduction From the Usual Prices! To those in need of Clothing and other Goods for 'Méii,_"s afid ;defs' - Wear, this is an Opportunity seldom offered, = = o CALILAND SER, - Renßyest Stde Main Street. '} \ ___ENGEL & CO. - A ug.25,5872. : KENDALLVILLE.
Banneß 00l > PRIVTING .‘ HOUSE! -
IS PREPARED TO FILL ’ : . ORDERS Promptly and Satistactorily! f‘or all Classes of Letter Press Printing, such as Cards, Billa HMeads, Letter-lleads, Circus lars, Dodgers, Pamphlets, Banlk Checks, Dray Tickets, Bills of Lading, &c. &c. at lowest market prices. Ade sli-t!asfp ' ’ _ . The Banner, G LIGONIER, IND.
Business Suits, Youths’ Suits, Children’s Suits, Cassimeres,
o :,Z?,:‘-.-jév-:*n' :}'T_,y:\;;'w?‘:. e b .-v,..,‘-?:;;‘— R ';","W’ i 5 (",‘ BBt 3RS HAS 8 A ¥R iBaOSl e gl R eX o R W RAL ok BUSR BT f{f M 8 )o S \6ds7 J o s o ~ % "‘_ X7\ E 27 S m 000) i T :fl ? AL : - = i a 0 B Y \ et m'm ot Sy < % : S e : =2 > ao\ EEaaaa e = // g eAN N e O/ o e CANEEL et e | /‘ & (-‘:} CAP ol S O —,IT 2 ; NI ‘5 ;E;-:%': =,_.=» P 550 e x,\g AR -& @@ B :;‘"“,"' % NS> TOMCHRESVLITOR. : B TEN REASONS WHY ' No Family should be woithout a Lottle of ' WHITTLESEY in the honde. = = " . I sta—ltwill relieve the ivorst casc I Bilicus Chalicor CholerasdMe:rl kg mla ettt <d.—lt willlicure the auasi OLSLIRIC Gt i Dy? pepsiaand Indigestionin a fiw weeks, - S N s 3d.—Tlt is the best’remedy in sthie wearkil ‘ff{:j‘ Sick Headache, as thousards cah testify, if taken when the first symptoms appean’ [z ad 4th.o-It is the best I"diuretic *ever: puit ‘befors ,?!“3 public; curing: those distressing ccomplainisg sr>labetes and Cravel and uther Urinarny difflculties. Gk TS et Sth.—lt is a most eéxcellent/Emmenas zogue, and to the Young Clris middic v2:d Women, and at the ¥ urn of Life; this W-nedyis of incalgulable valuel . B IS e y Sth.—lt will remove wind from she bowels i 1 hence a few drps in some’ sweekenod Wnter {7en to a babz i 5 hetter “than'a €ozed Circliali o - zlieve and make it Licspe Contnil cno anodync, = Zta.—ltis o surcy 80l 0 £odehis andl iR seted with Wornvs v ddein T L will- bring away the wiagish Do) S 3th. Llt will cure the Piles and Hemors= .odial difficulties. 3 PR Ula er 9th.—ltwill cure Congtipationand keep . rbowels regular. It will ©do’c are the worst ease CjumimerComplaintandtUyeentery. tOth.—lt will cure £our Stonach, ‘imulate the Live'r 8 ] cality Zction, 2lieve Hagrt-Durnind t¢tdsa gutieral: *FUlator of the syitoin] S 7hen taken diloed (hé (nid viily Sumar and! LOR to n Win ¢ =7 )nn Cd ey wmd S s anpPleasant toaiay oF T R hitelesey (Tivepepsin Crre) ©; st ranbatdes ety L bt lesesr Ae O e b e frede e Ihtant g(o et gt R Th N e T e e R RB N 5 P
A sure and permanent cure for ~Liver Complaints, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Biliousness, Fever and Ague, Sick Headache, Jaundice, - Piles, Loss of Appetite, Imperfect Digestion, and 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 bowels, and by its cathartic prop-. erties purges the system of all diseased matter. As a family medicine, it has no equal.: - SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ~ Price $l.OO per Bottle, . PREPARED BY . - © . ° ‘W. B. HURD & €O, - . NASHUA, N.H, =~ = o Westianall Atbion. Soer Ik, sug Sklatiy
W, AED ) D < v‘ 003 “; \~ B &L AdsA af) | SN/ QJ (/ & | & A g"&,*“ % 3! IS AL N X > | 4 v'.:“"J‘a¢ ( ' 13 s LUN \ S 2. | Py Y .£< R %/ Aj ' Q :am&. '7 ' 7 = Ve g y YINEGAR BITTERS.\ o Vinegny Biadrs oL D Y ] ook el Feoa ke A All Spiritsond "Raduss Jick oy a 0 and. swestenpd (tal plogss 4 i { i siFotiies W ApDaßa I AEd Lok thit: ledd the- tipnicr oa o vl .:f i rudh bat'are a-trne Modigine, e ! native rools and borbs of Coliforiiy, O fi ol Aleeholic Stimulanta: Thoy are e Blood Purificr ‘and a: Life-giviag Irincipio o Pérfect. Renovator and: Invizorater of (he &3 - temn, carrying off . all poisonous maticr a 4 restoring the blood to'la healihy conditivi, ¢ riching . it, refreshing and invigoratiog | § 1 aing and body,- They are casgy of adiniui~ g tion; prompt . thedr action, certain in t. 4. sresults; safe and reliable in all forms of diziag . - No FPerson can take these Dittersd - “eording to directions, and remain lonoun wqd', provided. their - bones are not desir ol : mineral poigson or other means, an« e Viki “ergatis wasted beyond the peint ufz:{ € b Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Hoidnety, Pain in the Sloulders, Coughs, Tightness ¢i i, - - Chesty Pizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stdy - fich, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, 11.gitauon ofthe Heart, Inflammationof the Lung =, *ain inthe regions of the Kidneys,anda hundied - other painful ‘symptoms, are the offspringsjoci Dyspepsia. In ihese complaints it has no canhl, _aud one bottle will prove a better guaranteefof “{ts merits than a lengthy advertisement. { - ‘For Female C,omYl.aints,.inymmr: arced, married-or single, at thé dawn of \\'Ungamlofiuh .o the. turn of life, these Tonie Bitters displayiso‘decided an influence that a marked imiproycment is soon pereeptible. e g © For. ' Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatismi and Gout, Dyspepsin. or lili‘gestion,. Bilious, ‘Remittent and Intermitt¢nt Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successal, Such Diseases are caused by Vitiateaßlood,which 18 generally ‘produced by derangement of (e Digestive Organs., .= | . They aron Gentle Purgative ns whll as'a Tonic, popsessing also the peculiar nugt -of acting as a/powerful-agent in relieving Chngestion “or. Inflammation of the Livet aud¥is_eeral Organs and ik Bilious Diseasces. i For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, SaftRhéum, Blotehes, Spots, Pimples, Pustules; Bdils, Carbuncles;Rihg-worms, Scald-Head, Sope Hycs . Erysipelas, Itgh, Scurfs, Discolorations of thic ~Bkin, Humorsiand Diseases of tle Skin, of -whatever name .or nature, are literally dug.:' up ~and carried out of the system in a short tini¢ by the use of thése Bitters. One bottlein such cascs will conyinee the most ncredulqus of their ¢ur--ative-effects. S e Eo -~ Cleanse the Vitiated Blood \vhemgror ~you find its impuriues bursting through ftho gkin in Pimples, Eruptions, or'Sores ; cleange it when-you find it obstructed nnfll. sluggishinfthe “veins 4 cleanse it-when it is foul ; your feeings yvill tell-yor’ when.. Keep tlie blood pure. puid. the heaith of the system will follow, i - Grateful Thousands proclaim ViNpfian CBITTERS -the mostrwonderful lu'\'igoruung;m ‘eversustained the sinking gystem. I “Pin, Tape, and othier Worms, lur§ing in the system of so many thousands, arc-cfive-tually destroved and l‘«'!l‘.O'.‘ffl.f Says a digtincguished physiologist : There 18 scarcely an individualon the face of the earth whose body i exempt from the presence of worms. It is no§upsonthe hedalthy elements of the body thatswdrnia exist; but-upon the diseased humors and sliny deposits that breed these living mmzutvxga of disease. Nosystem of medicine, no vermifgees, _po-anthelminitics, will frec the sysicid %"‘;'\)Ll “worms like these Bitters, ; 1 - :Mechanieal Discases.—Dirsong mrém-d in Paints and Minerals, such asPlumbers, ipesetterg, ‘Gold-beaters, and Mincers, ::s'uw_!;.:l; vanee in life, are subject to parilysis ofjthd ~Bowels, » Toguard against this, take a dfirac ol WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS twice a weeky ‘Bilious, Remittext, and Int.erxjfl(tent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleysofour great rivers throughout the Ulfitcd - States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ghio, . Missouri, Illincis, Tennessee, Cumberland,! Arkangsas, ‘Red, ‘Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, « Pearl, ‘Alabama, Mobile, Savannah,:Roanol ~ - James, and many others, with their vast thib~taries, -throughout our éntire country duriu;: ~the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryngsd, aia invariably accompanied by extenkive ddrangoments of the stomach and liver, and othet ab- - dominal viscera. In their treatment, a pyrga“tive, exerting a powerful influence upon ghese . various organs, i essentially necessary. There -is no cathartic for the purpose equal to I)fl:. J. -WALKER’S VINEGAR -BITTERS, -a3 they § wiil £peedily refpove the dark-colored viseid m!n‘wr with which’thie bowels areloaded, at thesame timestimuiating the secretiohs of the livery and generally restoring the healtlly functions df'tliec - digestive organs. Lo S| ~ © Scrofula, or King’s _]i}vil, Whité Shvell. ings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swellcd neck, Gaitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Infiathinations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, HEruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., ete. Inthese asin all other constitutional Diseases, WALKER'S -VINEGAR BITTERS have shown their g rn:xthi;-um—-tive powers in the most obstinate aud ingractghle cases. . - : ! Dr. Walker’s California Vinégar Bitters act on all these cases in a si‘animr manner, !By - purifying the Blood they refuoye the cause, and. by resolving away the etle¢ts of -the inflammation (the tuberculdr deposits) the _ - afleeted parts receive health, and a permdnens - cure is effected.. : | .. The properties of DR.'WALEER'S VINEGAR BITTERS. are: Aperient, Diaphoreti¢, Capminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diurctic, 'g»'w‘,:;tive, ‘Counter-Irritant, Sudorific] Alterdtive. - and Anti-Bilious, i ©The Aperient and mild Laxative prbperties of DR.: WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS sre tlie best safe-guard in eases of eruptions -and mdlignant.fevers, their balsamie, healing, an.i . 'Boothing properties protect the humors of the fauces. ~ Their Sedative properties allay pain in .~ thenervous system, stomach, and botyels, githicr - from jnflaxthmation, wind, colic, cramps, ete. - Fortify the body “fil‘“““ disease by - fiurifymg all its fluids with VINEGAR BlTres, <Ko epidemic can take hold of & systeu) thus fore-armed. A - Directions.—Take of the Bitters on going : 1o bed at night from a half 10 one and ong-haif ~wine-glassfull. Eat good nourishing foody such .28 beef-steak, mutton chop, venison, roasgbeef, and vegetables, and take out-door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetable Ingre~Adients; and contain no spirit. i - R H, McDONALD & €O, fi ~ o Pruggisis and Gen. Agts,, Sun Fra n‘-ug.f":'., & cor. of Waskington and Charlton Sts.. . | 2OSOED: BY: ALL DRUGGISTS & Mv‘Alfir 124
AN R ICC 0L by THE NEW DiSCGy LR .+ < InOhemical and Medical Sciene: | : ' \ .’A‘J A 3 ¢ E » MBI g | G ey | - WS N WY S LN : IS . AN DN Y s SNT < ARG o W =>4 Wb, r\;?".';? Sy 2l s - dlg Spwalk, > x *'*fa%fi,;;‘, 7 P | “m\’:\\ T ’gsfi'# = 7 ,' \ Soearsee s b ' >7% ST RADE mmi\‘K 9 b "/ FIRST AND ONLY SOLUTION everké.mda /in one mixture of ALL MHE TWELVE ‘valuable active principals of the well known ‘curative agent, ; -1 [ .« PINE TREIIL TAR, . UNEQUALED in' Coughs, ;Colds, Ca?t.nh, Asthma, Bronchitis, and consumption. .fil - CURES WITIIOUT=F4m A recent cold in three fo pix hours; and alsey IN){ its VITALISING, PURIFYING um;iSTl‘ ULATING effects upon the general system, is remarkably efficacious in all— i | DISEASES OF THE RLOOD. " Including Serofula and Erui)_tions of the sking s Dyspepsia, Diseases of the Liver and Kianeys, Henrt%isease, and General Debility. | s - 'ONE TRIAL GCWI'\IINCES§2I o C ALSO, A | Ak Volatile Solution of Tar - For INHALATION, without application of " HEAT. A remarkably VALUABLE discévery, as the whole apparatus can be carried in the vest pocket, readv at-any time for the most eff¢ctual - .Bnd positively curaiive usein L -All Diseases of the NOSE, THROAT . and LUNGS. i 3 AT THE COMPOUND 1. ~ Tar and Mandra}:(gx gll f \ i ith the I IR 1l : ggra‘_mc%gfiigm::t oot",'lt‘rx]e TWeO most vah . ALTERATIVE Medicines known in the Pro!;ssibu', n.gd ?nders éhisdPill without »:[ ntion ot est ever offered. Sl Tho BOLUTION and COMPOUND ELTXIR of . T AR 3 without’ doubt the Best Yemeny knodm fin 'CHOLERA AND YELLOW FEVER. “Itis a;Sx;:cifiqYéuuchflimueu; and shogld be - kept int the household of eve péci *éugatau those months in whioh e 1" “arcliable to prevail. A E}a% kiuuixigr igeg | ‘,“h’. nywm : Dmmteontmfingmem «_‘l ,N. ! - Volatile Bolution for In & ation ss.oopdr Box - . Bend for Circular of POSITIVE CURES 110 E, 224 Bt., New York.
