Ligonier Banner., Volume 13, Number 50, Ligonier, Noble County, 3 April 1879 — Page 2
45 Years Before the Public. . THE G.E!'“,'"_;T B DR. C. McLANE’'S CELEBRATED ' o LIVER PILLS, ) FOR THE CURE OF Hepgtitis, or Liver Complaint,
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. PAIN in the right side, under the 4 edge of the ribs, increases on pressure; ‘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 is affected with loss of appetite and sickness; the bowels in general 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 mem:. ory, 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 sensation of the skin; his spirits are low; and although he is satisfied that exercise 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 cxamination of thel 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 happy results. 'N% 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. For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled. . BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. 'TLe genuine are never sugar coated. ' - Every box has a red wax seal on_the'"q, ‘witk “he impression DR. MCLANE'S LiVER PILIS: ¢ fe The genuine McLANE’S LIVER PILLS oear the sigratures of C. MCLANE and FrLiMING Bros. on the wrappers. ' : Insist upon having tke genuine DR. 7, McLaxe s Livea PILLS, prepare” oy Fleras ing B os., of Pittsburgh, Pa., th= fark-. beirg full of imitations of tk: name MeLan = spell=d diderently but satie pronunciatisn -
USED ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
€ - g ohn'.s‘ft‘()ii"sf B\ SARSAPARILLAA e A L RSN s - VAR
Tone up the System bx using JOHNSTON'S SARSAPARILLA. : It has been in use for 20 {years, and has proved t 0 be the best preparation in the market for SICK HEADACHE, PAIN IN THE SIDE OR BACK, LIVER COMPLAINT. PIMPLES ON THE FACE, DYSPEPSIA, PILES, and all Diseases that arise froms a Disordered i.l_ver or an imgmre blood. ‘Thousai:ds of our best people take it and givs it to tiwir children. Physicians prescribe it daily, Those who use it once recommend it to others. It is made from Yellow Dock, Honduras Sargaparilla. Wild Cherry, Stylingia Dandelion, Bassafras Wintergreen, and other well-known valuable Roots and Herbs. It is strictly veget -« ‘ble, and cannot hurt the most delicate constitution. Itis one of the best medicines in use fo, Regulatinf the Bowels. i . It is sold by all respornsible druggists at one -dollar for a quart bottle, or six bogcl‘es for five dollars. ; Those who cantot ohtain a bottle of this medi--cine from their druggist may send us one dollar, and we will deliverif;to them free of -any charges. W. JOHNSTON & CO., Manufacturers, 161 Jefferson avenue, ..., ... .DETROIT MICH For Sale by C. ELDRED & SON, . Ligonier, Ind.
s ; O R R e P S T THEY ARE WORTH THEIR : o WEICHT in-COLD | READ WHAT HE SAYS: . DR. Turr:—Dear Bir: For ten years I have geen a martyr to Dysp%puia. Constipation and ‘Piles. Last Spring your Pills were recommeénded . tome; lused them (but with little faith). I ‘am now a well man, have good appetite, digestion perfect, regular stools, lriles one, ad I have gained forty pounds solid fleli Tiwy are vortg their weifht in gold. : AEV. R. L. BIM&;ON, Louisville, K;. A TORPID LIVER 18 the fruitful source of mma'diseam, suco 28 D,yape!rsia, Sick Headache, Costiveness, Dyse.:tery, Bilious Fever,‘Ague and Fever,Jaradica, Pileg Raeumatism Ki neyComplaint,C).,ete, Tutt’s Pills exert & powerful influencs on the YLiver,and willwith cértaintyrelieve that anpw - tant organ from disease, and restore its noru.al functions. S . Therapidity with which personstake on flesn while underthe Influencegf these ?ms of itnell _indicates their adaptability to nourish the boay, _hence their efficacy in curing nervous debility, .d{ngepsia, wu_th of the muscles, sluggishness . of theiiver,chronic constipation, andimparting Beali and strength to the systém. : CONSTIPATION, . -Only with regularity of the bowe!s can perfect ?heal_tgn be enjoyed. ghen the consti atigg is of recent date, a sln¥le dose of I‘l’l‘%s 1S will suffice, but if it has become habituai, one -pill should be taken every night, gradually lessen= Exg the frequenc{ of the dose unefi are; n{ar daily quovement i 8 obtained, which will soon ?gllow. . Sold Everywhere, 25 Cents, DFFICE, 35 MURRAY ST., NEW YORK.
_ The ¢¢ African,gEx'odus.” A A valuable lesson may .be learned by those who desire to judge justly of their neighbors, from this stampede of a few hundred worthless and improvident darkies, which the press generally is attempting to di%gify with the title of ‘‘an exodus.”’ el;])ublican organs, like the Tribune of this city, and the T¥mes of New York, see in it fresh proof of Southern proscription—of an intolerable social and political servitude, in, which the state of the Southern darkey is worse than his first. Most affecting pictures are drawn in their columns of the sufferings he has been made to endure, of the outrages, impositions and intimidations practiced upon him, and which have finally led to his sacrificing his 'property (?), and to the sundering of the sacred ties and associations which he holds so dear. He is a new pilgrim, according to these veracious journals, setting forth in the pursuit of that civil and political liberty which he prizes above all mere sensual , considerations of ‘‘hog an’ hominy.”” The privilege of casting his vote, free and untrammeled, for ¢ Massa Linkum' is what his simple soul still yearns for, and not Southern skies, nor much ’possum and sweet potato—not. the seductions of neighboring henroosts, nor accessible pig-pens, can. now cpmpensate him for the loss of -the power and importance with which he found himself suddenly clothed for a space at the close of the war, by the aid of Federal bayonets controlled and directed by carpet-bag Republicans. All this is now 'c%anged; and the black men who played fantastic tricks for a while during their temporary ascendency, and made a ¢‘ riotous travesty of government’’—we use the language of the (New York) 79¥mes—these men, finding honest labor and relegation to their proper level distasteful, have for some time been filling the same role at the South that the tramp does at the North. They are the class who, with their white allies from the North, have stolen the South poor, who deserted the cotton fields an(f flocked to the cities last summer, clanioring for free rations out of the supplies sent to the relief of the yellow-fever sufferers; who blocked up the streets around the relief depots, threatened pillage and violence, and rgfused twenty-five cents an hour for their unskilled labor. They are' fairly representative of a large share of the black voting population at the South into whose hands Republican fanaticism would entrust the administration of law and public affairs. - What their actual appearance and conditions are, even to radical eyes, may be gathered from the following extract from the Globe-Democrat, the special organ of Grant and Grantism, and now devoting all its energies to the reinstatement of ‘‘the man on horse‘back’” in the White House, and of Senegambian rule in the South:
Every day there are new arrivals on the steamboats [at St. Louis.] The other day two hundred and eighty landed. Of this number about fifty had enough to Kpay their two dollars and fift‘y] cents fare to Kansas City. When they : reac there hardly one of them will have a: dollar. There are one hundred and thirty-four here yet. The aggregate cash wealth.of them all combined would not likely figure up five dollars. They camp out on the levee, where there are families; the single youn&mx'nen ‘* hang around town.” It is worse .than the Leadville excitement. .Qutrageoflstlg absurd as it is, the children of Africa down there [in Mississippi and Louisiana] with an vbgnorz_mg:e as dark as their skins, have someho Egt it in their heads that if they come up to St. Louis they will be transported free of charge to the fertile plains of Kansas, and when there the Government will provide them with land, several hundred dollars,a mule and a plow. All they have to do is to rake up enough dollars to pay their way to Bt. Louis.and it only costs them four.dollars & head to come here from Vicksburg, Nine-tenths of them arrive here without a cent in their I;’)ock‘pts, but in the innocence of their hearts.they inquire: their way to the railway ticket offices and coolly ask for a pass. Then_ they learg that they have been ‘ fooled.” But still they hope that in some mysterious way they will be tmmigé)rted to Kansas and all wxl{ come out ** hunky-dory.”
- In Kansas they have been led to believe, through the efforts of such Republican statesmen as Senator Windom and Blaine, ‘that a farm, a mule, a year’s supplies and several hundred dollars apiece await them. Above and beyond all they can 'there vote the Republican ticket unchallenged and live under Republican rule unmolested. - The Morning Herald cannot utter-a more Christian aspiration than the hope that they may all get there. Kansas and the North will thus receive an object-lesson on the Southern political situation of which they are in obvious need. And the South will profit by getting rid of a shiftless, mis~ chievous, lazy set of dogs who would curse any community they come into— Chicago Herald. : -
: Congress and Mr. Hayes. The boldly declared resolution of the Republican minority in Congress that certain offensive party legislation shall not be repealed by the Democratic majority is a prodigious effrontery.. It is as if the Bonapartists of France, after being defeated, should proclaim that their policy shall continue to rule the country, and any attempt to undo it would be treated as revolutionary. The Democrats control both houses of Conl%ress. The Republicans haye lost National ascendéncy. The% no longer represent the' country. They are the minority. ‘Shall “the' minority rule? Shall it dictate to the majority? ‘The Democrats have votes enou§h to repeal the obnoxious -laws complained of—‘placing Congressional Elections under. the scrutiny of Federal Supervisors, ‘and authorizing the appointmeént of Deputy United §tates Marshals to make ‘summary arrests of citizens at the polls. - The Republicans, : therefore, cannot prevent the lgua.ssa.ge of therepealing measure. t, we are told, they will persuade Mr. Hayes to veto it. - Will they, indeed? Mr. Hayes has learned little in ‘the Presidential office if he imagines that the veto may be safely or rightly used to defeat the will of Congress and the country. | ‘Here is.a Democratic Copgress and here is a Republican Executive. The former comes into power by processes 2uite as creditable and respectable, to ay vhe very least, as those which lie at the foundation of Mr. Hayes’ authority, and it would be an ill-advised challenging of comfiarison of titles for him to throw down his veto at the very threshold of legislation .of the new Congress. Thenew Congress may pass mauy bills that Mr. Hayes does not like, for it is Democratic, and he is a Republican. But he has no rightful ‘alternative but to approve them, unless they involve violations of the Consti-
Intion. If he believes a bill to be unconstitutional, he may and ought to veto it, but he may not, with propriety, interpose the prohibition in any other case. That is a dcfma too well defined and recognized to be mistaken. Mr. Hayes has no right to veto bills merel{l because they are distasteful to himself or to his party. To do this would provoke a conflict with Congress and plunge the country in a turmoil—and the memorable contest between Congress and Andrew Johnson in 1866-67 clearly proves that when the Execative and the Legislature quarrel, the former is certain to get the worst of it.—St. Louis Republican.
The Federal Government Then and - Now. , If Geor%e; Washilnilgton, James Madison and Alexander Hamilton could now witness the stupendous operations of this great machine, they would recognize in it few traces of their most excellent handiwork. Changed not only by process of regular amendment, but by the interested construction of its administrators, through nearly twenty years of civil war and its consequences, it is no longer the same. : ' The power which tLey intended to confine within very narrow limits, and which they marked by the cleargst lines ever ldid down in any politigal chart, has transcended them all, and invaded on every side the rights reserved to the States and the people. The Federal Courts have gradually ‘taken either ‘undivided or concurrent jurisdiction of Freat classes of business, which properly belong to the State Courts, until the Judges with their trains of officials swarm upon us, and their dockets are crowded with causes, which no man, in the better days of the Republic, would have dreamed of appealing to Czsar. The Federal Congress has from year to year encroached upon the objects of legislation reserved to.the States, until we find it enacting laws for preserving the peace, conducting elections, and punishing the most petty offenses ‘‘ against the peaceand dignity”’ of the States.
For more than a decade the Federal Executive has been in the habit of setting up and pulling down State Governments at his pleasure, and less than two years ago it was proposed by certain rich men to give-him a mighty standing army, which he was to march wheresoever he pleased, without regard to the will of the States as expressed by their Governors and Legislatures. It can no longer be said 'of this Federal power that its blessings fall unseen like the dews of heaven. It is seen all around from the center to the circumference. You seé it in a hundred thousand officeholders; you see it in the Judge who determines the dispute between you and your neighbor; you see it in the tax-gatherer; you seeit in the bank; you see it in the regulations that govern the smallest business; you see it in the Marshal who lays hold of your coat collar and drags you from the polls in the name and by the authority of the United States. It is at every man’s door and concerned in every man’s affairs; and it is from this power alone that there is danger to our liberties, for it alone has the force to overthrow them. State and municipal Governments may plunder, but, they cannotenslave. The people, whomaintain them, are able to correct. their abuses when they become intolerable. But this strong central Government at Washington comes down upon one section, or one community, with the power gathered from all, and proceedings deemed cruel and oppressive here may be highly applauded or regarded with supreme indifference elsewhere. We cannot be too jealous of its encroachments; we cannot be too watchful to prevent transfers to it of powers originally denied. ¢ Eternal vi%glance is the price of liberty.”’ - he dread of centralization is as strong in the breasts of the people at this hour as it was in the days when Patrick Henry appealed to it against the adoption of the Constitution, and when the potent name of Washington alone prevailed over his appeal. The shadow of despotism is as chilling now as it was then, and the political party which firmly defends the rights of the States and of the people from fresh invasions is the party of the future. Questions of political economy, of taxation and currency, and even of moral reform, are always found to be secondary to those of liberty and right. The Democrats have nothing to .lose and everything to gain by givin% battle on this historic ground. The history of the Supply bifi is the histor% of English and American liberty. he British Congtitution itself is a mere aggrega~ tion of ¢onditions, attached at one time and another to grants of money; and the annals of Colonial struggles on this side are but one long story of the Supply bill, presented by the Assemblies with conditions, and demanded by the ‘Governors without them.
Will Hayes of Ohio—the creature of fraud and unlawful force—representing no one but the men who gave him ‘a forged title to another man’'s office—dare to renew this old issue of tyranny with the representatives of ' the Ameri- ‘ can people? And if he does, what ga’.rty singe the days of the English tuarts has undertaken a viler cause than the Republican minority in Congress will have to defend, and what party since Sidney and Hampden has chosen a better one than the Democrats will have to stand on? Trial by an unpacked and impartial jury, elections free from intervention by the army, and the’person of the ecitizen secure against arrest at the polls b{. the min- | ions of Federal power! These are among the most sacred privi;gges of‘ freemen, and we may be sure that the party which sustains and Xromcts them will itself be sustained and protected by the people.—N. Y. Sun. s
—When a boy walks with a girl as though he was afraid some one would see him, the girl is his sister. If he walks so close to her as tonearly crowd her against the fence, she is the sister of some one else. |
—lt is understood that a distinguished bigamist in [llinois proposes to get married one thousand times in one thousand quarter hours.—Buffalo Express. e '
- My Bird-House. My bird-house is not my own invention. Iread in some newspaper that an oyster-keg made a good bird-house, and an oyster-keg is what you must have in the first place.” Most of you know whatthese kegs are, and can easily get one from some store or some oysterman. Leave the heads in and stop up the bung-hole; then cut a round hole, two inches in diameter, in the side, about two inches from the end you design for the floor of your house, and nail this end firmly to a square piece of board large enough to project a couple of inches all round, like a little platform. Next, cover the outside o?the keg with pieces of rough bark. If you have a wood-pile to go to, you can probably find logs from which you can pry off wide, curving pieces that will go half round yvour little house; but, if not, you must get smaller bits from trees in the woods, and trim them with a knife to fit side by side; no matter if the joinings are not very close, when the house is fastened on some arbor or trellis, no eyes but the birds’ can possibly see the crevices, and they are not very eritical, bright as they are. Use .small brads for nailing on the bark, and if driven in a little on the slant, they will hold the bark more securely. For a roof, nail two wide strips of bark to the upper rim of the kef in such a position that their upper edges will meet to form a gable just in the middle above the oor. It is not necessary to have this roof water-tight, because the head of the keg will keep out the rain; trim off the upper edges of the bark roofsides so that they will meet closely, but if they do not stay together well, bore a few holes and take several stitches with fine wire, and yoifi' work will be better. o : ;
The house wil¥ look prettier if you make the roof both wide and dee;l>, giving what, in a real house, would be called “overhanging eaves.”. Last of all, fill up the open spaces under the gables with bits of bark trimmed to fit, and nailed to the sides of the keg. Now, your bird-house is coniplete! Nail it on top of the grapearbor, or in the crotch of a tree, and hang a bit of cotton-wool gnd a few hairs about the door, which the birds will read as we read the sign “To Let,”’ and see if you do not have wrens and blue-birds coming to look at the vacant house, and, at, last, some nice little couple ¢‘concluding to rent it for the summer.”’ o
No matter if your house is not ready until late in the season. Ido not think all the birds get to housekeeping before June, and, you know, often, they build more than one nest in the course of the summer; so, unless there are too many cats about, I think you may be pretty sure of a tenant. : When I made my little house, I had no idea it would last more ‘than one summer, but it has weathered the storms of four winters and still looks well. Ewery spring. the wrens and blue-birds squabble and fight for possession of it, the wrens, I am sorry to say, always coming off conquerors! And every spring I watch the nestbuilding from my window with great satisfaction.—St. Nicholas for April.
A Modern Romance. WHO says that the days of romance are ended needs to read the strange. history of a Scottish plowman who has returned to his native heath after a long exile.’ I'wenty years ago a farmer in Orkney hired a young man to do farm work. The plowman touched the fancy of his master’s daughter, and the result was that, in a runaway fashion, and in opposition to the will of the patriarchal farmer, the two became man and wife. The old gentleman was furious, and turned his back determinedly on his son-in-law. The young plowman kissed his wife, left her in her father’s arms and sailed for Australia, whence he soon ceased to write. His wife became a mother and remained in a state of such wretched suspense that her father began to repent of the treatment to which he had subjected her husband. Efforts were then made to trace the whereabouts of the latter by means of advertising in colonial papers and otherwise, but all to noYpurpose. He had gone to America. Years passed. The Frandson grew up to manhood, and, not iking farm work, bade adieu to Orkney, took ship last year to the United States, and after some knocking about found employment in a mercantile house in Illinois. In the course of business he discovered that the gentleman at the head of the firm was a native of Scotland, hailing indeed from the same district as himself. Occasional meetings led to more minute inquiries as to dates, names of places, persons, and the like in the old country, and after being six months. in the establishment the youth found—however wonderful it may appear—that he was actually serving as a clerk with no other than his own father! The effect of this discovery on both may be left to the imagination of the reader. Father and son are now in Scotland. The man who went away a penniless plowboy, but returns rich, has been welcomed with much emotion by his venerable father-in-law, who is still hale and hearty, as well as by the wife whom he left many years ago fn‘ her youth and beauty, but who is now a middle-aged matron.—N. Y. Tribune.
: Henry Bergh. THIRTEEN years of devoted labor. have wrought no very great change in the appearance and manner of H%nry Bergh. llf the lines cf his careworn face have multiEllliled, t‘heg have also responded to the kindly influence of publie sym&athy and the release of his genial disposition from austere restraint. A visitor who had ne claims on Mr. Ber{;h’s indulgence once remarked: “I was alarmed by the dignity of his presence and disarmed by his politeness.”” Since Horace Greeley’s death, no figure more familiar to the flxblic has walked the. streets of the, etropolis. Nature gave him an absolutes patent on every feature and manner of his personality. His commandinE stature of six feet is magnified by his erect and diinified'bearmg. A silk hat with straight rim covers with primness the severity of his presence. A dark brown or dark blue frock overcoat encases his broad shoul-
o ders and spare, yet sinewy, tigure. A decisive hand grasps a cane, strong enough to lean upon, and competent to be a defense without looking like a standing menace. When this cane, or even his finger, is raised in warning, the cruel driver is quick to understand and heed the gesture. On the crowded street, he wa.li:; with a slow, ‘slightlyswinging pace peculiar to himself. Apparently preoccupied, he is yet observant of everything about him and mechanically notes the condition from head to hoof of every passing horse. Everybody looks into the long, solemn, finely-chiseled and bronzed face wearing an expression of firmness and benevolence. Brown - locks fringe a broad and rounded forehead. Eyes between blue and hazel, lighted by intellectual fires, are equally ready to dart authority or show compassion. There is energy of character in a long nose of the purest Greek type; melancholy in a mouth rendered doubly grave by deep lines, thin lips and a sparse, drooping mustache, and determination in a square chin of leonine strength. The head, evenly poised, is set on a stout neck rooted to broad shoulders. In plainness, gravity, good taste, individaality and unassuming and selfpossessed dignity, his personality is a compromise between a Quaker and a French nobleman whose life and thoughts no less than long descent are his title to nobility.—Scribner. for April
: Struck by a Ball of Fire. 4 A BOY about fifteen years of age, named Edward Brain, living with his father, Jacob Brain, in Paterson, N.J., was sent, about nine p. m. Saturday, to purchase some groceries at a store close by. On the way he was joined by another boy named Robert Duroe, about twelve years of age. It w:s raining hard. As they were going atross a vacant lot in Pearl street, at the end of Summer street, in order to get to Mechanic street, Duroe says he looked up and saw coming toward .them from above, in an oblique line, a.small ball of fire, which in an instant struck Brain on the left breast, passed under his coat, and spread into a mass of flame over the boy’s breast and side. Brain was holding his left hand on his breast at the time, and in it was a quarter of a dollar. Both boys was terribly frightened, and Brain says he was nearly knocked down. They ran through to Mechanic street, into the grocery store kept by a man named Cox. He immediately stripped off young Brain’s blazing clothes. The boy’s coat was burned to a cinder on one side,| as was also his underclothing. His side ' was badly scorched and blistered, and the end of his thumb, including the nail, was burned off. His left hand was also badly burned, and the twenty-five-cent piece which he held in his hand was partly melted. Young Brain was put under the medical care of Dr. Garnett, who pronounced his injuries not dangerous. Brain says that he saw nothing; that only heard a hissing noise over his head just as he was struck. The other boy, a very intelligent little fellow, who wasg about fifteen feet from his comrade, says he saw the ball of fire coming 'véry distinctly. Brain claims not to have felt any shock as from a solid substance, but says he was paralyzed for the moment. - Both boys are truthful, and their story is credited by all those to whom it has been told.—N. Y. Tribune. T
A National Historical Clock. | A cLOCK hsaving ¢‘three times more dial indications and more moving embellishments than any clock on earth,”’ has just been finished in Columbus, Ohio—the result of eight years of toil. From the Columbus Journal the particulars of this remarkable structure are learned. The maker’s design was that it should be ‘¢ an embodiment of the great events of our National history.”” To begin with, he has supported it by ‘‘a ponderous dpa.ir of eagle claws, draped and banded by the thirteen stars of. the thirteen original States.”” "It is five feet wide and ten high, and the two sides have representations of the two greatest events in American history—the War of Independence and the War for the Union. Independence Hall is there, with the old cracked bell within, the belfry and an old man ready to ring it. The Goddess of Liberty strikes the hour, and the Goddess of Justice balances the scales in favor of industry. In the center of an Alolian har;l) is a model of the famous Strasburg clock only four inches by twelve in size. For the grand Apostolic pageant the figures have been made after Leonardo’s painting. All the allegorical ‘figures are made of ivory except the one of Satan, which is very properly made of ebony, and has garnet eyes. Historic scenes are enacted on a stage. At the first quarter hour a locomotive appears, as the emblem of our first prOfi-ress in industry. At the second, the bell is tolled in Independence Hall, and Washington walks majestically across the scene. At the third the Apostles bow to the figure of Christ, Peter denies his Lord, and the cock crows. A skeleton hastens along, bearing a green scarf on his shoulders, with the words ¢‘Time {lies,”” and an infant emerges from an opening door with a rattle-box in its hand. fiist before the full hourarrives, a phonograph makes music to heraid its coming. At midday Emancipation is acted. Lincoln, proclamation in hand, moves toward a slave boundto an auction-block, while the slave ‘?rns to look upon his deliverer, his Shackles fall, and his hands are raised as in a prayer of thanksgiving. i : . T e —Many a young fellow is more suc--cessful in walking into the affections of his girl than in a walking mateh.
A PHYSIOLOGICAL o ® View of Marriage ! 0 A Guide to Wedlock and W ,0, M A .N confidential Treatise on ‘the ol i gt i VAN D= crets of Reproduction aod i DU e the Diseases of Women. A book for private, considT PN 6] N ending "5 e, picn DRI\ - ) & [ On all disord o’n of l n&fi!’n&"vyi!&g% Self et eeosen Disesen vih T s thoA-eooIf'&:I 'l'h‘rlloat and xn??h&&bfifigw.fie %?inmx:b!t.&c.. price 10 cts. ek b et e “Kddress DR, BUTTS, No- 13 N. 860 81, Bt Louis, Mo
3 { e R ~ THE BETTER WAY. ./ ° . § ; sV 28 e 4 ,_.Q;» ye=dk N ; ® AR/ WP ! < AND ITS AUXILIARIES.: 1 . fe 2 i - s ™ Absorption Medicated Foot Bath, They ¢ure by absorption rather than -dru; -the istem. They haver&oventbeyond peradvggg:lg"e the heapest, the most pleasant, convenient, surest and - most satisfactory curative, also permanent and thor»ugh system-regulator in the world, and are applicaole to the infant, youth and adult of both sexes. Exgerience has led to an honest belief that there-is nc isease that.can be kept in subjection, or that can be modified, b( the use of medicine; but that can be acted upon in a far more satistactorf manner b{{ the HOLMAN REMEDIES (the Pad, Plasters and Medisated Foot Baths, known 48 absorption salt). It is al. 10 believed that there is NO disease -that medicine . san cure but that can be cured more ’_iproml]])'tly .and sffectually b% this treatment. Certain it is that times without number, diseases universally ackno,wled%ed seyond the reach of medicinehave melted away underx :he action ALONE of these remedies. And the work & was done so %ulckly,,wlth so little inconvenience t¢ /be patient, that in many cases the pain was gone before he or she was aware. Morethan a million wit.. —-aesses bear testimony to these statements. These are 10 idle words or misrepresentations, but are suscep~ dble of groot,. In the name of humanity try them. .The fo lowmg are some of the many diseases the LIVER PAD CO. remedies will cure:~" fever and Ague, 5 Kidnex Trubles, 3illious Disorder, Irrefiuv ar Action of the uiver Complaint, : eart, - | ntermittent Fever, | Rheumatism, : _Periodical Headaches, * Allkindsof Female WeakDyspegsia, g nesses, . 1 ggue ake, | Sick Headache, i ill Fever, ‘ Lumbago, Sciatica, Sumb Ague, . Pain in Side, Back, Stom3illious and every kindof . ach, Shoulders and . Fever, Muscles. . Diarrhcea, Catarrh, Lagsitude ; faundice, Neuralgfa, Billious Colic. , - All these have their origin, directly or indirectly, nthe Stomach and Liver. If you doubt it send for Dr. Fairchild’s Lectures. Price, $2." Special Pad, $3: The Holman Plasters, Toot, by thé pair, 50 cents ; Body, 50 cents each. Med: cated oot Baths, 25 cents a package; six:packages 1.25. If g'our druggist does not keep them, send yrice, either the money, postal order or registered . etter, and all will be sent youbymail, free of charge Ixcept the salt, which is sent by express at the ex:x,F‘ense of the purchaser.” 3 : he following communications explain themselves: S " CAMBRIDGE, ILL. fessrs. Bates & Hanley : : . .9 . I have been wearing one of the Holman Pads. It has ‘elieved me_from complaints of lonfe standing, iioiroved mly health ‘wonderfully, and I feel like a new voman. I would like to act as your.agentin this cxt{. md by so doing I believe I would carry. h&ppiness o tundreds of families.. Yours trulfi;l‘ . : (o 8. C. N. CARTEP : - Avrosa, Tor., May Ist, 1878. Gentlemen: I have been a great sufferer witi teurzalgia in the stomach, and also with dumb ag. 7 4.7ing spent thousands of dollars to get cured, bas ill to no purpose, until about the lst of March fast i- ‘ vs3induced to try one of Holmans Pads, which has »or2ly cured me, and lam now engaged in selhn; & ge lyndsz and doing all I can to spread the %‘a s vaws of this cure and induce cthers to try it. 8. Jfegg i : PEORIA, ILL., June 1, - \assrs. Bates & Hanley: . : = purchased one of your Holmar Pads for both my vife and mother, who were sufiering with Billiousness, Zonstig;ltion and Dyspepsia. The Padhas completely i.red them. ' Yours, _ J. WHEELER, o Proria, (ILL.,) Transcript, Address either of the fellow:ng offices: 134 Madison St.. Chicago, 111, . Mechanics Block, Detroit, Mich. : Hall Block, Toledo Ohio,. -~ 418 Millwaukee St Millwaukee, VVis, ] %rst’s Block:- Minna=apolis, Minn. @ . RATYES & EANLEYX, Agents for the JOPIR 10, 5 : FLor Tl
, T < ©VIBRATOR’ Reg. March 81, : ; - 16874, ~ ‘ ¢¢Vibrator” Threshers,! ; ‘WITH IMPROVED 8 MOUNTED HORSE POWERS; @ And Steam Thresher Engines, i, Made only by -~ NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.; BATTLE CREEK, MICH. | p—l L AT pul s, S o o o BATSRRE T A By =N W]b et g el || AP Cotaees el e L et O\ HE Matchless Grain-Saving, Timee T Savlnlgaxtd lh‘ioney’&vin&'l‘hmshera orgt’ffls day and generation, Beyond all vgh;&); Rapid Wark, Pepe fect Cleaning, and for Saving Grain rom Wastage, < RAIN Raisers will not Submit to the enormous wastage of Grain & the inferior work done by the otker machines, when once posted on the difference, TI[E ENTIRE Threshing Expenses (and often 3 to 5 Times that amount)can be made by ® the Extra Grain SAVED by these Improved Machines, 1 MO Revolving Shafts Inside the Separator. Eutirely free from Beaters, Pickers, Raddles, { and all such iime-wasting and grain-wasting complications, : Perfectly adapted to all Kinds and Conditions of ' Grain; Wet or Dry, Long or Short, Headed or Bound, OT only Vastly Superior for Whea " Oats Bnl'yl,ey, Ry"e,fnynd lik‘:%rllnl, buit-the oNLY Sug'cessful Thresherin Flax, Timothy, Millet, Clover, and ' like Beeds. Requiresmno * attachments?’. or *rebuilding ' tochange from Gr;fnto!qedg". (R b BTN : LO r Simplicity o | R A gAR A e Makesno Litterings or Scatterings.’ @ : s UR Sizes of Separators Made, ran Folng from Six to 'l‘welv.;a Horse size, and tw«’x styles‘n-t Mouuted Horse Powers to match. ek i ' @TEAM Power Threshers a Specialty SA special size Bepcmm nzade expreasly for m .Powuyr.. UR Unrivaled Steam Thresher Engines, with Valuable Improvements ‘and Distinctive @ Features, far beyond any other make or kind, ® N Thorough Workmanship, Elega s #inish, Porleclfim of Parts, Complatenegg’éf Eqmfifiggt, _ete., our “VisßAToß’’ Thrésher ‘Outfits ave Incomparable, OR Particulars, call on ou alers Eor write to us for lllumld Cn'cu?u‘, whleE lel‘l:g}l'"..
Sigk Headache 2 = =9 P,ocifivol¥ Cured by - these Little Pills. : 1. They also relieve 1 : Distress from Dyspep- < sia, Indigestion and = II I I-E ~ {Too Hearty Eating. e : ] ‘A perfect remedy for W IVER [pihes Nautes, =] ; -} Drowsiness,Bad Taste = G in the Mouth, Coated E . P_l LLs- ’ To%xgue. Pain in the ;1 Side, &c. They regu- ! he e late the Bowels and 5 . prevent Constipation ot A 0 allest 10 (RS, DY Soe bl eoy and easies ake, On ° -a dose. 40ina vla}. Purelf Vegetabie, 'l_’rl%e 25 cents. Sold by all Druggists, ) ¥ CARTER MEDICINE CO., Prop'rs, Erle, Pa. Five Vials by mail for one dollar,
178 31 : UL, for Giw cure of all Dhseases of & Private nstore, r@nlu%fim early abuses ur infection of either Sex. Seminal I el Em?fom.nlru ofnq-ol;. hufiw Loct muycfifiu‘mf the blutm‘%. ve:; " Asthny b, Plles, all 5 and DISb S '§°¥; fa a graduate of the Re Behool, uses Do mercury, has the Jarget practio 1a tho U, 8. mfis% treatment with |'m|a'nh. md'?& cents mlr':f ‘Rubber Goods and g °p‘:"'§‘n'f‘.i""' ™ "“’“""“‘-@“u{z&.n"’"' BN WhEwe ma! : I \ yuoim‘g am:'thA_ggm &mum dt’:!vé N um Information Datare, Valaable to the maried and Mmflq nunr. Ho n healthy and trul my rela'&m"’“ o 1 bk R e, oy o
