The National Banner, Volume 9, Number 17, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 August 1874 — Page 4
The Farm and Household. . Hints for August Work., The American Agriculturist gives the following among other hints about work in the present month: Draining may now be laid out for future completion. = Springy places should be staked, and the course of drain that will carry off the water, should also be staked out. Swamps are now dryer than usual, and ditches may be dug comfortably. Throw out the muck on on one side of the ditch only. Put it in heaps, and not in a contintious row, which would prevent surface water flowing into the diteh by and by. The muck - will-dry before winter, and so will the ground. The muck can be hauled away to any barnyard. * * Thrashing should be done as soon as pos§ible. Grain is safe from many enemies inthe granary. Desides it is the same as so much cash, and is equally available. Markets should be closely watched this year. Itis difficult to say how they may turn. An advance is just as likely as a decline, and with the wheat in the granary it can be taken advantage of. Seed . wheat should be carefully selected. - The heaviest grain only should be taken “and there should be no cracked cur-nels-in it. This should be looked to while threshing. If thethreshing machine is hired, a farmer should do nothing but wateh things. Wateh the straw closely, and see that no grain is left in it. See that the hired teams do their share of the work. If a steam threshing machine is used, see that it does not affect the insurance on the barn. For farms ‘of less than 100 acres, a good two-horse railroad power machine is probabty the best. With a cleaner attached it is so much the better. The whole may be set in the bakn, and grain may be threshed any day at -an hour’s notice. There need be no waste of straw. As a mow is emptied of grain, the straw should be returned. This is better than stacking it out of doors. Before long there ~will be few places in the country where it will pay to throw: away the straw. Plowing for wheat upon oat-stubble -should be done as.soon as the oats:are off. A light furrow to cover the stubble is sufficient. The oats left upon the ground that the pigs have not gathered, will soon sprout. When they are well started, a thorough cultivation will Kkill them. If a clover sod is to be plowed, it should be turned perfectly flat. If lime is to be used, it should be drawn now, and piled upon the ground in small heaps. A bushel to every two rods each way will give forty bushels to the acre. The heaps will slack in a - few days, or with one shower. - The lime may then be spread evenl ]y, and theé ground left until next month.
How to Treat Chills and Fever. INDraNPOLTS, Aug. 1, 1874. T'o the BEditpr of the Journal : . Reading gwo items in the Jowrnal this moring leads me to suggest some thoughts for the consideration of all those who aresuffering from the causes you mention, viz.: chills, or sinkjng cliills. * T am fully persuaded that only one course of treatment is nec‘e’sszujy to cure the chills, and that is warm water, applied while the chill is on or before it comes. In mild cases, soaking the feetin as deep a vessel as possible, with the water kept as warm as the patient can bear, he be kept covered thoroughly with bed-clothes all the time, and until he becomes warm and perspiration comes on, tth thoroughly washed off in warm water, rubbed well and put inte bed and covered well, that he may thoroughly sweat, then again well rubbed, and dressed with a plenty of warm clothes, will be sufficient to, prevent a second chill. But if another chill comes on the same freatment repeated will be very sure to perfect acure; yet if the chill should not yield, a bath in a bathing-trough, or a packing in hot sheets, thoroughly done, will not fail to effect a cure. If fever follow, the patient should receive a thorough washing in cold or tepid water,according to the intensity of the fever. The patient should drink as much cold water as he can, during the chill or fever.
In case of a cold, the above treatment is a simple, safe and sure cure. [ have practiced the above cure in my family for many years with perfect success, and in a neighborhood where chills are a prevailing disease; and while my neighbors are using all the common remedies, and still shaking, we are entirely clear of the-disease. — Not one of the family who has used our remedy has .been confined to- the bed one day in nine years, and during that time we have had several attacks of what would probably have terminated in typhoid and spotted fevers had we neglected our remedy at the very first appearance of the disease. :
- A chill is the fore-runner of nearly all fevers, and I am sure that the application above: suggested will save much suffering and many deaths caunsed by them. A, S, KiNasING. Surroundings of Farm Dweéllings. Alexander Hyde writes to the New York Z'imes concerning the unhealthy surroundings of farm-houses. He has this to say of the barn-yard: “Another surrounding of the farm-house, and a great breeder of disease as it is too frequently kept, is the barn-yard.— Now, barn-yards are _good in their place, but their place is not under the kitchen windows, as we have sometimes seen them located. Ie makes a great mistake who does not contrive to have a free circulation of pure air between ‘the abode of his family and the abode of his beasts. It may be very convenient to go from the house to the barn without going out of doors, but the convenience is not the only thing to be regarded in constructing buildings. It would be very convenient to have a bed-reom next to the stable. Put the barn and barn-yard at suitable. distances from the house, to the leeward of the prevalent winds, and out, of sight and smell, if possible. If already located near the house, and it is impossible to move them, plant a sereen of pine trees between the house and barn, to prevent unseemly sights and still more unseemly smells. In ‘any event the stables should be kept sweet, and the barn-yard should not be one great slough of despond and breeder of disease. It was fashionable, a few years since, to recommend a concaye barn-yard, so as to save the liquids and manufacture more manure. This is all well enough, but cattle do not thrive in filth. They want a comfortable place to stand and lie down, just as much as other folks.” -
FRENCH BREAD.—Take clean rice three-fourths of a pound; tie it up in a thick: linen bag, giving it room to swell; boil fiom three to four hours, till it becomes a perfect paste; mix while, warm with seven pounds of flour, éudding yeast, salt and water,.— Allow the dough to work a proper time near the fire, then divide it into two loaves, dust them in, and knead vigorously. This quantity will make thirteen pounds and seven ounces of excellent bread. =
ECONOMICAL BREAKFAST CAKES.— They may be made as follows: A teacup of qggar, one pint of sour milk, one heaping teaspoon of soda, one teaspoon cream tartar, part of a nutmeg, one or two tablespoons of butter,flour to make a stiff batter. Bake in gem pans. This quantity will do for several meals for a medi&;n‘ family.— ~ They are more tender without egg, and ' more convenient for some,
That Finance Plank—How the Mis- . chief was'Done. ' John A. Pinch; chairman of the Liberal Republican State Central Committee in 1872, recently published in the New York Z'ribune an explanatory statement of the manner in which that obnoxio,us finance plank was incorporated intothé Indiana Democratic platform. We make the following ; extract from Mr. Finch’s letter: Here let me say, as one who knows, that had D. W. Voorhees continued the | retirement from politics to which he had ostentatiously withdrawn,the democratic platform would not be what it is. I never knew a politician to sound a trumpet and “retire” who did not emerge to curse his party. Ifeis in proof of that. The Committee on Platform were for a sound currrency. But they were weak men and he ¢ompelled them to a compromiseplatform; the tail waggled the dog. His threat of a minority report and an explosion_ in the convention terrified them into? submission. He also prevented a resolution upon salary-grabbing. DBut bad as the platform is on financial methods, I am unable to see that it is more of a repudiation platform than that of the republican convention, and this would be inferred from the criticisms of the 7'7ibune. Every increase of the currency logically compels such a condition that the 5-20 bonds, and others of the saine terms,shall be paid Lin currency. To my mind there is no escape from that; and if thatis the repudiation, please to bear upon.the Republicans of Indiana with equal fonce as repudiationists. All roads of Ttaly do not lead to Rome more infallibly than does all direct or indirect inflation lead to the*sort of repudiation payment of the 5-20 bonds in currency would be. But for the people of Indi- ‘ ana of all parties, the spirit of whom I know well, I say that the charge that ‘ any party here is for repudiation of the- - debt is absurdly false. There is no such thought. It was not so thought in 1868 when the republican -convention of Indiana passed. exactly the sage resolutions that have now brought the democratic convention into disrepute. There was then in that party no such intention; there is now in the democratic party no such intention. It is an insult to the State to ' suppose it. : L The fact that this State is bewildered with such financial platforms is due to the low grade of politicians. who control and inspire conventions. Senator Morton is a calamity to his party and the State upon this and other questions of less importance. D. W.Voorhees bears the same relation to his party and the State. §lf these gentlemen would go West—say to the Sandwich Islands—we would see the spirit of patriotism and love of their State animating them for the first time in a | long while. With them out of the way I have not. a doubt that Indiana .would be free from the kind of finan‘cial fustain that is a present .disgrace to us. Knowing the people of the democratic party of the State, I do not hesitate to say that a majority—an overwhelmingly large majority—is in favor of a return to specie, the money of Andrew Jackson. They are disappointed with the convention on this question. The canvass will pass with more slurs than praises of the democratic financial expression from democratic 'speakers, and more, will be thought than spoken. The clause favoring a return to speecie will be urged as much as it can be considering its awkward alliance to. contrary utterances. 1t is needless to answer to this that if the mass of the dgmocratic party, and the better men of its leaders, do not like the platform utterance on finance, why did they not say so by | taking charge of the convention? It is not the rule for the best intention of any convention to find expression | in its action. Tt is a discouraging.feature of politics that that the best men in each party go home from party conventions disappointed. They are compelled to accept what is done, feeling that under all the eircumstances that it is the best that couid be done. Thelaté convention of the democratic party of Indiana only gave a more bitter disappointment than is usual.
The German Goverament is thinking seriously of buying Santona, a port in one. of the northern provinces of Spain, and making of it a second Gibralter. ~ This news has a tetrible significance to France. It means that Germany may- yet become 'a naval power,'and hold . a base of supplies in the Bay of Biseay. = 2 The estate of the late Chief Justice Chase will amount, when all his debts are paid, to about $105,000. Itssettlement has been delayed on account of the unwillingness of the executor to sell stocks and other personal property during the period of depression which follqwed the panic. The Secretary of the Treasury, having learned that a large number of collectors of' internal revenue have been in the habit of of carrying their wives and daughters on the pay-roll in a clerical capacity, has ordered this practice to be discontinued henceforth. TaE failure of Sutton & Co., the publishers of that handsome periodical, the dldine, is announced, with liabilities estimated at $180,000: The publication of the Aldine is to be continued, however, by a hew company. ———— e — : THE son of Prince Bismarck, has distinguished himself by fighting a duel, at Duesseldorf, in . which he fatally “plugged” his. antagonist in the abdomen with a pistol ball. _ —————ro—— L‘R\o M=r. MORTON the proposition te paythe five-twenties in greenbacks seems to involve bad faith and repudiation. Alas! times change, and we change with them. LAk -
A Galveston paper says that Texas will produce this year between five ‘and six hundred thousand bales of cotton. This is better than goldmining. CMRE L LR B ‘ ;| Tt . IroNDEQUOIT Old Port Wine, yingage of 1867, by far the best and purest article of the kind in the country, for sale at Eldred & Son’s, ' * e S — Amnew lot of Paint and White-Wash brushes just received at Eldred’s Drug Store, which can be bought very low for cash. : i SR e The Fort Wayne organ factory now employs sixty hands, and turns out one hundred and fifty organs per month: ¢ b ety e Fort Wayne is considering the project of a watch factory. The projector wants $55,000 and ten acres of land. ' : el & s ‘ . FARMERS, when trading at Kendallville, can always get something good to eat by calling at Kraner’s bakery. it S P 4 i ~ The tobacco crop of Southern Indiana this year will be the smallest that has been raised sinee the war. ) it O __ ADDRESS the Business College and Telegraph Institute, at Kalamazoo, Mich., for College Journal. i ;ngagq’s B:xi:mg] qu?ggt,, tfhe be?t an st in the market, for sale au;lfl}l‘(lrfis)fi:!s o b *
BILL GROH AGAIN!
‘ln the Throats of all Men is 'found’_Admu'S’ Applé, hut in the Mouths of all is the p()}fi;lllal' name of WILLIAM GROH, the great King;bf GII"‘O(:G,I."y ‘l\’leréh‘al.lts. : : ov 8 =
NEADOUARTERS FOR THE GRAGERS,
OR ANY ONE EILSE WIIO WANTS TO BUY GOODS CHEAP.
| - -’ K L | ’ ey They are just the Customers | V\’an(%)deal with, And I guarantee them no Middleman shall eat the profits hetween them and myself. ' 7, U } WRT ‘ -wy ' 4 I RETAIL all GOODS at WHOLESALE PRICES. All my 'l‘eaé, Coffees, Sugars, Tohaccos, Spices, (r?t,(-.b, :u'(l.lp]ml'('s’]lsl3o(] direct from the Manufactu:rers and Imponters, and ‘ : ' - v . _ ; : - ° : g : ; : ‘ Ishall Sell Direct te the Consumers, Whereas middlemen add fifty per cent. to the coet some goods. For instance, take the article of Tea: The Importer sells to the Jobber et 10 w. : cent. per pound %‘)rofi_t; the Jobber sells to the Wholesale Merchant at 15 per cent. per poua profit. The Wholesale Merchant resells to the Retail Merchant at 10 per cent. per pound profit; then the Retail Merchant sells to the Consumer at 25 to 50 per cent. per- pound profit just as he GITS IT. All these intermediate profits I give my customers the benefit of, and this is the only secret of my immense Tea Trade with Teas. ~So with Sugar, Coffees, or anything else I handle. T sell all goods to save the profits of middlemen . : - -
TEAS! TEAS! TEAS! TEAS! TEAS! TEAS! - ~ BEST YOUNG HYSON I SELL AT $l.lO. . Gun Powder, Jaimn, Oolong, and all other grades, clear down f()‘ the notch. Also shnfething new for you old-fashioned Pennsylvania Dutch, . Der Alte Heem-Gerehste Berg Thee. o " 1 CONTINUE TO SELL = THAT WILL ASTONISH ALL, AT PRICES THE SAME AS LAST WEEK, By the Bolt or Yard to suit my Customers. : , Bear’s oil, Put Up in Bottles,
. FISI! FISI! FISEL. | WHITE FISH, Trout, Mackerel md Herring, by the 4 bbl, £ bbl, or kitt, lower than ever. NPTV . 3 GO CUCIRET A X | ~ CROCKERY and GLASSWARE, I have a lavger and better assortment of 'Queens ahd Glassware than ever hefore exhibited to ‘the publie, which I offer very low. ‘ ‘ ! Tubs, Bowls, sth IS()-al'(ls, Can IF‘ruit, Clothes PPins, Starch, | - Soaps, Spices, Raisins, Clothes IL.ines, ~ And everything in a (]}rocery Store will be found in my establishment, which I offer, cheaper than ever before. I have the sole gency for L : ; g : ~dordon’s Japanese Indigo Blueing, Which [ wish my customers to try, and satisfy themselves of its merits. This flpvéy_,l’ preparation is put up in packages which { am selling at 10 cents each, and isundoubtedly the hest and cheapest blueing in the market; Sample Blueing free. : o e o As I am determined to go out of the Whisky business, any person wishing to purchase a stock of Liquors, together with Bar, Fixtures, Ice Boxes. ete., . e e g | . : will find a bargain by calling at my Store. .:::':_:__*__‘;:fi__;h_ s .’.:.‘,:ji'_f_’l‘::;: L T e ;:;:—;_—:;:::,—_::T;::?:::;:_—*—_:_:— Cravivh - REMEMBER THAT lAM SELLING ’ : i Groceries,Provisions,Feed, MR T e T T
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Pis .nd Stacks of COTTONADES are being offered for Sale % BILL GROM'S, at Very Low Pri es, by the Bolt or Yard to suit the Purch asei-, ‘ : "-': : ‘-;,_ O: . ‘ . W
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in-the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita-: tion of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove a better gunarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. ~ Scrofula, or King’s Evil, White - Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled . Neek, Goitre, Scrofulous -Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, ete. In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, WALKER'S VINEGAR Brrrers have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable caxes. For Inflammatory and Chronie Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Discases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Dis_eases are caused by Vitiated Blood. . Mechanical Diseases.—Persons “engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Ty pe-setters, Gold-heaters and Miners, as they advance in life, are sub ject to paralysic of the Bowels. To guard against this, take a dose of WALKER'S VINEGAR Birrers occasionally. : For Skin Diseases, Lruptions, Tetter, Salt- Rheum, Blotchés, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ringworms, Scald-head, Sere Lyves, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfy, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short time by the use of these Bitters. - Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many theusands, are effectnally destroyed and removed. No system of medicine, no vermifuges, no_anthelminitics will free the system from worms like these Bitters.! For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn ‘of womanhood, orthe turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. = - Cleanse the Vitiated Blood wheneyer you find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstru%ted and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tel you when. XKeep the blood pure, and the- - of the system will fofiow. " R+ H. McDONALD & €O., . Druggists & Gen. Agts., San Francisco, Califor - nia, & cor, of Washington and Charlton Sts..N.¥ Sold hy all Druggists and Dealers. CABINET SHOP ~— AND — CABINET WARE ROOMS!
R D EEBR. . Would respectfully announce to the citizensot Noble county, that he has constantly on hand a large and superiorstock of CABINET WARE, i Consisting in part of & DRESSING BUREAUS, Ly . WARD-ROBES, . . TABLES Askiod i I ATANDE, ' : LOUNGES, ' Ly CUP-BOARDS, ¢ THOULDING :i & ; CHAIRS AND BEDSTEADS, Andin fact evesything usually kept in a Firstclass Cabinet Shop. ' Particular attention paid to the deert&kingifiulin“qqt Ee o e COFFINS ALWAYS ON HAND. And made to order, npon short molce. . Also all ey g% ilg e * (RO, I : 2 2t ) Ligonier, S ' ‘lfi‘lfimmdfl#fl%vmhflm e - Ligonier, May 24, 1871, s
'y S ™ 4 wrCARBITTER\ .-‘_ \’”[[, ARSB o o /S ) o NS %, *V 2 W AN (’ Ve % ' 2 B M ORI N\ & SELE '/ £y~ (UREKA 2-‘ SIS &7 CAR. _'A, 3 oA B g - . wis Jew Walker's Califorzia Cinoear Bitlers are a purely Veg. etable preparation. made ehietly frois the native berbs found on the lower tiEros of the Sicira Nevadamount:ains of Calitornia, -the medicinal properties ol which are extracted theretrom witt 21t the use of Aleohol. The question is aliiost daily asked S AVhat s the ciuse of the anpa alleted: suceess ~of ViNeea. BiiTERSAT L Our-nmisser ds; that they remove the caunse of disease, . and the pitient covers his health, | They are the great blood parifier and a life-giving. principle. a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system, Never beforé in the hiztory of the world has a wmedicine been compeunded pos-, sessing the remarkable qualities of VixEGAR Drrrers in healing the sick of every disease wan iz heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonie, ! relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Viseeral Organs, in Bilious Dizeases \ The properties of Dr. WaLkER’'s VINEGAR Brrrens are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretie, Se¢dative, Counter:lrritant, Sudorifie, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious
Grateful Thousands proclaim VINEGAR BITTERS the most wondert’gl Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. / ‘No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral ‘poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. ; Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which are so ! prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, . especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colo- - rado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, through-. out our entire country during the Sumnier and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to DR. J. WALKER'S VINEGAR Birrers, as they will speedily remove the dark-colored viseid matter with which the bowels are loaded, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, . ahd generally restoring the healthy fune- ! tim‘)gnf‘t_h“e digestive organs..: !
~ Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinkcak Brrrirs. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed.
o - - e Wllaar = == —————— 3 ==K === =N e— M, — Poo ST L S oe i o ) ! L LI, PR T, e TR WST L o x P g e R = ULt SRS vey :,'.,_;l;Av 4 “:,:,;; ;:4_; ?‘.i.,“;v;-_- 2 . 1-.'-;;_ b 3 . e R = ‘ 2 Eg;;’:;;;"‘. ii%“: = e == p 3, eSN . : i —— : " IBE ST Wil vyt 1874. T INDIANA o 1874. STATE FAIR AND EXPOSITION. INEB EXPOSITION AND LIVE,STOK SHOW IN THE UNITED STATES, ‘ INCLUDING ALL BRANCHES OF INDUSTRY : GRAND OPENIN G September 7th. Thirty days of Magnificent Display. LIVE STOCK SHOW one week, beginning September 28th. ; TRYAL OF FARM IMPLEMENTS commences September 23d. : Open for the reception of Articles August 20th. : F'remiums largely increased over last year, and the Accommodations Superior to auy similar Exhibition on 'the Continent. Seénd for Premium Lists and blank applications fur space, to tho Se¢’y Ind}ana State Board of Agric*ulture, Indianapolis, Ind. i
3 TR T N S S Lok s R S APPLEDORE L ANMERICAN CYCLOPADIA. New: Revised Edition. ; Entirelyrewfitten by the ablest writers onevery sabject. Printed frowd acw type, and’ il- | lustrated with Several Thousand En- - gravings and Maps. - ! : Tur work origitally published wider the title Of Tue NEw AMeßtoany CyOLOPEDIA Was comple- | ted 1n 1863, since which time the: wide circulation which it has atteined in all parts of the United States, and the signal developments which have taken place in every branch of science, literatnre, apd art: have induced the editors and publishets to submit 1t to an exact and thoroungh revikion, and to issuz a new edition entitled Tur AMERIOAN CYCLOPEDIA, : - R Within the last ten years the progress of discovery in every department of knowledge: has made’ a new work of reference an imperative want, The movemeént-of political aftairs has kept pace with the discoverier of science, ind their fruitfu) | apphication tothe indunstrial-and useful arts and the convenience andrefinement of social life. G reat svars and consequent revolutions have occarred, involving national changes of peculiar moment ,— ‘The civil war of our.oW 11 country, which was at its height when the Jast volume of the old: work appeared, has happily been ended, and a now . course of commercial and industrial getivity has been commenced. Lo e e 1 Large accessiong to our gepgraphical knowledge have been made by the indefatigable explorersof Africd. - e dielion S 5 The great political reviolutions of the last decade, with the natural result of the lapse of time,: have brought into public view, a multitude o6f new men, whose names are in every one’s mouth, and of whose lives every one is_curious to Kknow the particulars, - Great battle s have been fought and important sieges maintained, ot which the détails are ag yet,preserved only in the newspapers or in the transient publications of the -day, but which ought now to take their place in permawent and authentic histor(y, e sl In preparing the present edition for the press it has accordingly been the aim of the editors to bring down the information t 6 the latest gossib!’e dates, and to furnish an acenrate eccount of-the mostrecent discoveries in science, of evers - fresh production in literature, and of the newest inventions in the practical arts, as well as'to give a suc-cinct-and original record of the progress of politi= cal and historical cvents. . G The work has been 'begun after long and care. ful preliminary labor, and with the most ample resources for carrying it on to a-successful termination. e 1 AR ¢ - Nome of the original stereotype plates have been--used, but every ¥nge has- been printed on new type, forming in fact a new Cyclopmdia with the same plan and compass as its predecessor, but with a far greater pecuniary expenditure, and with :uch improvements in its composition as have been suggested Sy longer expérience and enlarged knowledge, .70 oo o e o The -illustrations which: are introdunced for the first time in the present edition have been added lot for the sake of pxctoria} effect, .but to give greater lucidity and force tolthe explanations in the text. They embrace all branches of ¢éxplanations in the text. They embrace all branches of science and of natural history, and depict the most famous and remarkable feature of scenery; ‘ architecture, and art, as well a 8 the various processes of mechanics and manufactures. - Althongh ] intended for instruction rather-than embellishment, no pains have been spared to insure their' artistic excellence : thie cost of their execution is enormous, and it is believed they will find a rwel-i ccme reception as an admirable feature of the Cyclopadia, and worthy of its high character. | This work is sold to Subseribers only, payable -on delivery of each volume. It will he compieted in sixteen large octavo volumes, each containing about 800 pages. fully illustrated with several thousand Wood Engravings, and with numerous. colored Lithographic Maps, Lk * Price and Style of ‘Binding, Sens In extra Cloth, per v01.,...>..........0..5 .0 §5.00 In Library Leather, per v01.....0.0....... ... 6 00 In Half Turkey Moroceo, per v01.y.0. ........0 7 00 I'n Half Russia, extra gilt, per-v 01.,........... 800 In Full Moroceo, antique, gilt edges, per vol., 10 00 In ‘lv’ulltlzusa;fa, Dervolyis. s i 0 00 Four "volumes now-ready. = Succeeding volumes; until completion, will be ‘issued once in two months. ; ‘ e s *"Specimen pages of the AMERIOAN CYOLOP.&pIA, showing type, ilustrations, etc., will be seunt gratig, on application. T e ‘ FilreT-CrAss CANVASSING AGENTS WANTED. Addrese the Publishers, - LT Bedlaby, - o D. APPLETON & CO., - 549 & 551 BROADWAY,; N. Y
THE LIGONIER = Y T % : T ACADEMY OF MUSIC. JNO. H. HILL, Principal. : FIRST TERM COMMENCES : MAONDAY, JUNE 15, 274.. ; _SECOND TERM COMMENCES - MONDAY, AUG. 31,274 THIRD TERM COMMENCES MONDAY, NOYV: A 1 e A N()l!l'lAsL COURSE . Will be opened for the benefit of those who may - desire instruction in the Theory and = i Practice ot Teashing, 54 y Terms of Tuition—Payable in' Advance. . Per quarter of 10 weeks, Piano, Ist grade, 20 lessons per term...... ... .20 e 0 810 00 Per quarter of 10 weeks, Piano, 2d grade, 30 = lessons perterm.......... o vl L i)l 19 50 Per quarter of 10 weeks, Organ, Ist gradql 20 ) ;- lessons per term............ 0. TUOOL LUO 00 Per quarter of 10 weeks, Organ, 2d grade, 30 ) lessons per'term: Uil ii U voasaun IDy Cultivation of the voice and singing, 20 les- . ooRR SR R R s T Thorough Bass and _Hnrm(mg; 30 Fessons. . 15 00 Clergymen, who are dependent upon their salaries for support, and who send theirchildren tous, | will be charged two-thirds of the'above rates. . Competent Assistant Teachers will be employed. All the adyantages of a 200 d home Music School are offered. No effort-will be spared to make the term pleasant and Iprofltable. " Taition will be refunded in case of protracted illnese: > i ROOMS AND BOARD e ‘Can be had at reasonable rates.. The Principal will assist in procuring R?omsgand; Board. | ot BOCATION: . o ey The Academy is on the second floor of Landon’s Block ; entrance first door north of Jackson’s Hat Store. The Principal will ]\fivc hig attention to teaching Singing Schools, Musical Conventions, Church Choirs, (?lee, Clubs, &c. For further particulare apply to or address” . SR Jg r ; JOIIN H. HILL, Principal, 4-tf 3 Liconier, NosLE COUNTY, INDIANA.
HIGGINBOTHAM & SON, » %‘\ ,‘,','v Ibw'@‘\‘: l‘ 1‘ \;ff" i SO i . ) * 'W%‘%fi% 7 ‘—,,,_, 3 & - e ~‘ ‘«év‘lw,é \!‘\ ‘ R % 3 N\ T { RN o : S NGS S _,: hgP %:'"..o_“. I".n‘\:;' D PR = ’ S in‘",g U i /{5/ |F U N : o 4 '(lw.;"f/fi 5 : Watchmakers, Jewelry, S E . ANDDEALERSIN Al ~Watches, Clocks. JEWELRY. AND FANCY GOODS Repairing neatly and promptly executed, and - WArTRAtO ol Sl ity Agents for Lazarus & Morris’ Celebrated . . Spreetacien g w Slfin ofthe bigwatch, corner Cavin & Fourth. streets, Ligonier, Indiana..ge s den.d, 1874.) OLD LONDON DOCK GIN. | . Espec ally d'e*aigned- f:)r,; tfienseofihehflfi“'i“ > n& the Family, posseseing those in | g):gflg:dm}glifidg?’lt ;ropert'if\g}asmch Mfifix toamn} é?fi%:?}:g’:fif&%%f{fi&% ; %fiu ntgin. ing one nzflk ottles each, and sold by &lTdrug. | , ~ o i x; _,_f <. & bt e s Rebert, ‘-15:;%&3'&,& York.” 271 y Far sale by %gherfbrq‘u, Ligonier, Ind,
A NEW IDEA'! e 1 WILSON W;_CJ_{-‘) _./(4 ( : e BHUTTLE— Sewing Machine, Kl o detBTE e FOR L Fifty Dollars! FARMERS, ' - MERCHANTS, i MECHANICS, AND Everybeody - Buy fitho \\'nrld-Ronmv‘n(-d .~ WILSON Shuttle Sewing Machine! BEST IN THE WORLD! 1 The «Higil(;sit Premium Iw:ls awarded to itat -
VIENNA; i . : . Ohio State Fair; : ; Northern Ohio Fair: , _ Amer. Insti vo,N, Y. Cineinnati Exposl\t.lol.x{t . : . - Indianapolis Exposition: L o St. Louis Fair; '~ Louisiana State Falr: ; Mississippi State Fair; and Georgia State Falr: . FOR BpinG tmp Best Sewing Machin es, and doing the largest and best range | ofwork. * All other Machines .+ inthe Market were in, : direct W ) - : ooz 0 3 Competition ! WFQT H emmz’vig, Felling, Stitching, Cording, ' Binding, Braiding, Em’broz'dering, Quilting, ‘a'nd Stitching flnéor heavy goods cJt is unsurpassed. Where we have’ no Agehts we will deliver a Machine for the price-named ‘above, at the nearest Rail Road StaI tion of Purchasers. :
01d Machines taken in Exchange, Send for Circulars, Price List, &e., and Copy of the Wilson Reflueuon? one of the begt Pet’ioalen)s of the day, devoted te Sewing Machinés, Fash. ions, General News and Miscellany. AGENTS WANTED. ' ADDRESS, ~_CLEVELAND, OHIO. . G /. Jnne 18, n-8-t.-20, —w ~ W.A. BROWN, Manufacturer (;r and Deaier-_in all »kl'hd:ot ; o FURNITUR E, SPRING BED BOTTOMS, WILLOW-WARE, Cent U R BRAGKETS, do, Always on hand, and il be faraished t 9 order, .. Store Room: uu: “.f"' (M 1 iy s m "’?A& UKD, 1678.-8.15,
