The National Banner, Volume 8, Number 12, Ligonier, Noble County, 17 July 1873 — Page 4

. . e The Farm aut Household. A Word About Fairs. The Prairie Farmer pointedly remarks that September is emphatically the month for Fairs, and thereupon proceeds to give a few timely remarks upon that subject: : It says that Fair time is a season which every farmer should look upon with pleasure. It is the holiday season in th%,tarmg_r’s\,{e s andi % d be enjoygq;";‘%’;noffio y:h farnger himself I\3 by‘,-‘fii g& “men, Ws ‘children, and ffiu * of"all"his” wéhry wife. We like the idea of shutting up the house and all gaging to the Fair. ‘ ' e Whatever ohjection there may be to patronizing most of the perwmbulating shows that frequent the country, none should exclude patronizing the local Fair. It is an exhibition of the - products of the country or neighborhood, in an illustration of the industry a rogress of the year. is an ‘occasion whe 7 fa ‘.x )§0 the gonEunityis: m «%). aged ; at F@ir fime it at no ofther ! rmer can ifegard thighself as the Bqual of othefmily S YlB ¢ U 585 & Grave objections have been urged against the manner in which most of our Fairs are conducted. Complaints are made that agricultural societies do very little for the causeof agricultuye, and that agricultural¥Fairs are exhibitions of almost everything exceptpr ductions of the ?o]i;,or. at Jeast th farm productions cut but a small figure in these annual gatherings. -

Complaints are also made that large amounts are often paid to gymnasts, aeronauts, and other preformers; and that ‘objectionable ‘private shows' are admitted on the exhibition grounds.: In too many cases we must confess that these objections are legitimate.— We have always considered it our duty to denounce these things so foreign to the original and true idea of an agricultural population. : - We believe that these gatherings are for the rural people—tor the furthering of their interests, flild Ijto contrihute o I enjoy! %§i ig cannot"’byet{mggl ‘fi? ou 'th% loute side attractions with their attendant immoral influences, then the cause of agriculture can be subserved without them. Side shows, outside or inside a, Fair ground, are a nuisance and snare. They belgng to the circus and the lllell(l%&l‘ie—if | they belong anywhere. " If they be_tolerated at all for the purpose of getting money into the treasury, and we believe this is the only argument ever urged in their favor, then let them have some remote “corner, far from the instructive part of the exhibition, instead of permitting their proprietors tospread their tents on the most available part of the enclosure or to. make the very day I‘mideous with call for patronage. ' Perhaps the greatest objection that can be urged against the management of Fairs, is that things are not done with decency and in order. If an address is delivered, it is not unusual that the voice of the speaker is drown.ed by the ringing of bells which call people to eat cold petatoes, tough beef and dried apple pies; or by the vociferous screeching of some showman, who has announced that Prof. Dare Devil is about to| enter the den of performing serpents; or that the very highly moral exhibtion of: lighly trained . monkeys is’ about to take place. & : s » Loafers and jockeys often blockade the entrance of the stalls where the finest horses are secured ; and often the walks that lead past the pens of other animals are in so filthy a condition that women and children find it ~almost impossible to visit the various departments of animals. As one of the principal objects of ' Faire -is to - afford the moeans of gaining information, it seems important that conspicuous signs be placed over .the pens and stalls where animals of different breeds may be confined that the unintimate may know whfre to look for every class of animals. ! Not every farmer’s boy, and comparatively few grown persons engaged ift other pursuits than farming, know the characteristic difference between different breeds of cattle, horses, hogs, sheep. and poultry, and it is important that the best opportunities be afforded as such to gain the desired information. : A living specimen of a short-horn Devon or Jersey is worth all the cuts ever published to illustrate the peculiarities of each particular breed. : It would also be desirable that conspictous names be attached to every kind of fruits on exhibition, that novices may learn at a glance how to distinguish them. f Persons ‘who are familiar with all these things, are too apt to forget that many who visit Fairs are not able to: tell a Merino sheep from a Cotswold, and do not know the differente between' a Concord and a black Hamburg grape. . There is a difference of opinion regarding the propriety of placing the names of exhibitors in connection with their articles, but it is our belief that it is a good practice. Al

© BUTTER CHURNING MADE EASY. Strain the milk shallow; the ‘more surface the more cream, lhence large pans are best. Keep it in a room free from jars; domnot churn it in the room ; keep it at an even temperature it must have light and air; it is much like the rest of us, and spoils for the want of good pure air; but it is adverse to droughts. Watch it if you want (good, sweet butter, and skim just when the milk is thoroughly thick ‘or loppered. If you skim sooner, you ~will lose some ‘cream; if later, there will be spots on it or’ mold, and your butter will not keep. After skimming -the cream into your cream pail, stir all together with a case knife or spoon ; a knife is the best, as it manipulates _the particles against the sides of the pail-more thoronughly.” This proceéss takes but & moement, and if you do it each time that yon skim, when you come to :churn (if your iilk is at proper temperature) your butter will come in less than ten minutes, as the partieles are already half churned. When churned, take it up and work moderately. Don’t put a drop of water on; itinjures the flavor. Salt With good dairy salt—Ashton’s best. If you use barrel salt, or that from the small bags, your butter will taste of it, and will not keep. Let it stand a few hours and then work again, pressing the buttermilk out, if possible. Do not work too much, ag it will be salvy.— When your crock is full, for market, wet a cloth in cold water and lay it over the top, and cover that with salt; tie a paper over all.& For packing, cover with weak br m. Keep the crock in a dry, cool place, which is well ventilated. | Do net put it where anything smells, for butter and cream are great absorbents, and take on the slightest odor. = ' | 4 ‘ ;

This advice is for present emergencies; but there is coming a millenium, when new milk will be converted into butter direct., It is done now. The only reason of its non-adoption to universal use is the great power required. Who will devise and invent machinery for this purpose? No greater benefaction could occur to the overburdened housewife than the saving -of this incessant manipulation of milk, to make it ready for the churn. The washing gnd wiping, _scaldinf ~and sunning of milk pans, skimming of § N 0 ol

e T result! A productdelicious and sweet enough for the gods! Notbutter from cream whiéh in its best estate must have stood long enough to sour, and often goes over to the region of mold before the busy housekeeper gets to it —but sweet milk butter!—Rural New Yorker.

v ‘SALT FOR HENS, __Who made the first declaration that tiwould kilka hen? I€. : nehéfors L n., SMY er ) ; e “servant—as far back as I can remember, and then all the other little Abbetts, to exercise the greatest ecare and diligence to prevent salt being scattered ‘in the yard where Chanticleer and his flock' might eat it and die—for concerning salt, the command to him and his was, “thou shalt not eat of it, | for in the day thoi eatest thereof thou ' shalt surely die.” : } And thus the world has believed an (fight.’f v (?; @ Rl/ 4 ceidentalliy Mpi ¢ 1 the ‘ id wherg the Heng w \iHg 1 haye lurried t ver it S 0 the \\%mi" 1t ;it anils live'on.™ 1t iSwontterful how we ¢lihg to heresies. Now lam fully persuad.ed that salt may be given to fowls with beneficial results sometimes; indeed I have seen it with my own eyes, and know.it; shergfore-he who first told the worlds that, ust not be given to the Jubal of the poul-

“try yard because it would kill them -told a big lie, and every one since that original utterer of that variation from truth who has repeated that statement has lied also—under a mistake. “Wheére the fowl's ‘eyes close’up, and’ the base of the bill gets sore, and the white, slimy, false membrane forms in the throat, a friend of mine, a sort of hen fancier, takes a teaspoon of salt, puts some in the eye or eyes, and the rest down the throat, and the hen usually gets well. . - | This is the croup, and salt seems to be the best remedy for it known. A dose of saltéhjs good for a siek hen, our notigng to the gontr twithstandinég—z S. A. & wwzgr. :&.? 24

‘} ¢ KILLING THE CURCULIO: The Fruit Recorder advises jarring down' on sheets every other day, for three or four times, and after' that once a week for three or four times. This may do-in rare cases, where the fruit is'abundant, and the insects few and far between; but we ha¥e never been able to save a good crop without killing the curculios every morning without intermission (“Sunday excepted”) for at least three weeks, and sometimes longer, when they continued .to ‘make their appeata"@ge. A negléeét of two or three days during this time has been sufficient to allow the stinging of every plum. It is generally safer to go over the trees twice a day. 1t is'the feeble 'and intermitting application of this remedy that leads many to pronounce it inefficient and useless. o

TRANSPLANTING EVERGREENS. - The best way, in ordinary cases, of transplanting all trees is to select those of small size, so that the roots may be removed entire, and the trees will meet withlittle check by removal. But it is sometimes desirable to remove large trees. The great requisite in such cases is to shorten the roots the previous year. A proof was given lately by Dr. Hull, at a meeting of the Alton horticultural society. He tmhsplmfi)ted evergreen with perfect success that were fifteen years old, by root pruning the previous year. - THE WORD “VINE” is now used by some- careless writers for the stems and leaves of nearly all plants, We. obserye that .it is applied in some of our exchanges, not only to the running, stems of cucumbers, melons and pumpkins, but to strawberries, currant bushes, tomato, plants, raspberries, ete. The word s strictly applicable to the grapes, f{l!f? though locally applied to all trailers; but in no case should it be used for other plants. e .

IMPOSTORS. -The Fruit Recorder- gives another instance of the impositions practiced on those who never read.: Three peddlers have been in Missouri offering a pretended tree rose, growing like a tree and covered with perpetual roses —a new thing, lately. from Frénce, very rare and costly, but offered for the very low price of three dollars a plant. Many have foolisly bought of the peddlers. « ¢ $ o ) O BBER—— v i Lie Down and Rest. e -Dr/ Hall says the best medicine in the world, more efficient in the cure of disease than all the potencies of the materia medica, are warmth, cleanliness, rest, and pure air. \Some persons make it a virtue to brave disease, to “keep up” as long as they can move a foot or crook a finger, and it sometimes proves successful, but in others the powers of life are thereby so completely exhausted that the system has lost all ability to recuperate, and slow and typhoid fever sets in and carries the patient to a premature grave. - Whenever walking or work is an effort, a warm bed and a cool room are the first indispensable steps to a sure and speedy recovery: Insfin}ct Jeads all birds and beasts'to quietude and rgst theyely molfent disqgag;oryonids: assail the system, =1 68" “sae e

English'versus French. ' A young lady whose “pa strack ile” a few years ago, says the Titusville Herald, and who has since been at boarding school, recently returned, and a party was given for her benefit. Upon the bottom of her invitation cards she caused to he inscribed: “R.S. V. P.” and one was sent to an illit--erate rich fellow, who had also made his money .by boring. He did not 'come, but’sent a card with the letters “D. S. C. €C,” Meeting him 'in the streets she asked Lim what the letters meant. “Tell me first what yours meant?” “Oh ! mine was French for ‘Respond if you ean not _.accept.” “Well, mine was English for ‘Damn sorry I can’t come,’” :

Y OoUNG WALWORTH, the murderer of his father, whose trial has been a leading sensation among the. dailies throughout the land, for the last few weeks, was convicted on the sth inst., of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to imprisonment go’r life.— -The history of the case, in a;nutshell, is this: The old man was a disgusting brute, who abused his wife in every possible manner. The young man took his mother’s part, defending her, perhaps no further than was necessary for her protection. The family broil “grew fast and furious” and resulted in the death®of the old animal. The thing would hardly have produced a ripple upon the public mind had not the actors been persons of wealth and distiniction. As it is, Mrs. Grundy is terribly exercised. The newspapers generally coneede the justice of the sentence.. ,_.letgqase very . fully admits of an honest differenee of. opirion s~ Perw Sentinel. 2 :

. Fonr the lztrga;t:election _aiul’nicest styles of queensware and glassware, go oDecars. 00t N - > . A Eor ch '""‘"'lfls TiQr /paing ol el ks B rnt

#Be ¢ Sce: ol % kel Hoßtanchs ~AdORBE . .. Treachery. e i& letter {rom%{ndiém Superintendent Odeneal- to:the: Comimisgioner_of Indian’ Mgirg? dated before t%e"ds&ts;_ sination of General Canby, shows that the Indian Office was urged to desist from further negotiations. with . the Modocs. He says: “For eight years they (the Modocs) have been permitted to baffle'and defy the Governn _(% in the course desited to be pursgfé for their benefit. I tried to carry out your instructions peaceably. Persua-. siveame sgproved: fruit h mili&?yfi?& SHe: &}]fi ject by both argument and intimidation. ~All failed. The Indians commenced hostilities, and now 1 think no éel?msi shoufidtie made. ?w'i'“flilitt{he' band: which could in any way'interfere '\'\"i,‘gl =§ft'ei'wa'l‘(f ir%g!n%xgafi?j removing the leaders and the trial of the murderers.” In the same letter the Superintendent says: . There are enough of the Modocs to' demoralize 11 the Indians in that part of the Btate, and I believe that to subdue hem now is not only the mbstmxfi?i#ul and Christian like, but the only afe way to deal with them.” The “same writter thus comments on the responsibility i fod the’ donddict ofithe Modoes: “I have sufficient evidence to satisfy me that there are a few men | .ifn Yreka, California, some sixty miles from Lgstsßi swhogare to a ; ext‘%‘t,’ i nw irel y,(')nsfimg the Ins@b & o Captaim-rac band, and for the ;'efi:nt trouble with thepy. '{hateimgw M&Ottb%tilflk isteWce fvhich go to show that these men have pursuaded them to remain off their Reservation, making them believe that they could hold the land they claim uynderthe preemtion law if they would stay where they are, but that.if. they went to the Rp_sgrya%i‘,o,n they would lose all right to:at.: The friends and counselors referred to by Captain Jack have supplied the Indians with the best of guns and an abundance of ammunition to enable them to ren;agn, off the gegexv%;xgmi— They will,.of ‘eotwrse, find igreat-fanlt ith thé huflmfig"fifr 'ini’erfe&g with their customers. They have evidently made alarge amount of money by their illieit. tfl&fic; sand i they onlty desire war to make more, caring nothing for flfx ultimate fate of the Indians.” ~ Among,..others.. implicated i Enid (D IE Be AL Stedloin };sl'ilontf Dk lawyer, and a Judge of the State Courts: = =8 .., L ; Thefiunmm“mxw%? [From the Jonrnal of Commeree.]’

More than forty years ago, when it was_found that prevention ‘for the Asiatic cholera was easier than €ure, the learned doctors of both hemis< phetes drew up a’ prescriptial which was published (for workiq% people) in. The New York Swun, and: took the name of “The Sun Cholera Mixture.”.. Our contemporary never lent its name to a better article. Wehave seen it in constant use for nearly two score years, and found it.to-be thé, bestrgmqfly-for},loqsqnesa'_of@haJoofi" els eéver yeét devised. Tt is not to be mixed with liquor, and therefore will not be used as an aleoholic beverage. Tts ingredients.are well known un{‘ong all the common people, aud it will have no prejudice to icombat; each of the materials is in equal proportion to the others, and it may therefore be compounded without professional skill; and as the dose is 50 very small, it may be carried in a tiny phial in the waistcoat pocket, and be always at hand. 'ltis: ’ : , . [hmnet. opii, ' ¢ Gapsicif 4 il Rhei co., . : : Menth pip., . » Campho. : Mix the above in equal parts; dose, ten to thirty drops. I plain terms, take equal parts tincture of opium, red pepper, rhubarb, pepermint, and camphor, and mix them for use, In case of diarrheea take a dose of ten to twenty drops in three or four teaspoonfulls of, water. No.- one: who has this by-him and takes it il time will ever have the cholera., We commend it to our Western friends, and hope that the receipt will be widely published. Even when no cholera is anticipated it is an excellent remedy for ordinary sumimer complaint. | e R ;

. IMPROVED CAR SEATS.—New . car seats have made their appearance on some of the roads in the East. They are not unlike the plush ones familiar to travelérs, but the fitst “eculidrify observable is the separation of the two seats on tlie same level, so that neither of the occupants undergoes any incon-. venience from the restlessness of the other. . When the passenger is seated he at once notices the peculiar spring of the cushion, not attributable to the composition of the interior of the cushion but to the bending of the framework ; in other words, the cushion is so arranged. upon strong springs that the most vicious jolt or the most pronounced tilt of the cars manifests itself by a gentle rocking of the body in the one case and a gliding, sidelong motion in the other, doing away utterly- with the constant jarring of brain, bones and sinews felt on rough roads. It is intended to furnish a car with two setsiof seats, one for . winter of plush covering and the other for summer of cane. - & op T

COMMODORE VANDERBLLT has been. elected to the Presidency of the Lake Shore &-Michigan Southern Railroad, made vacant by the death of his- son-in-law, Hon. Horace F. Clark. The Commodore entertains very decided opinions on all subjects to which he .gives attention, and especially regard‘ing raibroads. We learn that he has already stopped all opperations on the second track which it was proposed to lay between Elkhart and Chicago, notwithstanding that a vast amount. of labor had already been expended on the work—considerable of the road‘bed being finished, and, in some sec- : tions'fi}e,‘ti_qf@being. pl‘a}:e(t,t;‘afig:fi for the rails. " THe action has excited a good deal of disappointed comment.— South Bend Register.

TEW SR ALY - The Board of Directors of the Cincinnati, Wabash & Michigan R. R. Company on Monday organized by the el@agtion of the following officers, toWity BELE MK WL b ATk M AR ~ Ranson Gardner, President. C. Cowgill, Vice Pres. and Treas. E. W. H. Eilis, Secretary. A. G. Wells, superin‘tendgnt., -Jos. H, Defréed and Chas, W. Chapman, 'AssistanthTreaSUrers. - The work is being vigorously, prose--cuted south of Wabash, gndw;vlfilppm‘ ably reach the town of Marion by the Ist of LO¢tober; smaking connections with Cincinnati and Pittsburgh.— Goshen Times. .

. Competition prices rule at ngia_;n Grol’s &nd his ‘groéeries -will FAvorably compare with any in this part of the State, either for quality or quar}‘ti- | Rfilfifli&iflflé‘fo’rfifiifii&”&frs. labaugh is closing out, her large hwc@nmifm?s %fir at teduced Tates. Call Soon ‘and seeure. the best.

lxm'mm_ INDIANA® ITEMS, | gl et g 00, 00l Tt {st ELEHART, COUNTYA niit . The: Millersburg corréspondent::of: { _glg -Goslién: Times writes::“Revu Mu.. askey, of tlie Lutheran Church liere,: has been doing some most: excellerit ‘work of-late, in dealing with :some’ of the besetting sins of :this people, sueh | as Sabbath ' visitihg, and; desecration, generally, . &c. . e “weighs 4 ‘ton”: when he comes down on such:things - w —Says the Lagrange Imdependent: hary Bailey 'i§ lter' name and she lives at Middlebury.” “She is. a music teacher’ and a sehool. teacher, and. an_ epterprising girl. She-walks- eight {glilebj‘ teaches ‘sclidol - Bix hours and gives six mtsic lessons fn one day, and 14 lately bought her ahome, in Middlebmya 1-iiggn. thomad owr —Judgd JSD OSB il ity started, on_a trip of recreation and. pleasure through Kansas, andiother. portions of the ;West:on Tuesday of last-week. They will be absent sevérs all WeeKs dfid their tany. friends will wish them a pleasant trip and a safe return.’ So .o = _ & —Thie Goshen, 7ines feports: “Edward Tieldhouse, a highly respected itizén' of Elkhart, “wis Killed on the ourth, while handlingice. A large iece'of the article that was beingmoved fromi the ice-house Ly.a pully fell upon “him, crishing: hitm 'down and causing injuries from which he died in about two howrs. " The deceased was ‘about 35 years old, and Jeayes a ity ERGee T - —ln refering to. the report that: the machiné shops :of “the iBS, &M. S Railroadl are to be moved from Elkhart: to Toledo; the Blkhart Revie says: “Instead of removing the shops from Elkhart, the Company net'léng since purchased more land here with the fview of extending their facilities. S 0 much forso mueh. - The probabilities of larger shops are much greateér than 1e removal of thoseS¥é already have, and the gushing ;"odf qut friends af the county seat is entirely lost, in: this ‘instance.” . jora gd divw ol o STEUBEN COUNTY. = ‘ K —A ride’over portions’ of Steuben {:.County prompts the editor of the. AnFoola Times to note the improvements | which have taken place during the Ppast three or four yvé&ars, in these | words: Farms which would not yield sufficient to pay taxes:and keep up fences are now tenantéd by good, prac- { tical farmers who are erecting new fences, new Darns and new dwellings. When we ask what lias brought this about we are informed that it is the healthy market afforded by our railroad towns. And tlm‘sf"it is, the thor“ough farmer who will put his hands to the plow and his shoulder to the wheel, will find in Steuben county ample suecess.” . |

. —An amusing. incident is thus velated by the Angola 7'imes. “A beautiful yaller haired girl, all covered | with paint and artificial blushes, mafle her appearance in town last week accompanied by her delicate (?) parients “and a mortal lovier who “claimed her as his bride” elect. She was splendid1y robed in a delicate red calico, but desiring to” appear in White, she procured the consent of our bachelor friend Flem Bodley, Hsq., to remove ‘gaid red garment in his store; Of course ‘Flem blushed, aud Greenwood had a ‘ tedious job in getting-some sugar out of the bottom of a barrel. The next moveiwas in thedirection of fif’(,;él‘htin Justice’s office, where a crowd had ‘assembled as unbid'deh_ as the bed bugs ina country hotel.. .But the Justice invited the wedding party into a rear room, where the knot was tied in just three seconds, the Justice meantime fst:mding irr the door to keep .the ¢uribus crowd at bay. ;J'ust‘: as the magic word was spoken Qe‘-bfidégropm closed the door and eheated the lawyer ot of his dues—a kiss. After the usual embraces by the bridegroom and parents the door opefieéd and the party filed out and returned to Bodley’s store where the red robe was again donned: The bridegroom treated the bride and her parents to the soda water and then all parties returned home. Stocker says he will have hisrevenge.” =~

—The samé paper announces that it “has already been determined to celebrate in Angola on the 4th of July, 74. An ox will be roasted and such.a time as will be had will bé asfonishing, Nogambling horse races will be tolerated, and people will be éx—pected to celebrate in a manner becoming ‘the patriotie, christian peOplp of America.”, i

HUNTINGTON COUNTY. ; —The Huntington Herald gives the folf6WlNg Account of the storm on the “Fourth:” “This section was visited on the 4th-by the wmdst.remarkable storm known herve for thirty years.— From the scattering accounts that have come in, it is evident that much damage has been done, althrongh considerably less than was at first supposed.— There. was a hard rain-storm, aceom-parited-by-a gale;-in the-forenoon ;-but: the real storm occurred about the middle of the afternoon. The first indication was a bank of black clouds which whirled acxoss the sky frow'fhie northwest, the foremost cloudsbeing blown into- ribbons by ' the tornado, ‘and’ stretched ‘like streamers before the hugzic \Lnost, Justanily it Siasl upon us; the big-drops:pattered down: for.a moment, and- then :the storm butst. The rain fell a 8 we.hever saw k it fall-before, The water came down' in sheets, fairly deluging thie earth, while'the ‘power 6f the Witid s¥is" fre. mefldou&” tornd it sl BEW Dan 7?:,&;11 . The 'Heradtl then gives: detailed statements of the damages done in ' ‘different parts of .the county. Trees were uprooted, - roofs torn off of -some builditgs and’ a° ng%@tiérubf' frame buildifigs blosin ddw. . ..- —The Mayor Stauts must he 4itite seveie on “transgredsors of thie law - During the past. four.months. of his official caréer he collected o Tess than $553 by Way‘*bf _flflefig"m;}“"“'*fl“ Geal l

' © LAGRANGEB COUNTY. " S‘v‘.@%fl@ fr6m the Stanaprd) —Wheat heads-are-said: to' be well: filled;-and the grain fulland plutap,

- —Witen banks cotipeté i payrient of linterest on deposits; ‘depositors are hai)fly~=f wind wmal odd %o wry i gt " _Druikenness on thepublicstreets; shouldithe Temperance - law+He: con-tinued-in foree afew yoars, will ohly be rtemembßeréd as one rof thd. vulgar barbarisms of thepast. * - e

- —=A'farméer way'in last Week seeking ‘advice about the payment of a note given for the patent/tight privitege of sellinig & new=fangled plow, Tt Appeats he had beéen induded fo sign 4 noteéfor $140; payaple in 'six- months, for the right'of selling ‘the Pfows in the ecunty. Thenote, instead ofbeing endorsed “given for a patent ¥ight” as reqeired by Taw, ’&vzfsf?enqg%jéd; “rhis ‘mote iy giver for “profita,” " The 'mian who signedithe notd Hds néverisedn ‘one of the plows,” and" eonsequently’ had nol profits] and now inelinds’ lo’ e dping Jon-hewill ot pay if. < “Phat he' éver ‘signéa it, ds one fif “the dnomalies of Hature:! 1 claaos ol ab 2a9nitie iy

L ¥ A 1o - * - oo THE C‘Ho‘Lfi’A‘Rfi’WEDY——mxere is probably ‘né s}mlr “aid more useful I'eim#é'gl‘jf for ,'léosere_’ss ‘of “the " bowels, | diartheed, and for cholera in its Caflyzl stages, than ‘Hia| following prescription, which we hive once hefore pubdished, “pus 'Wlsx,i"c'l} we think shélild be' repeated. Itls in plain termss Equal parts Of tineture fopi ym,” peppermint, rhubarb, éamph o% and eapsictim, mixgd. " Dosé,. tén” fo “tivénty “drops, in thrée to fout teaspoousful of water, to e repeated évery’ half lour until relief is bbg}mned " Every family sho'd keep ani cutice Vil 0f this prepardation’ in the house ready for ahy sudden fifQ?l facklof st didshectl” 1 G :5;47“1?%.;09&“‘3: i . A young mannamed Wilkiam IT. Robertson, of- _\Yilyng‘tp\ynship, about seventeen years| old, was_struek by -Jiglftl}i‘lxg‘xsj}‘;iilp q'f:u‘tp guning on the 4th of July, and instantly killed. Ie was ~overtaken. by the storm, and. had sought the Shelter of atree. The Sentinel thus reports.the calamity: His ‘head was severed from the neck, at ‘the jaw, and a p yrtion: of the jaw _sép;l.a ‘rated from the lfLi:ul_,—-both Lying apart from each other and the body of the boy. The‘hea.d)las cut off as smoothly ‘as if it had been (done with a sharp instrument. This is a singular freak of, lightnipg,‘ and :;'Ll)l)e:lrs like a deed _Qf horrible butchery committed by man. The gurrthe young man carried under is coat to protect the, lock from ‘the ‘Vi':ivi‘n,. is !nl,otgs:aid to ,J_l;by_é been injured, though the Coroner’s jury think that its metal barrel atfracted the lightning which struck the boy at_the ; 511011}1(19}' :sztixlg.t \\;hibl; it rested, and glancing off severed the, head from his fieck, and'the jaw from the lread. The upper portion of the boy’s eclothiilg ,i\";ls burned;and his body bore unmis‘fizx_kably the tracks .of the electric shaft. Ile was not fowTui@ until the 6th of July, by which'time the body had been shockingly mutilated by the hogs. Sl b e

. HOWARD COUNTY:i /' 37 The Kokomo Democrat of last week contains the "starthng information that there are no less/than-a-dozen young married men in thwt city who are on the broad road to hell. “Besides being aqdicted to gmnliwling,” says the Democrat, “they m'e'{ almost . irretrievably lost in drink. |They are men who ‘were once the li Jht of the homes they now darken and disgrace. Once 110ble and ' confiding husbands, how low, drunken blackguards. Onee kind and affectionate fathers, how coarse and brutal tyrants. | The philanthropic heart faints and | depairs in the contemplation of their fallen ‘condition. Merey becomes-hatred-and pity loathing -when Dbrought :in :contact: with them, .Is theve qo stay. for the conquest of ram? |No power that can throttle the monster thatis populating graveyards, filling alms houses and érowding .prisons? - Is: the hwuman heart made of adamant, that the sacred influences of home, of the true and noble, of purity and love cannot move.? There is but one licensed retail liguor saloon in the city, yet, who will say that it is not A%‘l‘ily‘_bi‘eathing forth. moral and physical death? While we have no ill feeling against the proprietors of ‘saloons. personally, we hate their aceursed h,?siness with a hatred that shall never flag nor grow weary.”

] 'v"’\*"" ok ; WoU iy PIERCES ‘ ‘,.»/"-:_\N-N -B:'!!.’l'..'E‘.X"i'.oa -(‘ e SJuiE Lifi g 58 . &,-‘—" -\\\\ ¢an e S RPN T LR i B SN g L sR el B figrrer S '.';‘ ) E '??? "}}".’_:: i\\ - ' s apt 5b e 4 RN : v o R Y AN S .«// 7 :"‘!yw \ \ | Vi i 2 .? '!]llm,“, [N ,\ o U Tt oA 3 N\ N Pt ol RN a 0 é;fg%‘i\,( eiR “pite / LIRY R “;r 0,/ e AR el ST Tl "‘?‘?fi AT fi] RTL S Dy S/g NSRRI et | GRS a;i?" %’“fli‘ SN R |R, GO IS e e T oaiE “;%:*fih‘{;?"’“wf ‘13:“!& = ”":"’l5 ; S e 53;33,;"-‘: Jf{l NG S |- il NS RO, |- \ & S st aol ¢RI e > g see == - _msinen OURES DISEASES oF Tiip ooetvmmmd B p G Rl g : THROAT, LUNGS 11% ks & BLOOD, In ' the wondériul ‘m:editine to which' the ‘ifßicted are above poinied for relicf, the dise Ymoverer believes ho lis comlined €0 harmony nore of Nature’s mostsbyesfign curative prop: yrties, which God 1 s ijusti'led into the veges .able kingdom for healing the sick, thdn awere wver before combincd in ‘oneg medicine. The. dvidetice of this Tiet is found'in ‘the- great 1 i wriety: of most obstinate: diseases which it hag ™ o %ormd to conquer. *ln the curo of Eron= | als, Severe Cugyqiaty and tho .(;lu.rji;rf stages |« Conawminion, it lias astoni-hed the medi | - faculty, and eminent i siviims pronounce it | juc greatest medical discovi vof the age. While 1% cures t';:lojwwficst C;)ugli:l,'it Smmmi:ens the | iystem .and pucriies tha Lloods By its great Ind thoroagh Lloott puvitying propertics, it c“fifie, Pl _Humors, {om tho wosst Serofulm to a sommon Bietel, Pimij ' or Eruption. Mer _puriak: fiinu:ai(!lsaflinlauffl‘v ifionhs;flilnfll bhfih* offects rre eradicated, aud vigorouy health and.a sou ronnftfltioigv' eit.;l‘)“!hfi(‘)“; :E,ry:fih'lm;’gs&fl Athenm, Fewer-Soydn, L or Rough 8 Jeciort, all ‘efxg nnfl;f~fi<l’4§‘d?st?;ses cml;gi by M | :.ooe\;;«nro,@mwhd Ly, whis, pofiurl‘ulgxamify.-_ «.p end tuvigopring Idicioe, i A . »_lt;;{on t{oc“i dutl, ey Aebithted, Thavy s golor, of sking or - loyish hrcsoa Bpots o I n:;,,-%um_v; freqiiesl Fada catiie fir-fl“.;z-,f.mgn; ba3 4 azte i monihy inie gl bt aioor 1 odisciierpated: .1«;1v(tt€ %mt fig?flf.fl. f(": thirt ;!.JL}; &i‘c() - Lodidgsyarrosuiar fappetize; £ll feorun Conted, i %an are; puffering fioq Warptet. Siwep o] ke g#un:n:u "J)}t; “'.i- 4 }‘xzmawzlum ) “Li‘t"c'r S 0 adentd?, nly pout O g symptom :Jre g.::)%rimf i‘ll:;",. s"&fih f{@;{ly ! Ln; 01l \%)éfi’gucls,’ Dr. Pierge's. Gallpn, Modical Discu - has nq | ejual, :’l;‘ rt?dm 5 gfir%g ‘31‘.!'05,‘ 1&'!".&?‘?%? Tiv. |ar mgmtb\wl:ml ‘Ae:"slt!}flyu For ihe eure Jp- | Aabithiul Constinagion of tie bowéls i 14 o ntem Tailing, Mu‘.&ggxw& ‘thore whiy [havy fuoo it for this pnrmy‘; avn Joyd in iru;ipmise. | ;i-p,wsfi-&eéww | 1000 lowan) Tor Jmsdi | ¢ ihat & ngl i curect” ad. the dis E & m-xgfiéfii& ’mgftfl -;‘?r%f’ ; . o e [f‘ pif ;’.?.\.;T i ¢ l’fl%}l'fi?fig“;hg‘m’? ” Bond yotfl‘a’d ress [OF & pampldet,

ENGEL AND COMPANY'S it o ADVERTISEMENT. THE LARGEST CLOTHING HOUSE IN THE COUNTY. ‘.l Fegsaatis 14 2ot g ILy il | o i e s BNGEL & GOy ', MANUFAGTURERS OF AND GENERAL DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF iy ; - . e o - :-. e 3 e ~ , »I’," : 5 Sy T Ko the Retail Trade, : Hats & Caps, Gients® Furnishing Goods, ; An Immense Stock of all kinds, Retailed’at Wholesale Prices for Cagh, "« " © Our Merchant Tailoring Department D 7 iin sk odiainds o bR difclons OUTINR. wid Aitieaivsidh 6L whe ey favor ns with $ » their patronage. We¢ have a full line.of English, French, and Amgérican i s } i CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES. . HATS CAPS, GENTS PURNISHING GOODS, r&c. IW'é have piid patticular attention o this line of goeds, and think we are able to satisfy all who" £ ;. may deen;it ofsufiicientimportano;e to give us a.call, a 0 e R

‘Weare Sole Azents sy ML pOR THE— e l CELE BRAT_EDI

Thanking our Numerous Customers for past favors, we-solicit G lea ‘them to call and examine our New Stock. © .~ y v RBMEMEER THB PLACE:Y 0 Reub. dilter's Brick Bailding,l | - RENGRL- B O »~(\.“:We;t slefd Maitk iNEpéot. “ff' } e b b“hGEI‘ & CQ‘ i 'quxqfffgi,_J'§73. ; faa . KEENDALLVILIE

HARDWARE EMPORIUM! & ) e = PENS St 3 S ‘. D) . ‘ ""; ,x‘ ‘-.’"v‘i. . UTEIR & €. EE e Desire to call at»tén;tion;totheir‘splendid assortmen‘tvof‘,; P ? S 8 ; AW f 4 ißy g ) Sheif & Heavy Hardware, e:bt::: A R R S R i g . e i : . Tt S : ; S el . SWagon and Building Material,: o v gy o SR ceie b 4 g.u” o *«w SR i e L T g T Ve e R zflfiv AR e rfig‘fi‘m’w*‘fir«s@%'f‘"?x%"qfi"*&!fi? “ ;g V§S§— ’—r!‘ HT—“‘-/./ ‘:«vgm,—_—-—rg}r '_""——-l’f'f:{?“‘”v/ am,iuxqi:)\ifi;“:é,&??fii%\h A \:‘%}.‘\t‘&,‘it;x!«-fi/ff...’f:—f:?‘%\ - g (/%‘&wfi‘;rxén?& BB NG e e e s eten eSN GGI 2T ME SN~ ey Aopl . N 7 Donaes . By e==Ll e O /‘9‘ : e . i Y : e B The COQUILLARD WAGON, . Buggies, Carriages, Plows, Horse-rakes, Driils, | Cradies, Woodenvware, Tinviare, Boors, Sash, Ca‘xfpé:!lxjtgg!.l’fi_"l'*etblgs‘,' i ALL KINGS OF STOVES. . 00l o * oy A, l 5 i h : HIFo P. = hoents for Fairbanks’ Seales, which we sell ai Faciory Prices. . Persous desiring &9 piarchase anythiog ic the Hardware Line, are eari‘;us_t_’].\f ne:;uééféd.to;.éafl and =xamine-our =tosk and prices before parchacing elsewheres .. 70 o inm gl iy Ligovier, Ind | Jaly 10, 1872°—1v Feds o L L. WERIR &CO.

: MANEEOOL - ; How Lost; How Restored. - . Just published, a new edition ¢f e, S Slulverwell'sCelebrated-Essay %on the radical etire (without medicine) ; of Spermatorrhea or Seminal Weaknes, Invoiuntary Seminal Losses, Impotency, Mental and Physical Incapacity,lmpediments to Marrlage, etc. ; also Consumption, Epilepsyand Fits, induced by self-indulgence or fjexual extravagance, - ¢~ Price in a sealed envelope only 6 cents. “Phe celebrated atnthor, in this admirable essay, tlearly demonstrates from a thirty years’ snccess< ful practice, that the alarming conscqnences of self-abuse may be radieaily cured without the dan; gerous use ofinternal medicine or the application ofithe knife; pointing out a mode of cure-at onee simple, certain and effcctual, by meaus of which eyery sufferer, no matter what iis condition may b;ihmuy cure himsell cheaply, privately, and radicauy. R . : * ga=This lecture should be i the hands of every youth and every man in-the land, _ _.Sent,anderseal in a plain envelope, toany ‘address, posi-paid, on receipt of 6 cents, or two postage stamps. ! ! ! o { Also, Dr Culverwell’s ** Matriage Guide,” price 50 cents. Address the publishers. . 2t { CHAS. J. C. KLINE &.CO,, A 27 Bowery, New York, Post-Oflicé Box, 43586, Aprik17,1873:60-1y +oF 15 o

@r“‘iig P e N KLANEa s Bioob - w WCURIFIER) Lo SO e e 3 4 5 ; r\»\,A}fll — i STCHREIVLIGR

No Famgy Should be without a bottle of . “WHITTLESEY tn the house. fist.—Tt will relieve thé worst case of Bilious Cholic or Cholera Morb.us in 15 minutcs. _2d.—lt will cure the most obStinate casé of sbyspepsia and Indigestion ina few weeks. % : “° 3d.—Tt is the best " remedy in the world for .Siek-Headache, as thousands can testify, if taken when the first symptoms appear. ! 4th.—lt is the best diuretic ever put before the public; curing those distressing com‘plamts, . Dilabetes and Gravel andother Urinary difflculties. : . ¥i Bth.—lt is a most excellent Emmena08U, and to the ‘Young Clris, middle aged Wome.n, and at the Turn of Life, this remedg is of incalculable value, . ! "~ Bth.—lt will remove wind from the bowels, and hence a few drops in some swectened water awen toa babe is better than adozen cordials to :Relieve and make it Sleep: Containm%.n_o anodyne. o ; th,—lt is a sure relief for adults and children .affected with Worms and Pin Worms. ‘lt will bring away the worms, | .+ ket .. Bth.—lt will cure the Files and Hermor= rhodial difficulties. i : : .7 Dth—ltwill cure Constipation and keep the bpwels regular. Itwill also cuie the worst case - ‘ofSummerComplaint:indbysentery. 10th.—Tt will cure €our *Ttomach, “Stimulate the Liver to Y eclthy action, Relieve He art=Burn and act a 3 a goneral ‘Rezulator of the f\'&""-«m. ol o When taken diluta 116 Caseanish Cricrnr and Water to a Wine~inegfoil ond you haveaplofigant tanic. . il Whittlasiy 5)_\'3‘99,7)--};'. Crered fr e por L ottlos L WAt Sy AL A Cee S forli b ¢ Whatth i €otwe i (s GHELE 5 00w Mo Bolt bygtll ot L e R . e e

L HOR SALE S Bik s Wileox. & Gibs Sewing. Mabine: * Reghlir ptide, $BO. Wil be sold at a fgasonable; discount, Tngifatthe. | f .o . - Banner OFrior.

WHITE SHIRTS 5 i.A—iA’.\"‘Df-:- - ;"»: 4 BAY STATE Suspenders!

| M

Absolutely the Best P'rotection *“Against : S PEpe AN s T i e OVER 1209 ACTUAL FIRES PUT OUTWEER I : . MORE THAN . . $10:000,000002 WORTH OF PROPERTY SAVED FROM "1'&1'1;—?11';3,\1‘1-18.; 3 48. R e g - N : o B : RN \ RS e : LM ceaßit - Lo LRy - MR ki BRTINVGUISHEQY _.ifili‘; SRR BRI BN : i ATLSO THEY 0 iy

ok Salf- Acting Fire Enoing Babeock Self- Asting Fire Enging, e FOR CITY, TO\VN_ AND VILLAGE USE. = * L 7 e Bald e Lk ¢ Mfi%’; N B 2 e e ) OA N e R RN B\ N e A ePR ARS \% AT Bh, O e ) AW ) \}%;fif‘? B e N Sl e Firx DrparTyeNts in the, principal ‘citiés of the Union use them daily. They.areSafe and Simple, and o powerful profections. . i el i BRE Tur GovernmeNr has adopted it. ~ Forty-six: Ramroaps use them. IxstranoE Co.’s reduce rates where it is introduced. © . ov T It is more effective than tlic Steam Fire Engine, because it is instantaneously readyapd throws a powerful stream of carbonic acid. g'tdand water for any length of time. - - ¢ e Tt is the Best and Cheapest Fire Engine in the. world, and comes within the, financial abilities of every place. - Fii« St ChG TAR b It does not require an ez;pensive aystem ~Ql;wa.t;sr£ works. and is never out of repair. S‘efid{_dr “their record.” Aoos oB WO BEARWELL; Séely, 441 y . 77 LreMarket St., Grloaaoo.

REMOVALI Having moveu into my New Buick, (ix)'tfx"e‘doli- . ner of Cavin and Second Streets, opposite my former place of business, T will be pleased to" have myfriendscn_llaudsée~lny§t(\)»ck‘of: Ss FURNITURE.-OF ALL KINDS ! : : .alsothegreat - e L EE YEOMAN’S and JONES' o B ! ,/"/'fi.s:‘ ,‘:'.-"‘ e Sl SR AR iy R e ; A e RS e G R Spring Bed Bottoms. ‘which only need to-bo uscd tobeliked: ~ Posi. ey SO NOBOMBUR, oo TCOPFPERFINS Ofallsizes mptnntl,{ kept on.hand, and trim‘med to order. Funerals attended with Hearse when desired. Bell pullinside thedoor, © SR e o eWA BRONENL . Ligonier, Aug. 2, 187146, & . o Smintatentris's Notton OTICE is hereby given that the undersigned. N s beeh Wfiwfifqfingn%m ra}m f James K. Graham, late of Noble ¢ ,‘& ‘g‘diana, deceased. .auiq:%uwgfig ) nfl% l‘ yent, U MARY RS ol Jnne 26, 1878-0-8 w - - Administratriz,

—‘—:—._—qzzw_,_‘.—-———.—-_fi g——— —~— WL e e ey : ' bl "‘." A '{ jcy - U EaBH N 8 B } KR ! : BT o EEAS : Vg, \ 3“fi L) * eTy e 175 5' P 5/% <":’"z., b‘. i ‘ 0 g 4 ;)@ ‘V Rs é 9 ; AT B 2 \G eAR P I RR S SLT B s Vinegar Diftevs oye pol a viie raney Drink, made of ‘Poor Daom, Whiskes, Prool Spirits and Refuse Liquors, doctered, spiced, and swectened to plense the taste, ecalicd “Wonics, ¥ ¢ Appetizers.”? “Restorers,” &e., | that’lead “the tippler on to drunkenncss and & ruin;- but are:a true Medicine, made froin the native reots and herbs of California, frce from el Alcohotic Stimulants., They are the Great Blood Parifier and a -Life-giving Principle., a Perfect Renovator amd Invigorator of the System, cdrryilg - off @ll poisonous matter and restoring the blood fo-a healthy condition, cnriching. it, refreshing and invigorating both mind and’body. They arccasy of gdministras - tion, prompt in their action, certain in their resulty, safe and reliable in all forms of disease. * .. No Person-can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain longun welly provided - their. bones.are not destroyed by mireral poison. or other means, find the vital organs wasted beyond the point ofrepair. © - 7 Dyspepsia or Indigestiony llcadache, - Pain in the Shounlders, Coughs, Tightness ofthe ¢ Chest; Dizzifiess, Sour; Eructations of the Stom- ' ach,Bad Taste in the Itf‘outh,Bilious Attdcks,Pyl--pitation of thie ,Ilcart,l‘fxuamxnapion of the Lungs, | i‘flill‘in the regions of the Kidnegys,and a hundred other: painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspépsia. “In-these complaints it has no equal, and-ong boftle will prove g better guarantes of 4ts merits than a lengthy advertisement, : For Female ComYlu,ints, inyoungzorold, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the'turn of life, these Tonic Bilters display so ‘decided an influence that a marked iinprovement i 8 sgon perceptible. ; S For Inflammatory . and Chronic Rheamatism and Gout, Dyspepsia. or Indi--gestion, Bilious, Rémittent and Intcérmittent Fevers, Diseages of the Blocd, Liver, Kidneys and _Bladder, these Bitters have bech most successiul, Sueh Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood,which , is:generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. diaas y L They are a Gentle Purgative ns well ~as-a Konic, possessing also the peeuliar megit of a%t'mg as-a powerful agent in relieving Congestion o Inflammation of the Livet and Vis- - ¢eral Organs and in Bilious Diseases “ . For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt‘Rheuin, Blotelies, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boiis, * <Carbuncles,Ring-worms, Scald-lead, Sore' Eycs “Erysipelas, Itch, Scurf 3, Discolorations of tie _Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of . whatever hame or nature, are literally dug up -and.carried out of the system in a short timie by~ “Alie use of these Bitterg, One bottlein such cascs will eonvince the mosfi: incredulous of their cur- « ative effects. . : : - Cleanse the Vitlated Blood whenever you find its impuritics bursting throush the --Bkin ix Pimples, Eruptions, or S_iu}’cs ;cleanse it -when you find it obstructed and sluggish jin the veins ; ¢leanse it when it is foul 5 your feelings will tell gouv when., Kecp the blood pure., and “the:health of the system will folloyr. oo Grateful Thousands prociaim VINEGAR BIrTERS: the most wonderful Invigorant that Cver sustained the einking system. ¢ : .

~ Piny, Tapey, and other Worms, lurking in the systgn of so many thousdands, are pficetoally destroyed i}nd removed. © Bays a- distinguished physiologist: There i 3 scarcely an individ,ua&ou the face cf the earih whose body is excmptTrom the presence of worms, 1t is not upon the'healthy elerrents of the body that worms ' ~oxist, but upon the discased humors and slimy -deposits - that -breed these living monsters of - disease. No'system of medicine, no vermifuces, - 1o anthelminitics, will>free the gystem from worms-like:thiese Bitters, - g IMechanical Discascs.—Dorzons cnoaeed in Paints and Minerals, pucy as Piumbars, 1y egetters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they .od“vance in life, are subjéct to paralysis! ef the Bowels. -To guard against this, take a dosge of -WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS tiice 8 wWcek. o Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which'are so‘prevalent in the ~valleysof our great rivers throughout the United States, espeeially those of tite Mississippi, Olio, Missouri, Jlinois, Tennessee, Camberland, Aikansas,= Red, Colorado,. Brazog, Rio Grande, “Pearl,; Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanche, James, and many others, with theiv vast tributaries, throughout our entire country duriingz ‘the Summer and Antumn, ‘and-remarkably so ~during sedasons of unusual heat and dryness, a 1 invariably accompanied by extensive derangc-iments-of the stomach and liver, and othei &b- - domingl viscera. In theéir treatment, o purga“tive, -exerting a powerful influence upon thesa : Varlo'lgs,organs, i 3 essentially nccessary. - There “is nno ¢athartic for the purpose equal to Dx. J. WALRER'S . VINEGAR BITTERS, as they will speedily remove the dark-colored viscid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same “time stimuiating the secretions of the liver, aiid -generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. A 1. Serofula,:or King's Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, *Erysipelas, Swelled neck, Goitre, ‘Scrofulous- Inflammations, . Indolent Inflamma-~ ‘tions, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., etc. . In these agin all other constitutional Diseases, WALKER'S ~VINEGAR BITTERS have shown their great curutive powers in the most obstinate and intract- . able cases. . : . s . Dr. Walker’s California Vinegar “Bitters act on all these cases in a shwilar - manner, By purifying the Blood they reimove the cause, and by resolving away the etliects af -the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the -affected parts receive health, and a permancut ‘cure is etfected, 5% .:The properties of DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR - - BITTERS® are Aperient, Diaphoretie, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diurctic, Sedative,. Counter-Irritant,, Sudorific, Alterative, . and Anti-Bfliogs, -~ . . The Aperient and mild Laxative proper-« “ties of DR..WALKER'S VINEGAR BITTERS are the best safe-guard in cases of eruptions and -malignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and - soothing properties protect the humors of the . fauces. .-Their Sedative-properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, and bowets, eitlier - from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps; ete. . Fortify the body against disease by - purifying “all its fluids with VINEGAR BITTERS. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus - “fore-armed. G . ,-Directions.—Take of the Ditters on going, to.bed at nmight from a half to one and one-hall -wine-glassfull., Eat good nourishing food, such " as beef-steak, mutton chop, venison, roast becf, and vegetables,” and take out-door exercise. | +They are. composed of purely vegetable ingre--aiénts, and contain no spirit, ! b | : ‘R.. He. McDONALD & CO., Druggisty and Gen. Agts., San Fraucisco,-Cal., &:cor. of Washington and Charlton sts., N.Y. - ‘SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS:

- HURD'S IV En STIMULANT CCATHARTIC®

A gure and permanent cure for LIVER COMPLAINTS, A DYSPEPSIA, COSTIVENESS, BILIOUSNESS, FEVER AND 'AGUE, SICK HEADACHL, ~JAUNDICE, PILES, LOSS OF APPE- ~ TITE, INDIGESTION, 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 properties purges the system of all -diseased matter. To the invalid and aged: it will be found an ‘lnvigorating Cordial, increasing the . “strength and flesh, vitalizing the blood, 3 and promoting perfect digestion. As g family medicine, it has no equal. - - . Sold by all Druggists. $l.OO per Bottle, e PREPARED BY ; LITTLEFIELD, HURD & €O., 0 BOSTON, MASS. e ‘ 861dby Fisher Bros, Ligonier, Ind,, and Skinngr & Mendenhall, Albion, 7-15

Wm‘n its gloomy atten:}nnt;; low spirits, depression, iuvoluntary emissions, logs of semien, spermaetorrhcea, loss of pewer, dizay bead, loss of memory, and threatened ime potence, and imbecility, frd a sovers cign cure in HUMPHIIYS' HOMEOPATHIC SPXCIFIC, Nuv. TWENTYEIGHT. THIS SOVEREIGN REMEDY tones np the system, arests the discharges, and jmparte vigor and energy, life.and vitahity to the entire man. ' They have cured thousands of cases.’ Iriee, $5 per package of five boxes and a large offl vial, which is very important in obstinate or old eases, or $1 per singl€ box. " Bold hyALL Drrg-. 2ists, and sentby mail on sweeiptof price, Address ICMPHREYS SPECIVIS HOMEOPATHIC HRDICING €O, 582 Broapwaz, N. X

OLD PAPERS! ¥OT WRAPPING PURPOSES, CLEAN . AND UNCUT, AT Seventy-Five Cents 2y e Hundred, at the, Banner Oflice

AT e W g SR ITDNOY 155 A 8 &4 pAVA #NERVOUS DEBILITY ST e