Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 12, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 July 1879 — Page 7
USEFUL AND SUGGESTIVE. . IF you have a man you can’t trust, turn him off at once. There are plenty of good men in the country, if you use them right. No man can work cheerfully and contentedly with the eye of suspicion on him. Your men must feel that you have confidence in them, to bring out their best efforts.—Jlowa State Register. . : . It should not be forgotten, says the American . Cullivator, that powdered white hellebore is the pest remedy that can be used for the destructive rose slug. Dissolve one-eighth of a pound in a bucket of water, and apply with a %'arden syringe. It will clean the foiage and give the leaves a green, healthy appearance. ;
A CORRESPONDENT writes to the Germantown Telegraph to say that his observation and “experience are that thousands of -fowls die annually of cholera from neglect. He_ thus gives hiS'Yrevent;ion: ‘I never overstock my poultry house. 1 always keep their quarters clean and sweet. I use plenty of lime and keep them well supplied with pure fresh water. I feed them morning, noon and evening at regular hours with a variety of wholesome food. A little fresh lime in their water is very good during the summer months, 'but you must not forget to clean the poultry-house évery week.” “PRACTICAL RECIPES” says that string beans cun be prepared for winter use in this manner: "Strin% the beans, but do not break them. ut them on the fire with cold water, and allow them to come to a boil. Take them off, put them in a market basket, and let them " drain until the next day. Make a brine of the water in which they were boiled, strong enough to bear an egg. Tie the leaves in a muslin bag, put them in a- jar, and pour the brine over them. Put a weight on, and set them away. When used, change the water in which. they are boiled, and if not used untillate in winter, soak them over night. - ‘ o THERE are many farmers who cannot, or think they cannot, aflord to sink a cistern or well at the barn.. Leaders and gutters could be placed along theroofs so arranged as to precipitate the | water into barrels placed below. The frequent showers and rain-storms- of‘ spring and summer would furnish water for the cattle during those'sea—l sons, at least. Much labor of carrying: water would -thus be prevented ata very small cost. The following estimate of the amount of water which falls on roofs may induce some farmer to try our suggestion. Three feet of rain per annum--the average quantity over the whole country—gives seventytwo barrels for each space of ten feet square. A barn thirty by sixty feet yields from its roof each year 650 hogsheads of rain water.—N. Y. Herald.
- The Water Supply of Farms. THE great majority of farms in the West are poorly supplied with water. Many farms that contain 160 acres of land have no spring, no running stream and but a single well. This well, which is generally quite near tke house, affords all the water for the family and the stock, whether the latter is kept in the stable or pasture. The animals are allowed a drink once in the morning and once at night. That they often suffer greatly from thirst during the long, hot days of summer is apparent from the eagerness with which they seek the watering-trough at night.. -With an abundant supply of water within a convenient distance, domestic animals: will drink as many times during the day us men do. By denying animals water, except at long intervals, they may become accustomed to it, but they will thrive poorly, nevertheless. The beneficent effects of having an abundant supply of good water within easy reach is well illustrated in the case of dairy cows. All intelligent dairymen are aware of the fact that it is as necessary to be careful of the supply of water as of food. They select farms that naturally afford not only rich food, but pure water. ' They know the money value of springs and the streams that 'issue from them. They have learned by experience that the yield of milk falls off with the decline in the supply of water. They would. not expect cows to give a very large amount of milk if they were allowed water only at milking times. The best dairymen aim to have a constant supply of pure, cold water in the pastures where cows feed during the day, and in the yards where they rest at-night. Cattle on the plains of South America, Texas and Colorado, where water is' so scarce that they often have to travel miles to obtain it, give very little milk, and the milking period extends through only a few months in the year. In regions where there are many springs .and streams, however, the vield of anilk is large and of long continuance. Young cattle and those in-, tended for beef grow poorly when kept in pastures where there is a poor supply of water, or where, as is often the case, they are let out of the pasture once a day for the purpose of quenching their thirst. If cattle are allowed -water only once or twice a day they will drink excessively. when they get a chance, and this is highly injurious. They should be permitted to Xartake of water whenever their wants demand it, and not when it suits the convenience of their owners to give it to them. . A large pasture should have ‘water available for the use of stock in more than one place. If cattle are obliged to walk from half a mile to a mile to procure water they will not drink as oli)ten as their needs require. If cattle intended for beef walk that distance every time they want water. they cannot be expected to gain flesh very rapidly. Cattle, no less than men, are fatigued by traveling long distances during the hot days of summer. There shoulg not only be a constant supply of water in a pasture, but it should be within a convenient . distance of where the stock feed. Wa.lkin‘g long distances is unfavorable to lay :} on fat or the Production of milk, and cattle are kept for one or the other of these objects. The time of cattle may not be very valuable, but it is worth toe much to spend in making long journeys to a spring or water-ini-ttough. L ~ Farmers do not ordinarily derive the benefit' they might -from the springs
that erist on these farms. In the majority of cases they do little to improve them, and rarely convey any portion of the water they afford to distant portions of | their farms. = By the means of a common lead pipe, which is now very cheap, aniron gas-pipe or even a wooden tube, a portion of the water may be carried to places where it will be of %rea.t 'advantage in supplying stock. n many farms water may be obtained from wells at very small trouble or expense., Little skill and no costly machinery is required to dig and wall up a shallow well, while a wooden pump may now be obtained at a very small cost. Any person can put down a drive-well, and if it is only wanted for ‘a single season it will pay for itself in that time. When no longer wanted in | the place where it was put down it may be removed to anothsr pasture,—PFroJfessor Welch, in Chicago Ttmes. I
' - The Utility of Soot. How disagreeable it is to be covered with spot, and what a quantity of the filthy stuff is yearly dumped into out--of-the-way corners and holes. The writer has spent four-fifths of his life in and about gardens. During those -years he has been compelled to fight insects—many of them very small and others large—and this ‘‘nasty soot’’ has been one of the best aids in overcoming the myriads of insects that attack plants in a state of cultivation. ' He once lived on a place that lay on the edge of a marsh, or large tract of bogland; and such a location is always favorable for insects. Nothing in the way of cabbage could be grown there successfully without the aid of soot; no densel‘g crowded heads of snowy-white cauliffiower would have graced the owner’s table if soot had not been freely used. All the stirring of the soil -and manuring that could be done would not avail to produce a fair crop. Soot was first sprinkled over the ground before the seeds were sown, then worked into the soil; and after the seedlings had made their second or proper leaves advantage was taken of a dewy morning to cover them with a light sprinkling of soot. Then -when the young plants were transplanted they were dipped into a paint composed of equal parts of soot and soil, mixed up with water, or, what is better still, soapsuds, until the whole was like thin paint. Into -this handfuls of plants were placed, so that they were covered up to their first ,leaves, and even partly covering them. After doing this, there was little or no trouble in producing cabbage, caulifiowers, or any of their brothers—such as Savoys, Brussels sprouts, or the curled kale of Aberdeen —fit for any piece of humanity, from a Prince to a beggar. : ; ! Soot is one of the best friends that a gardener or farmer has, and, if he permits an ounce of it to be thrown away, he is casting away hisown wealth. It will not kill the wire-worm or annihilate troublesome insects; but it will make it very annoying for them to be compelled to eat through it before they can get at the nice, succulent vegetables. If soot is first sown pretty thickly over the soil where onions, carrots and other root creps are to be grown, and then worked in, so as not to come in contact with the seed when it i sown, there is no fear of losing a crop by the ravages of maggots, wireworms, and other pests. Here in Western America we complain of insects, while we throw away that which would drive them to seek their food in some. other place. The roller fly or moth comes regularly every May to disfigure our rose-bushes, often making ‘them appear as if they had been burned by & hot|/sun; when, if the bushes had been dampened and soot put on them in the first weeks in May, and once a week, the roller fly would have been missi[jlg. Should any leaves have missed a coat of soot, look them over about five or six o’clock in the evening, and this insect may be easily seen an the top of the leaf, where it has gone to feed during the night; while in the day time it lays quietly underneath, to shade itself from the sun. :
The farmers of England are great soot users, and it -is’ no uncommon thing to see a whole train of soot leaving the towns for the farms and gardens at a distance. The turnip crop of England would be a failure each year were it not for soot, and this is a very important crop in many districts. After they get into the second leaf the soot begins to fly; or if not a small fly takes possession of the young, tender leaves, and leaves the farmer nothing for his labor. : G Soot is not only a good thing to drive away insects; but is also a powerful stimulant:: The ammonia it contains readily. mixes with whatever moisture comes in contact with it, and makes the plants feel good, so. to speak. The carbon and sulpurous geses in it also add their share to the health of the piant. Therefore, kind friends; don’t waste your soot. Store it as you would gold, for it is quite as valuable in the economy of life.—A4n Old Gardener, in Vick's Illustrated Magazine. ‘
A A Plucky Couple. SATURDAY a novel-looking craft hove into this port, which at once created great curiosity. It was a small, twowheeled cart, in which were a child two years old, a couple of sheets and a few cooking utensils. This was the complete outtit of a family of emigrants from Pennsylvania to Leadville. After thirteen years of toil in the mines of Pennsylvania, with scare sufficient to keep soul and body together, Peter Carline, aged forty-five, and his wife, aged thirty-seven, decided to try their fortune in the West. They could do no worse, poasibly better. Accordingly, on the 13th day of April last, with a small hand-cart, in which they placed their little girl and a few cookin&, utensils, Jhey started on foot from Wilkesbarre, with fifty-three cents as the total of cash on hand. At a rate of flfteen or twenty miles a day they have been trudging along, camping at night qunder a couple of sheets, supplying their hung‘er by the- generosity of the }Jeopie. - The little cart, like the felow’s jack-knife, after having severa new wheels, boxes and tongues, is good as new, while the family are in perfect health, and not greatly fatigued from their Jong walk, and well but
kglainly dressed. Theystarted for the Black Hills, but have changed their minds and will , push for Leadville, where the plucky couple believe they can get a living at least, and solve the labor problem, so far as they are concerned, without the intervention of politicians. He says there are thousands of miners ‘¢ back there’’ who would get away if they could, but théy have not the pluck to start on foot nor means to go otherwise.—Des Moines (lowa) Cor. Chicago Journal. : :
How Mourning Dresses Are Made. - THE furnishing stores keep cases filled with mourning dresses, partly made, that can be fitted and finished within twenty-four hours after they !are ordered. These are nearly all of | Henrietta cloth, as this is usually the ’fa,bric of the first mourning dress, no matter what is the season of the year; it is also suitable for- both deep mourning and light mourning, as the crape trimming or the absence of crape makes the distinction. The style of this tirSt dress is a basque, a deep long round over-skirt handsomely draped, and a skirt of the desired length. Widows’ mourning cannot be too deep or too plain, hence the skirt of the Henrietta cloth dress is covered with crape eighteen or twenty inches deep, or higher still if the over-skirt is short, as the object is to conceal all the visible part of the lower skirt with erape. This crape is shaped like the gores of the skirt, ‘having seams on the cloth' seams, and is turned under the edge of the skirt, and hemmed up two inches on the wrong side like a facing. The long over-skirt has a bias band of crape five or six inches wide, lined with foundation muslin; this is lighter and therefore better than a double fold of the crape. A crape collar, cuffs and border are prepared for the basque, to be put on when the garment has been fitted, and in many cases there is'a crape vest, or else the whole basque is covered with crape.: Dresses not intended for widows are less plainly trimmed; for instance, there is a knifepleating of the Henrietta cloth three inches wide at the foot of the-skirt, above which is a hias crape band twelve inches wide. : For young ladies the skirts have two narrower crape folds lapping on a pleating of the material, or else there are three knife-pleatings, each headed by a wide. bias fold of the material merely piped with crape. These are the dresses worn “at the funeral and immediately’ afterward. There is no fixed rule for the length of time this deep mourning is worn; by some families it is worn a year, by others six months, and by some only three months. There is, however, a tendency to wearing crapetrimmed dresses a shorter time than was formerly done; this is especially true in large families where mourning dress is worn for all relatives, even those most remote. Crape is found to be so unwholesome that it is soon abandoned for trimmings of the dress goods made into fine knife-pleatings or else bias folds. Other mourning dresses follow the designs used for colored dresses. For instance, a' bombazine short suit has the front breadth covered with crape from belt -to foot, and the other breadths untrimmed. A curtain over-skirt with wide crape border slopes open to show all the crape front breadth, and is draped twice behind in close clusters of pleats. The short basque has a crape vest, crape sleeves and a very wide folded crape belt in the front. Pleated front and side breadths are especially liked for skirts of mourning dresses. Nice bunting dresses, such as that called Bayonnaise, have the narrow religieuse pleats from belt to toe down front and sides, with a bias crape band three inches wide set across near the foot; other-skirts have from five to eight wide box pleats their entire length in front; these pleats are separated by a spacée of their own width; regular kilt skirts pleated all around have a broad box pleat down the middle of the front, trimmed with bias erape or with crape bows or rosettes. A silk skirt made as plain as a petticoat,” with or without - a pleated border, is useful to wear beneath several dresses, and thus economize silk linings. The plan' of trimming the lower silk skirt with the over-skirt and flounces is not liked for mourning, unless the dullest silk or ‘fine foulard is used for the lower skirt. Sewing-silk grenadines and iron grenadine basques have surplice drapery of English crape in folds on the bosom, meeting a wide belt of crape folds. Fine black buntings and sea-side grenadines for young ladies have the vest or surplice drapery made of shirred twilled foulard that rounds away on the hips in panier fashion. Some bunting - over-dresses are merely hemmed, others are stitched by machine, and others are bordered with wide Hercules braid. Bunting with narrow, lusterless strines makes nice dresses for young ladies. A very handsome black barege for deep mourning has a pompadour square of crape stopping at the top of the darts, while below this pleatings of crape descend to the edge of the basque, and spread out to form panier drapery on the hips; the sleeves are of crape, with two pleatings falling on the wrists. The skirt is pleated from the belt down on three breadths, and there is a short curved drapery following the outlines of . the crape aA§>=amnier above. Collars of crape are made to turn over or else to stand-erect on ‘all these dresses. Surplice pleatings of crepe lisse are put inside the open pompudour neck, which is seen on lusterless silk dresses. There are then both black and white isse pleatings around the neck. Silk dresses are not worn in the street, while crape trimmings are retained;: trained dresses of silk are used on oc. casions when the wearer goes into society, and these are trimmed with panels of crape, or else there is a short crape aprom, with lengthwise crape box pleats trimming the front and sides; the back breadths form a long flowing train that is not trimmed. Similar designs are used for the ir_e’nadine dresses that are made for the house and carri&ge' wear. Overskirts of barege or of fine bunting are draped by one or two lengthwise clusters of shirring on each sig’e quite high on the ‘Thips. fi‘he MarFuerite&‘)olonaise, once so popular, is also used for mourning dresses, as its soft festooned drapery ‘caught up in only two places bqhindrgj
very appropriate for rich, blagk woolen goods. For the house, cool morning dresses are made of black foulard silk, with ° small white figures. These are all in one, from heag to foot, and have narrow pleatings down the back and front; there is then a separate front that laps on this pleating, and the waist is confined by a gros grain ribbon that is tied on the side.—Harper's Bazar. ; —London 7ruth thinks the Swedes are more like Englishmen than any other people in the world. » + —Negroes are said to be less liable to color-blindness than whites.:
o .. Truth is Mighty. ~ As the little Jeaven hid in the measure of meal, made all leaven, so truth gradually overcomes all doubt and disbelief. When Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., announced that his Favorite Prescription would positively cure the many diseases and weaknesses peculiat to women, some doubted, and continued to employ the harsh and , caustic local treatment. But the mighty truth gradually became ac‘knowledged. Thousands of ladies who had uselessly undergone untold tortures at the ‘hands of different physicians, emplgyed the Favorite Prescription and were speedily cured. Many physicians now prescribe it in their practice. So sanguine is Dr. Pierce of its power to cure, that he .now sells it through druggists under a positive guarantee. Frece—3l Portraits—Free. National Life is the title of a new Pamphlet of 72 pages. It contains the biography of all the Presijdents of the United States, from Washington.to Hayes with their portraits (19 in all,) engraved expressly for this work; alsa 12 portraits of Canadian notabilities. National Ei fe will be sent to any address, by mail, on receipt of 3cstamp. Hni:l STEVENS, Boston, Mass. - WE congratulate Messrs. Wheelock, Finlay & Co., of New Orleans, La., upon their happy idea of giving to the public information of the contents of Dr. F. Wilhoft’s Anti-Periodic or Fever and Ague Tonic, which of late has gained such well-deserved popularity among thg people. -As far as we know, this is the oLy Eroprletary remedy for the cure of Chills and Fever, the composition of which is not kept a secret. * For sale by all Druggists. - GILBERT'S CORN STARCH—manufactured at Buffalo, N. Y.—is the most economical starch in the world. Why? Because, being pure, less is required for household purpaoses. It possesses a delicacy of flavor hitherto unknown in any other starch. : - LApiEs all know what a nuisance it is to have their yeast fail to *‘come up.’? National Yeast never fails. Try it. : -
~ Cmew Jackson’s Best Sweet Nayy Tobacco. H 0 CELMBRATED R S by » A NG o [ o NS . : Y v AN\ = E= oW ¥ (O 8 Nl . = S (b M S iz §‘°e;—?; S gl A G NG 2 s B SN W= S S W TS et N\ Wi R Y Eany f"’,:i‘f‘\*“"-;/;%’% S| L T2k 3 e = B &!%:%??%%\ % W/”}'l'/’ 1 6’;‘ }// 2 =RS Tl =), e eNN e et o AT g asz_;x&“z:"«é ”"Q, IO LR I\ U g2l it Rl o, b ISR~ R O/ " : el B o NG =) =3 g-:'r‘,*_ ;?sf’ef}sag‘,’fi} : - R SIPRLS)IS NN B l STOMACH ; S ‘The wear and tear of business life makes such tremendous drafts upon body and mind that without recourse to some sustaining agent they must give way under the pressure. 7To those who are breaking down, or wasting away from general debility or affections of the liver, stomach and kidneys, a systeimatic course of the Bitters will se reinforce the vital functions as to bafte all the assaults of disease and restore the system to its wouted health. i . ' Forsale by all Druggists and respectable Dealers genBrallys ;i 2 S
- :;‘,l@;i‘ifif‘;;gfl" R ~ i R : . bl ARI e HORININ IR RN[N — = o £ R [l SRS Tk E) [ EOwORINE )NG & 2 7 i /| “xm!“ e oy PV Tfi :l%‘f‘ I]m‘- g\» + h‘.iv’{,fi H‘L-v::{""!;i”"%':'- :‘»"111 l!ll ‘1 7.,;[ SIS TR BRUESSEESERARR i MV i R ei M El sl | AveE e G e R ALAGEER(M BRI =i\ ] y;*:' -‘;’?ll !l}ii ;1“, { '{l{'s:‘;‘,}.%"(‘;_’ e e T “'}!u I B ,!',u »”H il g | izll “M: ——————— AT Bl B RSN eil = dh /L lfi "‘:L'\ R 134 =\ i LS > R, Rl : © T ; &5 '?h]lfl\lk‘:‘lfl’f‘fiihtfihi"z‘:l.-: R S ‘.i lig ""i'fi?f’ N i s . J ;,,l] :'.-‘ '(i!mlb- "}#Q’ fl ;1 e . ol lkflzmh;!m:;mm : o/ el E / i—.{{ ,3 ‘ et )i Bt THE ADAMS & WESTLAKE Improved Wire Gauze Non-Explosive OIL STOVE.— The only Oil Stove made with wire gauze inside the res»irvmr. on the principle of the Sir Humphrey Davey Safety amp, making it absolutely non-explosive. Awarded the ?(;glé?lsfte ?re(r)mumilededaé sbt th% ‘Pi'a.tlis Exposition, in 1878, , Capacity and Durability. . Made {n four sizes, 1, 2,3 and 4 burners. Inquire of Dealers, or send for cataiogue and price-list. THE ADANS & WESTLAKE MFG. CO., - Stove Office, 100 Lake St., Chicago.
gl = et Pl il o el SRYAEEE ot e ™ lil R “!!“‘d‘“" \ s :r"""\ ‘ir,i-';'-!";"ul‘ » \(,1.“ ‘*l‘Mw“' ) /‘T\\ %! I/ 4\\ N 5 AR 11 & )\4t~-”‘ S AN W PATENT SPARK-ARRESTER. ' Ede-nicp—co=n 13 —‘l‘l. P..Mgunted. Sggg k 10' 12 4w jOOO, g kS o Send for our Circuiare. © “ '“' 350. B.W.Payne&Sons,Corning, N. Y. : ‘State where vou saw this. : D.H. LAMBERSON, SOLE WESTERN AGENT REMINGTON’'S CELEBRATED BREECH LOADING Rifles, Shot-Guns, Revolvers, CARTRIDGES, s"fx,';c.,'s’ PRIMERS, &c. (1 mmy T The " REMINGTON" SEWING MACRINES, For which an Agent is wanted In every county. Send stamp for lllustrated Catalogue. Office and Warerooms, 287 State St., Chicago, 111. ; i
TNENTET TR
e oy B T, Yt e world. In cans, 856, 65c, $1.75, WOOLRICH & CO. ' B A I N 3 MLA N N MEDIGALG GOLLEGE AND HOSPITAL. THE LARGEST AND BEST HOM®EOPATHIC cOIIE o oD, e HOYNE, M. D., 817 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111. SEE HERE 353000 iitocetor circulars and terms to M. J. McCullough, Lawrence,Kan.
b é g"- Dn cIARK( RS o&*"fifis s 2 %ogg, : Pl ; %s, W - s Y JOHNSON’S \¥ LABORATORY, ' . - T ; TT W. 3d St., New York City. et LATE OF JERSEY CITY. A . f F ou» A eS 2 e et SN <3 " BASS B o< URTA < o £ NQK 95 S@ R "\\ NN R AR \‘“g, : ] ¥ o ey gz | o)/4 - "\:\'.'r.f"' 0 o © s AR =2 &5 EMNNTR T 2 . e S J/lUN W W =23 w 3 7 /178 0 B>l t« {5 RIAN\T M - % / ",‘\/ =" S // / M e -BD - ({ % f“',‘,g 8 *\\? *‘ =4 =2 O WAL -/ = e \,‘) /’ § P S =W 1 I= =9 2 =W _ .23 D == e co WS == . R, =3 T =—Va = < o ST ="y “& ™ Sa ——Zil i = v » ==E ;H llmm"‘ = - o == :.--1-.3-' e . A s=SB =" 2 A el [TRADE-MARK. ], The Best Remedy Known to Man! Dr. Clark Johnson having associated himself with Mr. Edwin Eastman, an escaped captive, long a -slave to Wakametkla, the medicine man of the Comanches, is now prepared to lend his aid in the introduction of the wonderful remedy of that tribe. The experience of Mr. Eastman being similar to that of Mrs. Chas. Jones and son, of Washingtom County, Towa, an account of whose sufferings were thrillingly narrated in the New York Herald of Dec. 15th, 1878. the facts of which are so widely known, and so nearly parallel, that but little mention of Mr. Eastman’s ex- ) Pvrlences will be given Lere, K They are, however, pubished in a neat volume of 300. pages, éntitled *‘Seven and Nine Years ‘Among -the Comanches and Apaches,” of which mention will be made hereafter. Sufiice it.to say that for several years Mr. Eastman, while a captive, was compelled to gather the roots, gums, barks, herbs and berries of which Wakametkla’s medicine was made, and is still prepared to provide the SAME_ materials for the successtul introduction of the medicine to the world ; and assures the public that the remedy is the ;m}tt_e now as when ‘Wakametkla compelled him to make it. )
, > - 4 €& ‘ S o e ' ~ 7 Tmc , <sv = - & { . 091, AR N 14 . = &S \ / L BE = LA == & N Y s LS - Ra S\ 7,-/ %0 3 S Qé:u 3 W Uity o =5 W/l = §S W\ AW e ; Wy 3 g = 4 R 4’/—'-\’ . i : «‘(W\J"’./f i 522 “':l, =~ ",‘i‘ _.-- AL ‘ Ko g‘; (3> ~°’-'?'.'-7"’ (et s Y ~ M - AN SIS -w» D QA ‘ ""\ xf-'..-_-’:':::::'é:"n«‘&'c § A - & AN T SNTARNIN z % R Sk 1 e T TR (AN 3 A\ S RN, 2 { ‘z‘i:"' & \;.L., P X }.w’g \ Gy N A \~\~.\{s‘.‘§‘~.AT‘\ ASHUANMMNR. 2 ° AR NN # i SN \ \?fi\ \\\“\\\\ \\ A \\\\ : ¥ 3y X oAN \L" W\ \ . : b N ‘\\\\\ \ : Wakametkla, the Medicine Man, Nothing has been added to the medicine and nothing has been taken away. 1t is without doubt the Best PuRIFIER of the BLOOD and RENEWER of the SUsTEM ever known to man. 6 5 This Syrup possesses varied properties. e ] it acts upon the Liver. It acts upon -the Kidneys, . It yegulates the Bowels, Xt purifies the Blood. . 3 1t quiets the Nervous System. . . It promotes Digestion. . ; It Nourishes, sStrengthens and Invigorates, e It carries off the old blood and makes New. : Xt opens the pores of the skin, anid induces Healthy Perspiration. : It neutralizes the "hereditary taint or poison in the' blood, which generates Scrofula, Erysipelas and all manner of skin diseasés and internal humors. - “There are no spirits employed in its manafacture, and it can be taken by the most delicate babe; ar by the aged and feeble, care only being required in attention _to directionaB. S ¢ o : RN T : ‘» Y 5 R g4N A - E N qgg}g,\ Y i ~ A Ji3 oy gl SR o S PAUN S . ¥ w & NS =2 < AN SIS s = j S ARSI SN 2 = S AN l\‘ i oS : SYL : NS L - . = AN I SR (a 4 = = N\Fpwie A“i ‘:f}; 37, e 2 IS IR - & NG s §. : / \-1 ‘ w S A 8 B - = o LS R L . b A { \‘l\ S g £ _amhtea.,. 3 L TSR AN §! BOSON S 4 : g NS : Edwin Eastman in Indian Costume. SEVEN AND NINE YEARS AMONG THE' COMANCHES AND APACHES. A neat volume of 300 pages, being a simple statement of the horrible facts conneeted - with the sad massacre of a hélpless family, and the captivity, tortures and ultimate escape of - its two surviving members. For sale by our agents genarally. Price, $l.OO. : The incidents of the massacre, briefly narrated, are distributed by agents. FREE of charge. : Mr. Eastiman, being almost constantly at the West, engaged in gathering and curing the materials of which the medicine is- composed, the sole business management devolves upon Dr. Jehnson, and the remedy has been called, and is known as Dr. Clark Johnson’s i INDIAN BLOOD PURIFIER. Price of Large Bottles -.-- - $l.OO Price of Small Bottles s meee B 0 ' Read ‘the voluntary testimonials of persons who have Dbeen cured by the use of Dr. Clark Johnson’s Indian Blood Syrup in your own vicinity. S ?
- TESTIMONIALS OF CURES. Scrofula. . o : MILROY, Rush County, Ind. Deai* Sir—This I 8 to certify that I have used yeur Indian Blood Syrup for Scrofula and Milk Leg, and lam perfectly satisfied with the results. lltis the greatest blood purifier known to the public. I would advise all sufferers to give it a trial. I MRS! LOUISA J. NEWBOLD. + Neuralgia and Indigestion. QUINCY, Owen County, Ind., May 17, 1879. Dear Bir—l was a great sufferer with Neuralgia and Indigestion, causing almost continual Headache. ¥our agent persuaded me to try the valuable Imndian felfoold sglfiupf gvhicikél} dltdf t:md found immediate re- .. I would not be withou s é T : M. L. QRRELL. IR » -Cures Chills and Fever.: - WILLIAMSBURG, Wayne County, Ind. Dear Sir—This is to certify that I have used your Indian Blood Syl_'uy. in my family for Chills and Fever, and in every case it had the desired effect. My whole family was troubled with a peculiar kind of Chills, which no medicine had the slightest etfect on until we took the Syrup, which worked positive cures. : J. MULLEN. . : Sure Cure for Dyspepsia. BUFFALOVILLE, Spencer County, Ind. Dear Sir—l have been afflicted: for Several years with Dyspepsia, and a short trial of your valuable Indiam Blood Syrup entirely cured me, y ; : 4 : #(_)BERT PERVIARSKE. o A Very Excellent Medicine. = - . NEW ALBANY, Floyd County, Ind., March 25, 1879. Dear Sir—l have used your excellent Imdian Blood Syrup and found it to be the most remarkable medicine I ever used. I can highly recommend it. = 1 2 D 3 . Remedy for Rheumatism, ~ = - ‘ ' . BRUCEVILLE, Knox County, Ind.. Dear Si#—Not being able to stahd on my feet for ono . week, by a severe attack of Rhetumatism, I'was induced by Zou‘r Agent to try your Indian Blood Syrup, ‘W Idid, and tomy surprise was able to gglk in three days. I can therefore recommend the medicine. e e WBITEBILL MUQM i St g % !_l e Dyspepsia and Indigestion. CLOVERDALE, Putnam co\‘my, Ind. Dear Sir—ll have used - your excellent Indian Rlood se;rnp for Dyspepsia and J&dm. ;Att Suiferets snould Bive 1t a Griak [ e disones Al sufl ould ita ot s EaG 3T R
NICHOLS, SHEPARD & €O., Battle Creek, Mich. . = . 3 i 2.4 & 2 o ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE C“VIBRATOR* THRESHING MACHINERY. . TKE Matchless Grain-Saving., Time-Saying and Money-Saving Threshers of this day and generss tion. Beyond all rivalry for Rapid Work, Perfect Cleaning and for Saving Grain from Wastage. . : - ol . - epibimgers O% | R 16— (= I SNI g e i/ R S e R %%‘/ e THY et T s e = AATHND zlmfl-?f’ifi A N 24 B ARSRT e SRR R : ) L\ 2N e : — e N e N J ST e e s bl L, STEAM.PO“'PI‘ Threshers a Specialty-~ Speciak sizes of Separators made expressly for Stedm Power, OUR Uneivaled Steam: Thresher Engines,. both Portable and Traction, with Valuable Improve--ments, far beyoud uny other make or kind. e THE ENTIRE Threshing Expenses (and often : threeto five times. that amount) can be made by theExtra Grain SAVED by these Improved Machines. GR,\IN Raisers will not sabmit to the enor-: mous wastage of Grain and the inferior work done by all other machines, when once posted on the difference. NOT Only Vnstlfi' Superior for. Wheat, Oats; Barley, Rye, and like Grajus. but' the O~y Suecess'fml Thresher in Flax, Timothy, Miliet, Clovér, and like: Seeds. Requires no ‘‘attachments’’ or ‘‘rebuilding". te charige from Grain to Seeds, IN Thorough Workmanship, Elegant Finish,, Perfection 6f Parts, Completeness of Equipment, etc., our ‘‘ VIBRATOR " Threshe:j Qutfits are Incomparable, - ~ LLS A -IR ~;‘mz;rfii';‘;».,,,.""f;'..,.'r k ekl ok el o Wel [Ny E i S A B\ ———— = ) ] i v e ePR e U\ AR @[f( CERE O\ | i 5 NSRS N b fljfifif{g}}fi e . "4.”@5 S | -VI el ANy R . r»'n—'»-.ss_—%_‘_“A :\\,l...——‘-_&‘ ; FHEE MARVELOUS for Simplicity of Parts, using less thaif one-half the usual Belts and Gears. Makes Clean Work with no Litterings.or Scattérings. - S POUR‘ Sizes -of Separaiors Made, Ranging from Six to Twelve-Horse size, and twost 7les of Mount ed Horse Powers tomatch, ; 2 POR Particulars, Call on our Dealers or 1 Wlite to us for Illustrated Circular, which we rail frees:
““THE PERFECT TONIC.”
THERMALINE
A Safe and Reliable Substitute foi' Quininee. _The.only 25 cent = -AGUE REMEDY XTI TEE W OoOoORLD : CURES T
IR
. and al MALARIAL DISEASES. - Sold by all Druggists. Mailed FREE on rec‘ei%t of price by DUNDAS DICK & (0., 35 WOOSTER ST., NEW YORK. Write for BOO.K, mailed to the readers of this paper FREE on application. ' . ¢ ;
N ANRI"TIT"EID»?
Every Dealer, Canvasser and Agent gelling Chremos, Frames, Lithographs, Photographs, Perforated or Chrome Mottoes, Perforated Card-Board, Reward Cards, Transparencies, PictureCord, Stereoscopes, Convex or Concave Glass, Pantographs, Artists’ Materials of all kinds, Mouldings, Mirrors, Mir-rer-I'lates, Perforated Chair Seats, &e., to write to W.. R. REID, 352 & 354 Euelid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio, for my new reduced price-list of the ahovenamed articles. ~ . AUSTIN’S, AGUE DROPS. ' Purely Vegetable. Contain no Quinine or Arsenic. . .. 'WARRANTED TO CURE AGUE. = .- = Dose, 10 Drops. Only 50 cents a Bottle.. AUSTIN’S AGUE DROPS are prepared from “highly-con-ccn orated Extracts of Willow, DogiWood and Iron-Wood 3 hence are perfectly safe and reliable. - They are a sure cure for Ague and all Bilious Diseases. For sale every: where. 'A!{S’l‘l‘mf & SYKES,,Propl"sf Plymouth, Ohio. 5 '\ : e _ <‘ I' . ‘ /*—va ol \’3" KELLY STEEL BARB FENCE WIRE., \ i : ©'\ Made underfpatentsofvisss and all be- \@ - e { { ‘foreit. Sendforcircular and price liet, ) ; to TuorN Wirk Hepek Co., Chicago. ‘ =
Send, for Grand Rapids, - ‘Mich.. Business College Jours 3 - ng&l. Superior advantages given.. Paint Your Homes ' e \N' ' : — WITH — RHENYENN T o : Rl ey S G lit P h s o =5OO Guita-Percha eV 3555_‘.-2; e sl C= T AT e : SRR e PAINT. W T o i ; Fiace fike ¥ 0 : e UNEQUALED in BEAUTY of FINISH and DURABILITY, Please: asSK ANYONE WHO HAS USED GUTTA-PER-CHA PAINT what they think of it:: ALL say it is the Cheapest, Best: and only Paint to use. Send for Color~@ard, prices or other information. Address, .. . A GETTA-PERCHA PAIXT CO., ; Gt Cleveland, Ohio, and Chicago,lll. 4 g . oo™ DYKES'BEARD ELIXIR g ] '§ 7 W, A Woudertul Discov. rv. P?rctih-:t\'yllannl"hlor 2% fi?“" H c@ sk o s i o o e S\E P fi'fi e oS4 syt g BR O L ME JwA "T at TaymrA, FLORIDA. > to work on Railroad.. Parties desirous-of purchasing Lots in Medora, Polk: County, Florida, should not wait until the Company advance the price’ again. Lots at present Three and Four dollars.each. 5 B acres, improved, at Clear Water................ 51,650 16 acres on Tampa Bay.....coovviiiin e, .. 51,200 514 acres on Tampa Bay......s.covvnoiiu i, . 92660 Bearing Orange Grove in Sumpter C0unty......512,000 . 6 and 10 acre Orange Fract, Polk County, $3O per acre. -~ Land, from $1.25-to.sl,ooo_per acre, for sale, - Apply to WM. VAN FLEET, South Florida Land and Emigration Office, 146 LaSalle St., Chicago. = Agents wanted. e e e ———— P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE. ICTORIAL It eontains 672 fine historical engravings and 1,260 . large double column pages,and is the most comglete History of the World ever published. Itsells at sight. Send for specimen: pages and extra terms to Agents, and seewhy it sells faster than any other book. . Address, - NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, 1l = | AGENTS, READ THIS. We will pay Agents a Salary of $lOO per mounth and expenses, or allow.a large commission, to sell oufr new and wonderful inventions. Wemean what we sa{hSam--ple free. - Address SHERMAN & CO., Marshall, Mich. - . AGE NTS £2,000 A YEAR for a ! B Or Reliable Business Man ineach: county. Add’s, J. B. Chapman, 69 West'szj., Madison, Ind. MUNBY MAB Bend Postal-Card for new 1Y « price-list Pianos, Organs, Musw: @oods, ete. Western Music Co., Chlcagq. Agengszévanted. : ‘ A MONTH—Agents Wanted—36 best i selling articles in the world; one sample W W'V sree. -Address Jay Bronson, Detroit, Mich. . ‘1) Wholesale and retail. Bend for pricelist. Goodssent C.O,D. EWIS? made to order. |IR RBB E. BURNHAM, 292 W. Madison-st,Chicago. s Y e S a st TN The OLDEST and BEST Business College, catallgne free. g ~Address C. BAYL!E%. Dubuque, lowa. YOUNG MEN -lemiwhyé and earn $4O tosloo A . amonth. Eve dnate guaranteed ap: it~ uation. Address fl.ga entine, hflmgen%néfil%fl. A SRORET) 2o % e hong ot : .3 tuition at Eureka Co e 101 weeks. Address, Pres. H. W. EVERKST, Kureka 1. R Wages BSummer and Winter. Samples free.. BIBN&&“ Copying Co., 800 W. Madison-st,Chicago.. N A,. 'N.. ‘x,v SR 38“',‘ iy "W‘“;" % Ttcttes eot cae St Mot plonisn ‘mf“"m‘w‘vm . ’é’-é!’;fi;ti'ifl tisement i this paper. Advertisers like to knaw _ when and where their Addvertisemenis Wresnmtng M . - 0
