Ligonier Banner., Volume 13, Number 42, Ligonier, Noble County, 6 February 1879 — Page 2
- "45 Years Before the Public. s - THE CENUINE DR. C. McLANE'S ; CELEBRATED { . LIVER PILLS, P FOR THE CURE OF ‘Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint, ’ DV.SPEPSIA AND SICK HFADACHB. SR Symptoms of a Diseased Liver, -PAIN in the right side, under the edge of the ribs, increases on pres. sure; sometimes the pain is in the left side; the patient is rarely able to lie , on the left side; sometimes the pain is felt under the shoulder blade, and it _frequently extends to the top of the shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism in the arm. The stomach 1s affected with loss of appetite and 'sickness; the bowels in gen. eral are costive, sometimes alternative with lax; the head is troubled with. pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy sensation in the-back part. There is - generally a considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sen. sation of having left undone some. thing which ought to have been done. A-slight, dry cough'is sometimes an attendant. - The patient complains of weariness and debility; he is easily - startled,. his feet are cold or burning, and he complains of a prickly sensa- _ tion of the skin; his spirits are low; - and although he is satisfied that exer: cise would be beneficial to Him, yet ~ he can scarcely summon up fortitude - enough to try it. In fact, he distrusts’ every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them ex-: isted, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the LIVER to have ‘been extensively deranged. /
AGUE AND FEVER. Dr. C. McLANE’S LIVER PiLLs, IN CASES OF AGUE AND FEVER, when taken with Quinine, are productive of’ the most lappy results. No better cathartic can be used, preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. We would advise all who are afflicted with this disease to give them a FAIR TRIAL. . Fdr all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. Tlie genuine are never sugar coated. . Every box has a red wax seal ¢n the "q, with “he impression DR. MCLANE'S LIvVER FiLLs. | : ' The genuiné McLANE’s LIVER PILLS pear the sigr ztures of C. MCLANE and FrLzMING BRros. on the wrappers. Insist apon having the genuine IR, 73, McLa<z 5 Li7es PILLS, prepare” oy Flera. ing B-os., of Pittsburgh, Pa., ths mark-. beirg full of imitations of tk: name MeLa= e spell=d d. ferently but satwe pronunciatizn
USED ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
T ohnston's ' .‘ f N I ! ,/' A SARSAPARILLA Y ROl - LAY
Tone up the System bz using JOHNSTON'E SARSAPARILLA, It has been in use for 20 years, and has proved to be the best preparation in the market for SICK HEADACHE, PAIN IN THE SIDE OR BACK, LIVER COMPLAINT, PIMPLES ON THE FACE. DYSPEPSTA, PILES, and all Diseases that arise from a Disordered Liver or an impure blood. Thousa::ds of our best people take it and 53 va it to tiicir children. Physicians prescribe it daily. Those who use it once recommend it to others. Itis fina.de from Yellow Dock, Honduras Sarsaparila. Wild Cherry, Stylingia Dandelion, Sassafras, Wint,_ergreen, and other well-ktown ' valuable Roots an.l Torbs, Itis strictly vegetsble, and cannot-hurt the most delicate constitution. Itis one ‘of thebest medicines in use fo. Regulatinf the Bowels. It is_sold by all responsible druggists at one dollar for a quart hottle, or six bottles for five dollars. Those who cantiot obtain a bottle of this medicine from their dru_g%(n)st may send us. one dollar, and we will deliverif,to themn free of any charges. W. JOHNSTON & €OO., Manufacturers, 161 Jefferson avenut.....-....DETRQIT MICH For Sale by C. ELDRED & SON, Ligonier, Ind.
A A T R T S : ' ~ : THEY ARE WORTH THEIR | : j 'WEICHT in COLD 'READ WHAT HE SAYS: i : : B DR. TurT:—Dear Bir: For ten years I have’ been a martyr to Dyspgsln, Constipation and Piles. Last Spring your Pills were recommended - to me; I used tfiem {but with little faith). I aiv now 8 well man, have good .::peme, digessicn perfect, regular stools, lrl gone ‘ad 1 have gained forty pounds solid G Tfiey are wortb their welfl;t i&;%!. Rev. R. L. 8I N, Louisville, K;. A TORPID LIVER is the fruitful source of many diseases, susn 28 Erwpepinick Heatche, hrivenee By s e e G S e Tutt's Piils exert a powerful influence on the Liver,and will with certainty relievethat imps - ' tant organ from disease, and restore its norinxd - fun~tions. : { ; The rapidify with which pfrwnu'tak'e' fl while ugdert{hemflnenuo thesep n."&:&fi! indicates their ndnpubmgmmmfin the body, hence their efficiicy In curing nervous debility, T e M besitk and strength w_&e}ystem'l : : . CONSTIPATION. , Only with regularity of the bowels can perfect ' he:lt% be enjoyed. 'gbbn' the constipation is of recent date, a slnfle dose of TW | will suffice, but if it has become J one il phociebe iaken srory mht, gradoatiy o mgvem’ent is obu{ned-, which will soon f’llom : . __Sold Everywhere, 35 Uents, OFFICE, 8(! l BT, m YORK,
WHAT SHALL BE DONE WITH THE INDIAN BUREAU? Argument of Thr» .e Members of the Joint Committee. Who Oppose the Transfer to the War Department. . The report embodying the views of Senators Saunders and Oglesby and Representatives Stewart and Van Vorhes, four of the eight members of the Joint Committee on the Indian Transfer Question, has been completed and firesented to Con%;ess. - The Associated ress gives the following synopsis:-
It is shown that various evily and abuses grew up under the administration of Indian affairs gy military officers, and, notwithstandlgfi the reformatory legislation of March 3, 1847, they continued to grow up to the last ‘hour in which the War Department had control of the Indian population, and so little had been done toward Indian civilization under the War Department’s management that üblic opinion had ) acquiesced in the assump{’lon that the Indians were not susceptible to civilization. It is estimated ‘that if all the fighting Indians of |the country could be got together they would not muster more than 15,000, and the idea of their ever concentrating for warlike purposes is simply preposterous, because it is im‘;fi;sslble. Indian wars on a large scale are ovér, and we may reasonably hope that that portion of our National history is in the past. In reference to the sentiments of the Indians, on the subject, the Secretary of the Interior made to the .committee statements _ng—ing the views and Vetes of the various tribes, which gives an average vote of sixteen to one against transfer, nearly all the tribes being unanimously c:lpposed to the proposition. All the religions denominations in this country are absolutely opposed to the proposed change _of management. Their opinions and behests deserve and should receive respectful consideration. That we have among the 250,000 Indians some unruly tribes is u lamentable fact, and to this your committee would respectfully call the attention of Congress. We are of opinion that in sueh special cases the military skould have temporary control, and that the President have power to place such warlike or unruly tribes under military discipline, .the same as he would a city or State terrorized by mob-law or revolustion. That the Indians can be Anglo-Sax-onized is proven beyoud all cavil in the case of ' the Winnebagoes and Omabhas, who reside on reservations in the: State .of Nebraska. They live in comfortable houses, have good barns, cultivate their land and raise as good wheat, corn and potatoes as- are produced through the labor .of any white man. They have churches and schools, and no more orderly community can be found than on these two reservations. Theg' are petitioning’ to become citizens, a question of such vital importance in their case that it must soon be solved. Tsit necessary to put these people under. military management? We think not. Whether the management of the Indians remains where it is or is. relegated to the War Department, a general system of reform and improvement should continue, and among the most -important things commanding immediate attention is to provide that the civil law of the United States be extended over all Indians who will agree thereto, with a code of laws applicable to them, defining crime and providing a Judiciary, especially in what is known as the Indian Territory. In the opinion of the committee, such legislation is imperatively needed, and no time ought to be lost in making the necessary provisions therefor. The Indian Agent seems te be the objective point to which all those opposed to the present policy of the Government point in_scorn and derision. They assert '}hat the Indian Agent is synonymous with ¢ fraud and corruption.” ~The committee made diligent inquiry into the present sygtem of conducting the aglencies, and are of opinion that, as a general rule, the Agent is more sinned against than sinning.. There ar¢ now seventy-four Agents employed, and-at every opportunity, as we learn, the Department proposes to reduce this number by | the consolidation of agencies and lessening of reservations where ‘it can be done with justice to the tribes. Men of integrity, who are competent to administer the affairs of an Indian agency successfully, ¢an, in most cases, get larger salaries at less sacrifice nearer their homes. The salary should be large enough : to employ honorable men of decided execu- | tive ability, and %o enable them to take their families with them to the agencies, and to support them there. The pay ought to be more liberal, and the tenure of oflice should be secure for four years, provided the Agent should prove worthy.
The laws providing for the punishment of wrongdoers in this branch of service ought to be exceedingly severe. The guilty should be punished with an unmistakable "earnestness that will convince all others of the firm purpose of the Government. We are assured that this policy has been inaugurated, and that already the good results are felt, as the Commissioners of Indian Affairs testifies that there has not been a single defalcatiomunder the present Administration. The committee say they cannot find any good ground for the common statement that the War Department is any more economical and efficient than the Interior Department in the purchase of -supplies and their transportation. It is found that both Departments have exceilent systems, and that both have ‘made great improvements of late years. The im,Erovement in the management of the Indian ureau is said ‘to-be especially marked. Its system of business is pronounced very effective, and the organization of the office is considered complete enough to be a bar to all outside irregularities. : : ~ Your committee are of opinion that the reservations should be decreased, and that, as rapidly as possibly, smali tribes or parts of tribes be placed on large reservations, unless they take land in severalty, do away with their tribal relations, and prepare for citizenship. We are of opinion that the Indian Bureau -should be a distinct degartment, with the Chief a member of the President’s Cabinet. This will aid much in the solution of .future complications in Indian affairs. The Indian should be prgtrscted in his rights to his land, and a safeguard ought to be thrown around him, 80 as to prevent designing persons from filching his homestead, or induce him to sell it for a trifling compensation. He should not have the right 'to sell his land, without the consent of the Department, under twenty-one years. Your committee can discover not one good reason why the ‘proposed change should be made. They believe that harm, rather than good, to the red men would result from the change, and that no possible advantage could result to the Government from it. _Your committee are, therefore, of O}flnion that it is not e%edient to transfer the Indian Bureau to the War Department. ~ The report is accompanied by a bill authorizing theé President to ¢ transfer ' the cpstodg, ‘control and manafiement of any Indian tribes from the Interior to the War ‘Department temgc)rarily. whenever, in his jud%ment, e shall deem it advisable to do so, either on account of actual or apprehended hostilities of Indians a%iagiut the United Statef, or in case of difficulties between such Indians and settlers.” The bill further pro%es lo aunthorize the President: to detdil.an officers of the army to act as Indian nts or ' Inspectors, or m&ea.ny other capaeity in the Indian Service, and exercising the same: powers, and subject to the same rules and _regulations as civil officers, and ';n‘aspropriation of $15,000 is recommended to pay th& traveling expenses of officers thus detailed during the next fiscal year. |
‘ A Dangerous Power. v There are hard times in California, notwithstanding it is the great producer of gold, and its money composed almost exclusively of the"gr‘ecious metals. - California is always down to hardpan, and yet it is far from being a financial paradise. @A Boston man writing from California to Massachusetts states g:;me facts that explain in part the canse of hard times on the
hard-money Pacific Coast. He says: ““One of the great causes of the scarcity of money on this coast is the presence of the Chinese here, combined with the control over money that a half dozen men on this coast have.”” We have italicised what we wish particularly to call attention to. * * * 3
The great curse of the Pacific Coast, aside from the Chinese curse is the control over money that a half-dozen men have. These few capitalists control completely the money market of the Pacific Coast, or so much of it as California embraces. No country can permanently prosper under such conditions. Men of small means in comparison must always work in the shadow of these great capitalists. That is not healthy. %f)‘mpetition cannot be made effective. Enterprise beyond or outside of the money - circle can have no encouragement. If a city is to be lighted with gas or supplied with water, or a mine to be opened or large industries to be started, the few money capitalists must have the lion’s share. The legal rate of interest is 10 per cent., but there is no penalty for usury. The borrower must pay what the lender chooses to demand, or %o without. Money is not plenty enough to permit the would-be borrower any independence. Heis simply at the mercy of those who control tke money market. Times are hard, because: the interests of the money classes are not in harmony with the interests of the people classes.
Those who control the money of a country have no interest in money being plenty, as it will be of less purchasing power, and not so easily managed as when scarce. The scarcer money is the more demand there wil] be for it, and the greater will be its productive capacity to those who own or control -it. To confer special privileges on the money classes, and to legislate to increase their power, is a crime against humanity that no free Government should be guilty of. The National Banking system is dangerous, on account of its ability to concentrate its power in behalf of its. own interests and its natural disposition to do so. To allow that power to be the sole issuer of the paper currercy of the country and the controller of its volume would be putting the whole business of the country under its supervision. And that supervision of the business of -the country would carry with it theyelections, whenever and wherever the Money Power might choose to exert itself. Times would be made hard or good, just as its interests might dictate. California should be a warning, instead of an example to follow.— Cincinnats Enquirer. : :
* The Michigan Senatorship. The T¥mes has been little disposed to credit the reports rife of late to the effect that Senator Christiancy, of Michigan, had determined to resign and accept exile to Peru,in order to make Pplace in the Senate for Zach Chandler. Mr. Christiancy has been esteemed an honorable gentleman. No honorable gentleman could barter away the high office he holds. The statement that he had so traded off his seat in the Senate was therefore generally discrédited. But the Tvmes’ V§ashin ton special this morning leaves small goubt that such trade has been made, and that Mr. Christiancy will send in hisresignation, to take effect on the 4th of Marech, when he will be appointed Minister to'Peru. - The circumstances attending this transaction are peculiar. It is an open secret that heretofore seats in the Senate have been bought. These circumstances mark the inauguration of an era in which seats in the Senate are sold out.. Mr. Christiancy is not desirous of retiring to private life. Instead, in arranging the terms upon which he would dispose of his place in the Senate, he appears to have been a stickler for the .privilege of holdiri§ on until the close of the session. ‘He ig not content to quit public life then. Instead, he stipulates that he shall be appointed Minister to Peru.. That position is practically one of exile, and the term for which he will be appointed expires at the same time as does the term which he holds as Senator. In political importance and dignity the office of Minister to Peru is a mere bagatelle in comparison with that of United States Senator. The inquiry to which Mr. Christiancy’s exchange of. the greater for the lesser leafis is: ““ What else is he to get?” He cannot be supposed to be such a stupendous fool as to give up the Senatorship for that paltry mission. . What is the remainder of the bargain? Is it a seaton the United States Bench—seats on which seem to be getting to be common subjects of barter? : ; The other side of the negotiation is no less disreputable. The bargain'is the bargain of -the machine politicians to restore to the Senate the man who stole the Presidency in 1876 for Hayes, and is wanted where he may, if occasion require, take part in asimilar robbery in 1880. It is a bargain which could not be carried out without the aid of that eminent Civil-Service reformer, Mr. Hayes. He furnishes the consideration for which . Mr. Christiancy sells out to Mr. Chandler. That consideration is the appointment already pledged; and what beside remains to be developed. The{e coelgglbe no ‘more disiracei\l}l blic : ing of patronage than this IPI?WhiO}])Il Mr. lgresiént' H:;g:; has takenpart. It is a performance fit for him if he: intends to make public ad‘vertisement that he 'recognizes, and theérefore corruptly rewards, the corrupt services of Zach Chandler in stealing the place in the White House ‘which Mr, fiayes now holds. There .can be no lower degradation in Ameri¢ can politics than that. ‘ N ' That such a transaction ‘should have ozcurred is disgraceful en‘onigh., But zl;a;ithe. terls: _andb;letails ot}mg&ufimf" ven to the publie, apparently with absolute anbmioume‘:gofih‘a shamefulness of it, marks the infamy of that era in politi¢es which it foreshadows. It is a fitting precursor to a third term of Grantism, in the interest of which the whole shameful traffic has been conducted.— Chicago Times.
—A workman selected the top of the Brooklyn bridge tower as the place to have a fit.
o The Forged Title. T There never has been the least moral doubt that when Kellogg signed what: is known as the secong set of certificates for Electors of Louisiana, to correct the errors which rendered the first set worthless, he knew that several names were forged to that paper, if he was not directly a party to the forgery. Everybody knows now that the date. of the certificates was fabricated to correspond with the rejected original, which Returning-Board Anderson had carried to Washington, and which Mr. Ferry, President pro iempore of the Senate, had told him was irregular in form and therefore invalid. It has already been proven that Anderson opened this certificate in Washington, wgere he consulted with the Republican chiefs as to the exact form, and then hurried back to New Orleans to procure the paper upon which the Electoral Commission acted finally. A. B. Levisee swore, before the Potter -Committee, that his signature to the second set was a palpable forgery, and Kelly, the colored man, who was Kellogg’'s messenger at the time, and had charge of the room where the forgeries were perpetrated, recently swore that, to his knowledge, the name. of Oscar Joffrion was also forged. o When the Potter Committee were at New Orleans, a few days ago, diligent inquiry was made for others of -the Hayes Electors about whose signatures there is also distrust. Yet additional testimony on this peintis not necessary, and the case would not be strengthened if every name to the second certificate was shown to have been forged. Levisee, who now holds the office of SubRevenue Agent in San Francisco, and was probably assigned to that remote servide so as to be out of the way, has established one forgery in his own per-' son, and Kelly has proved another. The difference between the two certificates from Louisiana is that the first pretended to ve‘rif§ a fraudulent result of the election for Presidentby genuine signatures, while the second repeatsthe fraudulent attestation by forged signatures; and this second paper was the one adopted by the Commission as the means of declaring Hayes President. So that the astounding fact will go into history that the eight Electoral votes of Louisiana were in the first instance stolen by conspiracy and fraud; and in | the second instance, that the certificate declaring this resuit, being vitiated by barefaced forgery, was yet solemnly adjudicated as valid, hecause the eight-by-seven Commission determined that they would not go behind the face of the forged paper! } s (il . Honest thinking men may be deluded or confused by a conflict of testimony in regard to the vote of Louisiana, based upon tLe stories of intimidation and violence, artfully constructed to mislead the unwary and to deceive the tens of thousands who accept at second hand the assurances of party managers and party papers. But putting all that entirely out of view, the astounding fact yet stands, that the whole administration of forty-five millions of people, the public policy, the Treasury and its mighty operations, the vast patronage of the Government, #hd the hundred thousand. offices at home and abroad, are to-day in the hands of a man who was not elected at all; and that even the fraudulent title by which he claims to be President rests upon a forgery!—N. Y. Sun. '
Southern Claims. Many people will infer from the speech of Mr. Bragg in the House, vesterday, upon the subject of Southern war claims, that it has not occurred to anybody to think of selecting the Speaker of the next House from %Visconsin.- No such inference could be drawn in the case of Mr. Potter, who made a similar speech on Tuesday, because Mr. Potter was not chosen a member of the next House at the election in November last. And no doubt it will be cruelly unjust to connect the speech of Mr. Bragg in any way with the failure of the Democrats of the House to fix their attention upon the Northwest in their quest of a Speaker. Still, this a world of injustice, and Mr. Bragyz will have himself only to thank for it if such some concatenation accordingly is assumed by his heartless fellow-creatures to account for the otherwise unaccountable vehemence of his outburst upon such a trivial occasion as the presentation of a bill referring the claims of certain minors to the Court of Claims. Why the Court of Claims exists excepting to examine such claims neither Mr. Potter nor Mr. BragF perhaps would find it easy to explain. It would be interesting also to get a plain, unvarnished statement from either of them of the reasonswhich make itin any way more improper for Southern members to urge ‘¢ loyal claims’’ upon the attention of the Court of Claimsin 1878 than it was for Northern members to urfie such claims upon the attention of -the same court in 1868. 1t is quite time for men who call themselves Democrats and Conservatives to ungersta.nd thalt tht; tax-paying and producing people o the gouthga.re the equal fe%low-cfiizens of the tax-g?ying and ‘producin% people of the North. The rig‘l:-t of talking and voting for Buncombe belongs to Southern B(;greaentatives just as sacredly as to Northern Representatives, and it is to be remembered to the credit of the South that where it has been éxercised once in the last decade by ‘a Southern member, it has been exercised a hundred times by*a Northern member.—N. Y. World. . B
Charming Birds. WE learn from a correspondent that there resides in the vicinity of HarrisurE, an out-of-the-way place in Hancock County, about. three miles west of Mount Blanchard, a very remarkable child only five years old, who seems to have the power to charm birds at will. Her mother first noticed this strange fascination ' that the child possesses about a year ago. The little girl was out playing in the dooryard among a bevy of snow-birds, and when she would speak to them they would come and light upon her, twittering with the utmost glee. On taking them in her hands and stroking them, the birds, instead of trying to get away from their
fair captive, seemed to' be high&y pleased, and when let loose would fly away a short distance and immediately return to the child again. She then took several of them into the house to show her mother, who, thinking that she might hurt them, 9ok the birds and put them outdoors, but no sooner was the door opened when the birds flew into the room and lit upon the girl's head and began to chirp. The birds remained about the premises all winter, flying to the little lgirl whenever the door was opened. The parents of this remarkable child became alarmed, believing that this strange power-was an ill omen, and that that much-dreaded visitor, Death, was about to visit their home. But Death did not come, and during last summer the child has had numerous pets from the birds. The child handles the birds so gently that a humming-bird, once in her hand, does not fail to return. > This winter a bevy of birds have kept her company, and she plays with them for hours at the time. Every morning the birds fly to her window, and leave only when the sun sinks in the west. There is nothing peculiar.about the child’s personal appearance except her wonderful, magnetic eyes, which sparkle like diamonds. i . The parents of this little girl are poor, superstitious people, and have been reticent about the matter until lately, fearing that some great calamity was about to Dbefall them.— Forest ‘(Ohio) Review. : :
Excessive Brain Work. - ONE of the clergymen of Worcester, Mass:, in the course of a sermon recently, uttered the following . cautionary suggestions in regard to immoder--ate brain work: : © «Jtis a lesson we are slow to learn—one that has to be enforced by an occasional thrilling fact—that the most robust physique has its limit of exertion, that well compacted and toughened metal fiber may succumb to undue stress at a single point. A piece of steel wire can bear only a given amount of longitudinal tension. Beyond that limit it snaps. By the annealing process of intense stu&y or application to exacting business a man’s brain gets toughened. It can bear an immense, prolonged strain, but there is an unknown terminus of your powers; exceed that point and the subtle thread of reason snaps. A ruptured capillary on the brain paralyzes that center of thought, and the stalwart, brilliant Iman of yesterday, full of hope, projecting grand schemes, the pillar of strength to his family, the pride of many, the possible envy of more, is today an enfeebled or quite broken-down victim of intemperate brain work. You might charge me with an exaggerateéd idea .of the perils of over-exertion among business men, did not faets justify all Thave suggested. Have we not seen some of the brightest stars in the cluster of enterprising citizens, ' of -which we are justly proud, wander from their orbit of reason and pass, unless Geod shall disappoint our fears, into the shadow of permanent mental eclipse? The saddest feature of this ‘Phenomenon is that it seems to fall upon the highly-organized, generous, sympathetic natures first. A coldblooded grasping Shylock, who cares little for the good name so highly prized by another, appears to be in no danger of such a calamity. Better far to confess poverty, be an honest bankrupt, than be broker down in body or mind under too %"l;eat exertion to aveid that calamity. ith emotions of wunspeakable pity for every man harassed by his unsatisfactory affairs, I turn to expostulate with the coming generation. Keep a sound mind in a sound body. De be contented with ¢things honest,” with comfortable mediocrity. Husband the stoek of physical and mental life God has given you, that you may not grow prematurely old—useless before your time.’’ " sl &
To Cure Hams.—To 100 pounds- of meat, take one quart of molasses, two pounds of brown sugar, and three ounces of saltpeter. Make a pickle that will bear an egg; put these ingredients in it. Pack the meat tightly, and powr it over. Let it remain in the pickle six weeks, then put it in the meat-room; let it dry well, then smoke a few days, and, when sufficiently smoked, put in bags and keep them in a dark room. We have used this recipe in .our family at least twenty years.—ZKHastern Paper.
' KentUuCckY CORN CAKES.—Take one quart of eorn meal and two tablespoonfuls of common wheat flour (not prepared); add salt' to taste, and mix thoroughly with a sufficient qnanti&y of buttermilk to form a batter. ext melt a heaping tablespoonful of lard, stir it with the batter well, and bake on a hot griddle, pouring them thin. By this recipe the full flavor of the cornmeal is obtained, unmixed with the taste of molasses, which many people mistakingly K deem necessary to cause the cakes to bake brown.
—Law, physic and divinity are well supplied with feminine members in the United States. The lady doctors number 530, and feminine dentists 420, while 68 women are preachers, and 5 practice as lawyers. gome ladies adopt two or three callings at once. ‘A Mrs. Gibbs, living in St. Louis, notifies on her door plate that she is an ‘‘elocutionist, poetess, washer and ironer.”
—Several mill afirl:s in Birmingham, Conn., were made very ill recently by eating ‘* motto lozenges.”” A physician pronounced it a case of arsenical poisoning. i ‘
Sigk Headache 9 Positively Cured by these Bfilo‘ Pills. They also relisve f : Distress from Dyspep--1 : sia, Indigestion ‘and ‘.. ll ' L Too Hearty Eating. m A perfect remedy for < giulneu. Nnu%eté = rowsiness, Bad Tas s pl s in th:lMouth. Coated = % a ] Tongue, Pain in the — : Bide,; &c. They reguP , §late the Bowels and ] prevent Constipation and Piles. The amalland easiest to take, Onl‘y one lpm # dose, in a vial. Purel{ Vegeétable, Price 25 cents. Slold by all Druggists, : ; . CARTER MEDICINE CO,, Prop’rs, Erle, Pa, Five Vials by mail for one dollar,
THE BETTER WAY. i : AT e T - o, ; £ “Y 3 & 3 o . g \g/ o 5 ke cfßelsEl - S THE '¢ - : AND ITS AUXILIARIES. - p Absorption Medicated Foot Bath, They cure by absorption rather than drugging the a{stem. They have proven beyond peradventure the sheapestithe most pleasant, convenient, surest and most satisfactory curative, also permanent and thor. »ugh system-regulator in {he world .and are applicaole to the infant, youth and adult of"both‘se_xes. Ex. genence has led to an honest belief that there is nc isease that can be kept in subjection, or that .can be modified, by the use of medicine, but _that.can be icted upon in a far more sansfactory manner by the HOLMAN REMEDIES (the Pad, Plasters and ifedfi >ated Foot Baths, known as absorption salt). ‘ltis al 10 believed that there is NO diséage that medicine san cure but that can be cured more promgtly and sffectually b% this treatment., Certain it isthat times without number, diseases universally acknowle‘d%ed seyond the reach of medicine havenielted away under ‘he action ALONE of these remedies. And the work was done so %uickly, with so little inconvenience. te :he patient, that in many cases the pain was gone be‘ore he or she was aware.. More than a! million wit--lesses bear testimony to these statements.. These are 10 idle words or misrepresentations, but are suscepible of ?roaf.. In the nameof humanity try them. . The fo lowmg are some of the many diseases the LIVER PAD CO. remedies will cure:— = fever and Ague, . Kidne¥ Trubleg, s dillious Disorder, . Irrefiu ar Action of the uiver Complaint, eart,. - . -0 : ntermittent Fever, Rheumali’sm. g o Periodical Headaches, All kindsof Female WeakDyspegsia, : i messes, ¥ ; Ague Cake, ... Sick Headache, T shill Fever, ' Lumbago, Scia{ica, : Sumb Ague, Pain in Side, Back, Stom3illious and every kindof - = ach,; Shoulders . and Fever, Muscles. . . Diarrhcea, Catarrh, \ Lassitude, - - laundice, Neuralgia, Billious Colle. All these have their origin, directly or indirectly, n the Stomach and Liver. If you doubt it send for Dr. Fairchild’s Lectures. e Sy Price, $2. Special Pad, $3. The Holman Plasters, foqt, by the pair; 50 cents; Body,so'centseach. Medcated Foot Baths; 25 cents a package; six packages 1.25. It gour‘druggist does not keep them, s'entj yrice, either the money, postal order ‘or registered etter, and all will be sent you by mail, free of.charge Ixcept the salt, which is sent by express at the ex:xpense of the purchaser. = : : IPhe following communitations explain themselves: L . CAMBRIDGE, ILL. - flessrs. Bates & Hanley.: ; oy 1 have been wearing oneof the Holman Pads. It has ‘elieved me_{from complaints of lon§ standing, i~ aroved my health wonderfully, and I feel like a niew voman. I would like to act as your agent in thm'clt&;. md by so doing I believe I would carry- happiness iundreds of families. Yours truly, . sl : ' " Mgs. C. N. CARTEF _ . © Avrora, ~ May Ist, 1878. Gentlemen: I have been a great sufferer witi tearalgia in the stomach, and also with dumb.ag< I.7ing spent thousands of dollars to get cured, bis ill to no purpose, until about the Ist ®f March fast ve3induced to try one of Holmans Pads, which has 12 aly cured me, and lam now engaged in sellin; i€ I?;lds, and doin(f; all T can to spread the %‘\‘?*., vaws ol this cure andinduae cthers totry it. 8. G : ; " PEORIA, ILL., June 1. L 2858, Bates & Hanley : div . : . purchased one of your Holman Pads for both my vife and mother, whowere sufferingwnh Billiousness, ansti?ution and Dyspepsia.. The Pad has completely i.red them. Yours, -3. WHEELER, - : . Premrr, (Itr.,) Transeript. Address either of the following offices: i 134 Madisown St.. €hicago, 111, Mechanics Block, Detroit, Mich, Hall Block, Tuledo Ohio. - : 418 Millwaukee St Millwaukee, ¥is. %rt;t’s Block- MiAna2qpdlis, Minn. @ RATES & EANLEY, Agents for the JOFRN wricasy e TUTRE SLR PR i R
' ; o ""4 ; "* b\‘—_..‘.— _Rt <3 1 SVYIBRATOR'" i Reg. March 3. ey . 1874. : S : ¢¢ Vibrator®® Threshers, WITH IMPROVED MOUNTED HORSE POWERS, @ And Steam Thresher Engines, . : ' - Made only by i HOLS, SHEPARD & CO NICHOLS, SHEPARD ‘& CO., BATTLE CREEK, mcn. ! pp—— L A 1 e Sanys SDRIEERE 15 ‘E'"n;;:'{‘;_.'.‘..;f_’f{;i //# T A e = et e [ NepEifei TR B7S \| T s e e[| AN\ s (N VSR s e N LB - SR o~ = Ny [y T ) e ‘ “"'4"!‘"\?3:/,'7&&_,_ . SLA e e SR\ e — S = e S (7._.1_7;7- RS e ‘ HE Matchless Grain-Saving, Time= Saving, and Money-Saving Threshers of this day and generation, Beyond all Rivalry for Rapid Wark, Pere fect Cleaning, and for Saving Gnh\m Wastage. GRAIN Raisers will not Submit to the enormous wastage of Grain & the inferior work done by the otker machines, \fhen once posted on the difference., THE ENTIRE Threshing Expenses (and often 3 to 5 Times that amourit) ean be made by ° the Extra Grain SAVED by these Improved Machines. O Revolving Shafts Inside the Sepnrator, Entirely free from Beaters, Pickers, Raddles, and all such time-wasting and gr-in-wn{ltln’g'compll-cations. Perfectly adapted to alt Kinds and Conditions of Grain, Wet or Dry, Long or Short, Headed or Bound, ~ _ T only Vastly Superior for Whea "oousonaryley, Rye, nynd like Grains, biit the dubs sutc: ecsaful Thresher in Flax, Timothy, Millet, Clover, ana iike Seeds. Requires no “attachments’’ or “rebuilding ** to change from Grain to Seeds. Ty “ARVELOUS for Slmpllcltz’lat‘ Parts, using less than one-half the ususl ts and Gears. lhkel_ no Litterings or Scatterings. i i R Sizes of Separators Made, rang Foi!xjg from Six to Twel\l':‘l‘lom .m,%m ',lw:)‘aty}ego? Mouuted Horse Powers to ;nntclp 4 A s’I‘EAM Power Threshers a Specialty. A special size SBeparator made expreps}y for Stean Power, onn. Unrivaled Steam Threésher En'gines, with Valuable Improvements and Distinctive ® Features, far beyond any other make or kind. ® e ik o 4 i » §N 'l‘lnor,ou?h Workmanship, Elegant Hinish, Perfection of Parts, Completeness of Equipment, etc., our ‘‘ViBRaTOR’’ Thresher Outfits are Incomparable, OR. Particulars, call on our Dealers For write to ua for muartr.:u;l Circular, which we mail trr...
‘ JQEE Fotie rIM U TR, for g camecd all Dhesses of & Pfivm nature, mulda'fiou early abusges Elactone Lose of Me s”""i:l..ngwd red ight, Lost %.u l-m? : .lsl:u‘SRS S had a life-long e: s and cures where others fall. He fs a graduate of mnm"scw uses ‘no mercury, bas the lfl-ngeaemmu.s. umj:s-wuw b with = M ooLßot Bt g ] gular of importaat laformation by expres. DR. OLIN'S per Box. ltation MARRTAGE GUIDE mmsm. e -IL’&n- d;fi m‘%’w :v‘l:o.:o the m.‘fl those contemplating .Mnuwnymmymhmmn’ tlon. w‘muum 50 cents; to azy ad~
___ A PHYSIOLOGICAL View of Marriage ! 2 e OCK Al LLRSE ¥R\ §oonfdentiel Troatioe o 0 the g ONBI ot bt e She. ' Disasos of Women. MARRIAGE ;.mr?m;-:..:;-m ouan AHIVATE NEOIGAL ADVISER! Abumm or Becret pfim wxxth the best g;gom cfthe T‘i:r:gnm;l Lfigé%&k&pfllfl.‘tfi , Babit. e, pris e ther sent postpaid on leceipt of price; or all three, eonulnr:i gno g:;ea %&t&h}lfllw%&r 78 che,
