Ligonier Banner., Volume 13, Number 52, Ligonier, Noble County, 17 April 1879 — Page 2
45 Years Before the Public. THE CENUINE DR. C. McLANE'S CELEBRATED . LIVER PILLS, : FOR THE CURE OF : Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint, D?SPEPSIA AND SICK HEADACHE.
Symptoms of a Diseased Liver. PAIN in the right side, under the 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; someétimes the pain is felt under the shoulder blade, and it frequently extends®o 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 sensation 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 18 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 existed, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the LIVER to have been extensively deranged. AGUE AND FEVER. DR. G: McLANE’s Llver PiLLs, IN CASES OF AGUE AND FE_J"VER, i when taken with Quinine, are productive of the most happy 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. For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled, BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. | Ti.e genuine are never sugar coated. ; Every box has a red wax seal on tlé "q, with ‘he impression DR. MCLANE’S LIVER PiLLs. : The genuine McLANE’S LIVER PILLS dear the sigrztures of C. MCLANE and FrLzMING Bros. on the wrappers. Insist apon having ke genuine DR, 7, McLaxz & Livkz PiLLs, prepare” oy Flera. ing B os., of Pittsburgh, Pa., ths mark- . beir full of imitations of tk: name MeLa = spell=d di.ferently but sarwe pronunciatizn '
USED ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
LU ey - VU GUREY C TR RS B HEALTH. /
"Tone up the System by using JOHNSTON'S t SARSAPARILLA. It hag 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. Thousai:ds of our best people take it and giva it ‘to tlclr children. Physicians prescribe it daily.. Those who use it once recommend it to others. 1t is made from Yellow Dock, Honduras Sarsaparilla. Wild Cherry, rStylfngia. Dardelion, Sassafras Wintergreen, and other well-kzown valuabie Roots and Herbs. Itis strictly vege! 4+ ‘ble, and cannof hurt the most delicate constitution. Itisone of the best medicines in use fo. RezulatinF the Bowels. ! ‘ It is _sold by all responsible druggists at one go{}ar for a quart hottle, or six boutles for five ollars, . Those who cannot 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. JOHNSCON & CO., Manufacturers, ; 161 Jefferson avenue....,-....DETROIT MICHB For Sale by C. ELDRED & SON, Ligonier, Ind. i
B T L S L T i ) THEY ARE WORTH THEIR .n i - WEICHT in COLD : 8 2 READ WHAT HE SAYS Dr. Turr:—Dear'Sir: For ten years I have been a martyr to Dyspepsia, Constipatior and - Piles. Last Spring your Pills were recommended to me; lused them (but with little faith). 1 a 1 now & well man, have good appetite, digesticn perfect, regular stools, lftilez:gone aid I have gained forty pounds solid flesh. They are worthb their wel{ht in sold. - REV. R. L. SIMPSON, Louisville, ;. A TORPID LIVER - 18 the fruitful source of mmgldiseasea; sucnas” D yspchsifl., Sick Headache, Costiveness, Dyse.: tery, Biiious Fever, Ague and Fever, Jar.adice, PUas Raenmatism,KidneyComplaint, )i etc, Tutt’'s Pills exert a powerful influencsonthe Liver,and will with certaintyrelieve that NP - .+ (tant organ from disease, and restore its noruied " funstions. ; ; : The rapidity with which persons take on flesn while under theinfluence of these ?flls of itacik | indlcmeg their adaptability to nourish the booy, hence their efficacy in curing nervous debility, d?'spepsia, wasth«pl the muscles, sluggishness of the liver, chronieconstipation, and imparting beaitz and strength to the system. CONSTIPATION. : Only with regularity of the bowels can perfect “heal ti) té'e f,njoye_d; }leien thefcons‘}:ii:lstigg is of recent date, a single dose o Pls = \;fl‘i suffice, but if ft has bgcomfia itug , ONe | ill. shonld be taken every night, ?rnduall lessenfl,g the frequency of the duse until aregu{ar daily movement js obiained, which will soon fHllow, Sold Everywhere, 25 Cents, : OFFICE, 35 MURRAY ST., NEW YORE
The Men Who Are for Grant. Mr E.V.Smalley, who has been sent by the New York Zribune to the Southern States to spy out the land and who has a face quite brazen enough and a nose suffieiently longitudinal to perform such service to the satisfaction of even his present. employer, writes that ‘‘there is but one expression among Southern Republicans for the candidate in 1880; they are all for Grant.” If Mr. Smalley imagines that this is news e commits an error. The merest tyro in politics knows that the ‘¢ Southern Republicans” are for Grant. It was not necessary for Mr. Smalley to make a two months’ tour in Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana in order that the people of the North might be informed of this fact. The ‘¢ Southern Republicans,” that is the few white men in the South who are Republicans, are either the adventurers of the palmy days of their party in the South when the bayonet and the bastile kept the white population in subjection, or the corrupt and desperate spirits among those native and to /bhe manner born who like Wells and Anderson engage in politics only for the sake of speculation and plunder. Such men are naturally and as a matter of course for Grant. Under his Administration of the Presidency they fattened at the public crib, and rioted in robbery of the Treasuries of the despised and hated South. Protected by his authority as the Chief Magistrate of the Republic they go_r¥ed #hemselves with gxg taxes of a people who by force of arms in times of peace were made their political slaves for a whole decade, Sustained by his favor as Com-miander-in-Chief of the Army they enjoyed an unrestricted license to wreak their mean and cowardly revenges upon the men of the South whom they hated only because they feared that they might not be permitted to plunder them forever.. Why should not these creatures whose corruptions became rotten ripe under the sunshine of Grant’s favor, who were mere parasites that infested the Grant Administration, nay, that sprang from its carcass and subsisted and grew and flourished upon it—why should not they sup-
port Grant for a third, orafourth, or a fifth term? There is no Teason under the sun why they should desire the election of any other man to the Presidency so much as that of Gen. Grant. Nor is the Republican party of the Northern States without men of their ilk.. The favorites of Delano and Robeson, the co-operators with Babcock, the copartners with Belknap, the sharers in the Black Friday fraud, and all -who belonged to the plundering rings-that surrounded the Federal Administration from 1869 till 1877. are -ardent, enthusiastic and persistent advocates of the re-election of Grant. It is as reasonable and natural that this should be the case as ‘that the jackal should follow the track of battle or the buzzards gather about the carrion. If Mr. Smalley will make a two months’ tour in the Northern States he will find the spoilsmen of his party, all the bal-lot-stuffers paid for their villainy out of the United States Treasury, all the members of the whisky ring and all the thieves that have béen in office nr expect office under a Republican Administration to be as earnestly and emphatically in favor of a third. term for Grant as he has found their compatriots and co-workers in the South.— Harrisburg (Pa.) Patriot.
4 The Bayonet at the Polls. . DetGolyer Garfield says his party is ready to go before the people for judgment on its opposition to the sixth section of the new Army Appropriation "bill. L 3 Whatis the sixth section of that bill? This is its language: - 0 That Sec. 2002 of the Revised Statutes be amended so as to read as follows: '‘ No military or naval officer, or other person engaged in the civil, military, or naval service of the United States, shall order, bring, keep. or have under his authority or control any troops or armed men at the J)!ace where any %ene_ral or special election is held in any State, unless it be necessary to repel the armed enemies of the United States.’”’ | And that Sec. 5528 of the Revised Statutes be amended so as to read as follows: | ‘" Every officer of the army or navy, or other person in the civil, military or naval service of | the United States, who orders, brings, keeps or | bas under his authority or control any troops or armed men at any place where a general or special election is held in any State; unless such force be necessary to repel armed enemies of theUnited States, shall be fined not more than five thousand ,dolla‘rs, and suffer imprisonment at | hard labor not less than three months nor more' than five years.” ‘ How do the existing statutes differ from the proposed statutes? In the { sole particular that the two formery now contain, after the words * to repel armed enemies of the United States,’’the additional exception, *‘or to keep the peace at the polls.” Thus the issue is clearly made up on the question whether elections in America shall be free, or whether they shall be ruled by the bayonet. Does anybody doubt what the people of this country think of that question? Why, monarchical England jealously guards the ballot from any interference of soldiery, under any pretense. So long ago as the rei%n of George 11. a statute was passed for that gurpose, which was re-enacted under Victoria, and reads as follows: . e
*“Bec. 2. And be it enacted, That on every day appointed for the nomination or for the election or for taking the poll for the election of a member or members toserve in the Commons House of Parliament no soldier within two miles of any city, borough, town, or place where such nomination ur(g_léctlon shall be declared or poll taken, shall be allowed to go out of the barrack or quarters in which he is stationed, unless for the purpose of mounting or relieving guard, or for ngmg_ his vote at such election; and that every soldier allowed to go out for any such purE(_)se within the limits aforesaid shall return to is barrack or quarters with all convenient speed as soon as his guard shall have been relieved or vote tendered.” ¢ %
The third section of the British laws declares that wheneversuch an election is’appointed, notice of it shall, with all convenient speed, be sent to the War Office, and thence, in writing, ¢ tothe eneral officer commanding in each gistrict of Great Britain, who shall thereupon give the necessary orders for enforcing the execution of this act in all places under his command.” Thus, in an election for Members of Parliament, the bayonet must vanish; the voters are to be free from all danger of military ¢oercion; and if brawls arise, as they often do, at an excited election, the civil authority alone is to keep the peace. For a double reason should suck secnrity from army interference be guaranteed to the people of our country, since here there are,.in addition, State Governments, whose func-
tion it is to keep the peace at the polls. Yet De Golyer Garfield demands that ‘America shall enjoy no such immunity for the ballot, and that, though there be no armed enemies of the United States to repel, soldiers may block the wai%bo the polls. ith a characteristic subterfuge De Golyer Garfield does not risk his hostility to the sixth section on its merits, but complains that the section is out of place in an Appro({)riation» bill. The people of the United States will not decide the question of a free ballot on subtle distinctions of parliamentary practice. They see a great statutory proclamation of popular ‘rights struggled against by the Republican party, and will take no fine-spun argument, based on technical rules, for excuse. The people, too, are well aware that hundreds of laws, net dealing with specified sums .to be expended, have, during past years, been enacted in Appropriation bills to which they were related, and will judge accordingly the new-born compunction of De Golyer Garfieldism over its own habitual practice hitherto. Beside, the sixth section is germane to the pending bill, because it treats of an army employment, and because it effects a probable economy when it cuts off one expensive mode of employment. gt . The use of the army at the polls/is an adjunct of martial law, or of imperialism; it does'nct belong to a free country. Let all who want to smooth the way to the return of martial law in our country, and to make imperialism possible, rally to keep on the statute book, by whatever pretense or device, the dangerous words which the sixth section of the Army bill seeks to expunge.—N. Y. Sun.
~ ~ . Yielding the Point. - The remarkable admission madé by Mr. Garfield of ' Ohio in the House debate is the most curious feature in the long and acrimonious discussion. The gentleman from Ohio was asked by Tucker of Virginia if he would vote for the repeal of the law authorizing the use of troops at the polls, as a separate and independent measure. The reply was: “I would vote to repeal these clauses, if brought- up separately, but not to make them as you propose to make them.” Mr. Garfield, who is regarded as speaking for Mr. Hayes, is, then, not opposed to repealing the provisions of law which authorize troops at the polls; he is in favor of it, and will vote for it as a separate measure. The only thing he objects. to in the question before the House is the making the repeal a part of the Appropriationbill. The Appropriation bill is one good measure; and the proposed repeal of the enactment allowing troops at the polls is another good measure. Both ought to be passed.” Mr. Garfield is in favor of both, and will vote for both—but they must be presented to him and to Mr. Hayes one at a time. If they are presented in the same enactment he ‘will resist them to the last, and will suffer the Government to fall to the ground for want of means of support, rather than vote for themin that shape. In view of these important admissions by the Republican leader, how meaningless and unpatriotic becomes his opposition to the bill as it stands! What becomes of the load and angry chatrge against the majority—char%es which Mr. Garfield has made, and all the other Republicans have echoed? The country has been told that the parliamentary method adopted by the majority is revolutionary; but when the accusation is brought to the test of an analysis, the only revolution the majority are guilty of is that of attempting to accomplish two good objects in the same bill! There is no revolution in either measure; but while it is perfectly ngpabi‘ble with the highest standard of Republican loyalty to enact them separately, it becomes revolution to enact them. both together! L Mr. Garfield has knocked the props from beneath his party. He has, in one frank admission, answered his own elaborate speech of the 29th ult., and all the speeches of his eopartisans on this subject. He has furnished a complete justification of the policy of the majority, and left Mr. Hayes no decent pretext for vetoing the Appropriation bill in the shape the- House is about to pass it.—S¢. Louts Republican.
s New Greenbacks. i A_Washinfton dispatch says there is good ground for saying that a genuine case has already been made wup that will involve the whole issue of the right of the Government to putout new legal-tender notes in time of peace. A citizen of Connecticut, owing $5,000 to a citizen of New York, tenders in payment new Greenbacks reissued since the Ist of last January, after having ‘been once redeemed. The New York creditor refuses to receive them in satisfaction of the debt, en the ground that they are issued in violation of the Constitution, and are, therefore, not lawful money. He will bring a suit in the United States Circuit Court in Con-. necticut for the collection of the debt, and the debtor will set up as his defense the tender of the new Greenbacks and their refusal. This, it is believed, will make a perfect test case. It is thought the case will be tried in April before U. S. Jud%‘e;Blatchford,' of New. York, and from his decision, whatever it may be, appealed to the Supreme Court at Washington, where it ¢an he heard and decided before the close of the present year. Not doubting that the matter will be put through according to programme, we consider it not out of place to say something as to the probable consequences of the decision of the Court resversing its last ruling on the financial, commerecial and industrial interests of the country. e - Suppose the Supreme Court shall reverse its decision in the case of Knox against Lee, and rule that the Government has not the right, in time of peace, to issue legal-tender notes money, nor the right to reissue sugfl notes after havingonceredeemed them, what would follow? .
The decision would be a proclamation from the highest judicial tribunal in the land that legal-tender notes are no longer money, and that no creditor can be compelled to receive them from his debtor. Every 'inferior judicial Court would follow that ruling: = The dccisiop would be equivalent to, as be-
tween debtor and cre@itor, withdrawing from circulation two hundred millions of gold. Gold would suddenly appreciate. The debtor would be cut off from one-half his resource to obtain the money his creditor has the right to demand. o ; The Greenbacks would rapidly follow. The National Banks would no longer have an interest in receiving the emasculated notes on deposit, or in payment of discounted paper, or bills sent them for collection. The banks would Jo that, not only for self-protec-tion, but to drive the Greenbacks out of existence, so as to secure the whole field of circulation to themselves. The Government and the banks would be run for gold, and, both be compelled to suspend. Currency would become scarce and gold .be hoarded. The Government would be taking in its notes all the time without the authority to reissue, and the bauks, as a matter of selt-protection, would withdraw, as rapidly as possible, their notes from circulation. The contraction of the currency, under these circumstances, would be unendurable, and the country would again be compelled to gothrough the horrors of hard times, ruin and bankruptcy. ! The New York Financial Chronicle does not see why such sad consequences should follow, because (1) the Court would simply and only decide that these notes are not legal tender for private debts, leaving them %o circulate as common currency; and (2) because the banks are not required to keep up their reserves in legal-tender notes, but in ¢ United States notes,”’ which the Greenbacks will continue to be with the legal-tender quality eliminated. : >
The first suggestion made by the - Chronicle is based on the fact that “¢the notes now. circulate and are valued, because they are exchangeable into gold. * * * No one isin the least influenced to take them at par with gold because they are tenders for private debts.”” But how long would those considerations have influence when it should become a fact that twothirds of the legal tender of the country had become demonetized, thereby increaging the market value of the third that was left; for the Government would be unable to redeem more than one-third, and would then be compelled to suspend. Make gold onefourth or one-bhalf per cent. dearer than at present, and the Government would very soon be compelled to suspend redeeming its notes. Nor is the statement of the Chronicle correct in its full sense. 'No debtor can get gold for United States notes, should his creditor demand the gold, without going to New York for it, or procuring it from there -by an agent. Resumption is, therefore, now much of a humbug, and the notes now circulate and are valued to an appreciable extent because of their legal-tender quality. - > And the second suggestion of the Chronicle, that the banks are not required to keep their reserves in legaltender notés, seems to be based by it on the puwmctuation of the following section of the law: % "*“BEC. 8588. United States notes shall be lawful money, and a legal tender in payment of. all debts, public and private, within the Unitea States, except for duties on imports and interest on the public debt.” ¥ Every law we have seen on the subject has no comma between ¢¢lawful money and a legal tender,” but, as every lawyer knows, C(‘)urtgsq\.re not governed by the punctuation of a statute, but by its plain import and sense. The bank reserves are required to be ‘“in lawful money of the United States.”” But the lawful money of the United States, when the Bank law was passed, was legal tender; and if the law shall be changed by a decision of the Court, Congress would be called upon, by a sense of public interest, to require ‘the bank reserves to be legal tender. And that legal tender would have to be specie, which would require the banks to demand of the Treasury specie in exchange for their reserves. And the 'banks, 'further to protect themselves, would be compelled to curtail their discounts ana: withdraw their notes from circulation; for, in the financial disturbance that would follow, the banks could not expect to remain unaffected.— Ctncinnate Enquirer.
A Joke at the Bay State Capital. SENATOR KNOWLTON, of ißristol, is a forgetful man, even to depositing his kat and-coat in sundry unremembered places. He has often lost a train by having to delay to find his garments. A few days ago he drépped his Old Colony Railroad pass!in:the room of the Committee on Railroads, of which he is a member. The other members of this pass-laden committee thoughtto have a joxe at the Bristol Senator’s expense. So they cooked up a. letter to Senator Knowlton, inclosing the pass, and signed by ‘¢ President Choate’’ of the Old Colony. The letter informed Senator Knowlton that the pass had been returned to the writer (President Choate) by a pawnbroker who had been refunded the money advanced upon the pass. The letter then admonished Senator Knowlton, if he wanted money hereafter, to apply to the corporation, and not to pawn his pass. A messen%er handed the letter to the Bristol Senator, who was mightily cut pin consequence. Down he sat and wrote a note to Att'y-Gen. Marston, who is clerk of the Old Colony, asking him to refund the money President Choate had paid the pawnbroker, and inclosing the pass. The Senator indignantly denied that he was ¢‘any such a man’’ as to pawn his railroad pass.. The Attorney-General received the letter of his Senatorial friend, and sat himself down and wrote to President Choate, giving Sengtor Knowlton the highest possible recommendation for honesty and all entlemanly qualities. President %hoate’s turn to be astonished now came. . He wrote a letter to the Attor-ney-General, expressing . his perfect confidence in Senator Knowlton. Next the Old Coleny President came up to the State-Homse to inguire what all this -meant. He was told that the whole thindg was a huge joke. All the correspondence is now fin the Bristol Senator’s pocket. His pass was also returned.—Boston Herald.
—Did you ever hear a carpenter plaue the piano?—Graphic, :
FACTS AND FIGURES. ~ THE peanut erop of North Carolina is short 40,000 bushels. ey Nara County, Cal., produced 2,100,600 gallons of wine last year. LAsT year 18,322 immigrants settled in Canada, and the Immigration Department spent $177,045. A RECENT census shows that Portland, Ore., has 17,225 inhabitants, and that 1,832 of them are Chinese. : THE coal industry of Pennsylvania has reached enormous proportions, the annual product being valued at $50,BOSTON has. 41,527 dwelling-houses, and all but 1,512 now have occupants. The whole number of buildings’in the city is 50,603. - ; THE weight of the 1878 wool clip of Oregon is said to have been 6,580,000 pounds—l,soo,ooo more than that of the previous year. ‘ THERE were 147,663 emigrants from Great Britain and Ireland last year, an increase of 27,692 over 1877. Of this number 54,694 came to the United States. - - e THE aggregate age of 227 persons who have died in Baltimore since Jan. 1, i 8 17,851 years—an average of about seventy-eight. One woman was 109 years old. ‘ . THE manufactures of the State of New Hampshire amounted to over $96,000,000 last year, among them being $30,588,200 worth of cotton goods, $11,706,000 of boots and shoes and $9,222,000 of woolens. :
Joun FiINNEL, of Tehama County, Cal., owns a ranch containing 10,000 acres. He recently leased a ranch in Colusa County containing 200,000 acres. The two ranches border on the Sacramento River for thirty-two miles. SOMEBODY has taken pains to hunt up the average length of artists’ lives. to prove that they live longer than .do other folks. Of 1,112, theredied under 60 years old 474; 60 years and under 70, 259; 70-years and under 80, 243; 80 years and under 90, 134; 90 years and under 100, 19; above 100, 1, the mean age at death of the whole number being 55 years. : : - In the last seven years the amount spent in drink by the population of the United Kingdom is estimated at over £800,000,000, or more than the whole revenue of the Kingdom for the last ten years. In spite of what are called “hard times’’ we find that the power of the British drinking, public, in beer Frigcipally, has increased during the last couple of years by £2,000,000 sterling! The returns show a falling off in in wine; so it is the ‘¢ people’’ who are the drinkers.— Exchange. : L A WASHINGTON correspondent ascertains that professions of the members of the present Congress-are as'follows: Lawyers........ .....241 Professional officeMerchanta;. ... ...« 241 holders ... .Ti . 2 8anker5.............. 121Miner5..,............" 2 Farmers..... ... .0 16 oarpenter:. .. ... v 1 Edit0r5............... 10/Stone-cutter.......... 1 Manufacturers......: 9/Mi1er....... .......: 1 Doctdrs. =ol il IBnrYeYop. Ll e Rai1r0ader5.......... S‘Live-stockdealer.... 1 Teacher 5.......:..... B|Ticketagent......... 1 C1ergymeu........... 2/Without regular ocInsurance men....... 2' cupati0n........... 18 Lumber dealers..... 2! |
Automatic Maechinery.
~IN our issue of the 15th ult., we were enabled to give particulars respecting some newly-invented machinery now in operation. at the Oak Mills, near Low Moor, in the immediate vicinity of Bradford. The most importantpart of the announcement was that the machinery had been constructed to run all night without attendance or supervision, and was actually doing so, producing the whole time, and with unfailing regularity, a variety of articles for which the mills are so well known. The statement was very naturally regardéd by many persons as a hoax. If correct it would bring about, they said, a complete revolution in the art of manufacturing; but it could not possibly be true, and there was no use in discussing the matter. We are now able to bear personal testimony to the accuracy of the announcement. We have visited the Oak Mills by night, in company with Mr. Binns and a friend. The building itself was in darkness, but we could hear the rumble of machinery as we approached. The door was unlocked and a couple of candles were' lighted. By the dim light we saw the machines all at work, and passing from one: to another we noted also what they were producing. There was no possibility of deception and no room for doubt. We were not there to examine the construction of the machinery; if was sufficient to be able to verify the main faet, which 18— that when the working hours at the mills are over the lights are put -out, the buildin% is locked up, and the machines are left working all through the night, producing large quantities of beautiful articles in great variety of pattern in silk, cotton and wool. Coming out of the mills and locking the doors behind us we next visited the en-gine-room, which is in -an adjoining building, completely eut off from the mills, and communicating with them only by a hole in the wall, throuih which the driving-wheel passes. The engine and boiler requiring attention throughout the twenty-four hours, the engineer is relieved by a night attendant, who takes his place at the close of the day.—London Warehouseman and Draper’s Journal. : ,
~—*When do you intend to go back, Mike?’ asked one exile of another. «If I live till I doye, and God knows whether I will or not, I intend to visit ould Ireland onee more before I lave this country.”’ ; :
—You can’t catch the diphtheria kissing a girl eighteen years old.— Syracuse Sunday Times. . S — View of Marriage ! : G A Guide to w?d'gk and W ,D ,M A N confidential Treatise on the duties of marriage and the e causes that unfit for its the se~ il S N l ) =" crets of B,oproducti‘on and = ==t‘--;==ln e the Diseases of Women. A book for private, consid« VYR VAN E] Hernte eaing 260 paies, brice On s Saoriins ot o A{vato Mavule atisng Hom Sels Ab“”’rmfi"fzeq'xh or aßeorot lr)iu%?):?. with the best 118 Of cu ages, e L INTUAL LECTURE on the above diseases and those of the Throatand Lungs, Catarrh,Rupture, the (])Lphun Habit,&c., price 10 cta. : ither book sent pos%nid on reeeipt of price; or all three, eontuinlnbmn ggéen&' enutlfu'll%ill&gmted. for 75 cts, Address DR. BUTTS, NO. 12 N. Btb B¢. Bt. Liouis, Ma
THE BETTER WAY. 4 % % 5 it 5 . - ey . . VR 5 i 5 s 3 v 3 o i R ' " AND ITS AUXILIARIES. K ! ' ¥ S e w AT e ot : S b : Absorption Medicated Foot Bath, They cure by absorption rather than drugging the fistem. %hey have I?roven beyond peradventure the sheapest, the most pleasant, convenient, surest and ' most satisfactory curative, also permanent and thoryugh systqm-reg;ulator_ in.the world, and are_ applicaole to the infant, youth and adult of both sexes, Ex: oerience has led to an honest belief that there is nc lisease that can be kept.in subjection, or that can be nodified, by.the use of medicine, but that can be: icted upon in a far more satistnctory manner b{i the HOLMAN REMEDIES (the; Pad, Plasters and Medicated Foot:Baths, known as absorption salt). It is al. 30 believed that there is NO disease that medicine >an cure but that can be cured more Promgtly and sffectually b% this treatment. Certain it is that times without number, digeases universally ackm')wled%ed seyond the reach of medicine have melted away undex ‘he action ALONE of these remedies, And the work ~as done so %nickly, with so little inconvenience te :he patient, that in many cases the pain wag gone belore he or s’he wasaware. More than a million wit. aesses.bear testimony to these statements. These are 10 idle words or misrepresentations, but are suscepible of groof_. In the name of humanity try them. The fo lowmg are some of the many disegses the LIVER PAD CO. remedies will cuire :— o fever and Ague, Kidney Trubles, 3illious Disorder, Irregular Action of the Jver Complaint, Heart, ! i ntermittent Fever, - Rheumatism Periodical Headaches, Allkindsof Female WeakDyspegsia, . nesses, - ! Agie Cake, -Sick Headache, ;2hill Fever, Lumbago, Sciatica, = ‘Jumb Ague, Pain!in Side, Back, Stom. 3illious and every kind of - fi(:b' Shoulders and Feveér, v . Muscles. Diarrhcea, Catarrh, [ Lassitude faundice, Neuralgia, | Billious Colic. = . All these have their origin, directly or indirectly, nthe Stomach and Liver. If you doubt it send -for Ory Fairchild’s Lectures. ; 2 Price, $2. Special Pad, 3. The Holman Plasters, Toot, by the pair, 50 cents; Body, 50 cents each. Medcated Foot Baths, 25 cents a package; six packages; a. 25. It fiyour druggist does not keep them, send yrice, either the money, postal order or registered etter, and all will be sent you by mail, free 6f charge ixcept the salt, which is sent .by express at the exixpense of the purchaser.. ° = ’lphe following communications explain I;the selves: S -CAMBRIBGE, ILL. flessrs. Bates & Hanley: P I have heen wedring'one ot the Holman Pads. It has elieved me from complaints of lo"? standing; iinroved mly health wonderfully, and I feel like a new voman. I would like to act as your agent in tbxsm}{, md by so doing I hélieve I would earry happiness to tundreds of families, Yours truly, . | : e Mzs. C. N. CarTe® 3 AUrORA, Trur., May Ist, 1878. Gentlemen: I have been & great snfferer with ienraligia in the stomach, and also with dumb ag. < i..7ing spent thousands of dollars to get cared, Daq ill to no purpose,‘until about.the Ist of March fast vs3induced to try oné of Holmans Pads, which has 1, aaly cured me, and I am now engaged in senm,; &se Pynds. and doijn‘f:' all I°can‘to spread the %‘t--. v2ws of thiscure andinduce ctherstotryit. 8. G . = 4 - Proria, Inv, June 1, 128578, Bates & Hanley: - . i - purchaséd-one ot your Holman Pads for both my vife and mother, who were suffering with Billiousness, Jonstipation and gyspepsxa. * The-Pad has completely s.red them. Yours, J. WHEEIER. - -+ Peorir, (Itn.,) Transcript. Address either of the follow:ng-offices: : 134 Madison St.. Chicago, 111, Mechanics Block, Detroit, Mich, .. Hall Block, Toiedo Ohio, . ¢lB Millwaukee St Millwaukee, Wis, %fl;t's Block. Minn=apolis, Minn. & RATYS & ELANYLEY, Agents for the JOPIT i~y ; S 3 i : : *f
. W » : ’ 9’ Q{ £ G i by ¢ VIBRATOR’ ~> = . Reg.March3l, : : § 1874, T ;. - ¢¢Vibrator” Threshers, WITH IMPROVED i MOUNTED HORSE POWERS, 9 And Steam Thresher Engines, g Made only by - S NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO., BATTLE CREEK, MICH. i 83 20 LRath T o % - ,—n—’?:z%':“@“t‘x L 4 : \ T W*‘L‘L b [’l:w—,flm”‘" o, \SEag i Temln T eL) 0 e L R N ~-|“ \ AR - G %@LE,{«\_‘-: =2y et enl\Dl o == e ::,-'.‘A“—::;:fi?-.ni‘:-;‘:]:;—“’('h' e Q e i THE Matchless Grain-Saving, Times Saving, and Money-Saving Threshers of this day and generations, Beyond all Rivalry for Rapid Work, Pere foct Cleaning, and for Saving Grain from Wastage, . RAIN Raisers will not Submit to the enormous wastage of Grain & the inferior work done by the otksr machines, when once posted on the difference, TH‘E ENTIRE Threshing Expenses . (and often 3 to 5 Times that amount)can bLe made by ® the Exira Grain SAVED by these Improved Machines, O Revolving Shafts Inside the Separator, Entirely free from Beaters, Pickers, Raddles, and all such time-wasting and grnin'-w,satlng complications, Perfecily adapted to all Kinds and Condition's.of Grain, Wet or Dry, Long or Short, Headed or Bound. ; OT only Vastly Superior for Wheat, QOats, Barley, Rye,;and like Grains, but the oNLY Suc- " cossful Thresher fn Flax, Timothy, Millst, Clover, and like Seeds, ~ Requires mo nuchm‘enul" or ‘“‘rebuilding to change from @rain to Seeds. 3 MARVELOUS for{Sirfiplic’ltiv‘ of Parts, using less than one-half the usual Its and Gears,. Makes no Litterings or Scatterings. 4 : OUR Sizes of Separators Made, ranging from Bik to Twelve Horse sizeé, and two styles of Mouuted Horse Powers to match. Bl ‘ TEARM Power Threshers a Specialty. A special size Separator made expressly for Steam Po\‘fu. UR Unrivaled Steam Thresher Engines, with Yaluable Improvemerts and Distinctive ® Features, far beyond any other make or Kind. . a N Thorough Workmanship, Elegant inish, Perfection of Parts, Completeness of Equipment, etc., our “‘VisraTon" Thresher Outflis are Incomparable, OR Particulars, call on our Dealers or write to us for muun’tod Olg;mgr, which we mailiree,
Sick Headache 9] Positively Cured by ! B . - these Little Pills. ‘They also relieve : s - | Distress from Dyspepo l ~ ¥sia,” Indigestion and TTLE Too Hearty Eating. bt p A perfect remedy for =M IVER (= Naases, - + ¢ rowsiness, a. e = P ' Lls in the Mouth, Coated < S 'a | Tongue, .Pain in the F i I - .{4 Bide, &c. They regulate the Bowels and ] . prevent Constipation - =l and Piles. The smallest and:easiest to m%e. Only one lpm 2 .dose. 40 in a vial. P_ure]{ egetable, Price 25 cents. sold by all Druggists. g : CARTER MEDICINE CO., Prop'rs, Erle, Pa. Five Vialé by mail for ona dollar,
Dr.A Qs i b S ettt i oty 1 s va resul m early abuses or infection of either Sex. sem_hiln-l \s’ ness {fodnd x fiml-iom. hu'ofumrfi, sed Sight, l.o: snhood or Impotency, Nervous_ Deb s permas nently cured ; diseases of the hlld%‘h Liven, ungs, Asthms, Catarch, Piles, all Chronic Diseases, and DIS~ ASES OF FEMALES, yleld to bis Dr. Olln had a life-long ex?erhnu, indwz.whuio‘hn fail. He fiaa graduate of the Reformed School, tses no mercury, bas the hfim practica in the U, S. LADIES "fi'}' treatment with private home and board, callor write. ery convenience for Patients. Send fifty cents for sample of, Rflhbifio«h and cle~ cular of important information by expres. DR, @LIN’S Female Pills, $5 per Box. = Consuliation free. - : MARRTAGE GUIDE mess.tess oun; A a T S e Bt S e e s nun’o. How to be healthy and truly myh the married reletion, Everybody siould el this books Price 80 canky, 0 any ad~
