Ligonier Banner., Volume 14, Number 42, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 February 1880 — Page 7

USEFLL AND‘_S%GGESTI'VE. CopFIsH BALLS should have very little codfish in them. Ivies growing within doors are greatly benefitéd by washing the dust from their leaves once a week with a sponge or soft cloth. o : - CELLARS that gather dampness from cond~nsatidon of the atmosphere may be remedied by closing the windows during the day and opening them at night. GuINEA fowls will keep all bugs and insects of every description off garden vines. They will not scratch like other fowls, or harm the most delicate plants. —Exchange,' , THROW }()ur coal ashes around fruit trees and wnder currants and gooseberries. Don’t throw away or sell wood ashes, but use them around your fruit trees.— Farmers’ Review. ;

- AN old and careful fiu'mer of Indiana, after thirty-three years’ experience, says he has made most on sheep for the amount of capital invested, and the least on horses.--fowa State Register. FArMERS who are fortunate enough to have on their premises an excellent spring bursting from a hill-side might at no great cost construct a fish-pond and raise speckled trout; in abundance. —Exchange. ..~ | ¢ A GRNTLEMAN in Engla’nfd has discovered that water-cress will grow in dry soil. Some seeds were dropped by birds near his house, which produced plants that grew very finely. The stalks and leaves were smaller than those of plants growing in & spring brook, but were highly flavored. - THE New England Farmer says that a gardener of some notoriety carried several articles to a fair in Vermont, and among them beautiful specimens of the egg p%ant;; The judges inspected the article, and 'very wisely awarded the gardener the fifth premium on a new variety. of turnips. : IF hens get into the habit of eating eggs, take enough bran and corn meal of equal parts for one feeding, and enough vinegar, warmed to make the meal wet enough for the hens to eat. Mix together ana feed it to the hens. Repeat this once the same day.—Farmer's Boy, in Country Gentleman.

MERINGUE RiGE PUuDpDING.—One teacup of rice, one pint of milk, butter the size of an egg, five eggs, two lemons, Boil the rice soft in the milk, add the butter, the yelks of the eggs and the/grated rinds of the lemons. Bake this twenty minutes. Beat the whites of the eggs to a froth with two table-spoonfuls-of white sugar, add the juice of the lemons, spr'eag this on the pudding when a little cool, and set it back in the oven. to harden and brown lightly. . : 1 Birp's-NEsT PuppiNGg.—Take six or seven cooking apples, pare them, and remove the cores without breaking the apples.: Place them in a pie-dish; next wash thoroughly four heaped tablespoonfuls of sago; mix with sufficient cold water to fifi the dish containing the apples, and bake in a moderate oven. Cherries, prunes, etc., may be used instead of -apples, or tapioca instead of sago; and, if well made, the pudding is palatable, wholesome and inexpensive. To be served with sugar and milk, or cream if practicable. 11’l,'r:n; flavor of food baked or broilea in earthenware is said by those who have made the experiment to beée far superior to that of vegetable or animal food . cooked in the same way in iron vessels, for the reason that iron is a conductor of heat, while eartlienware is a npon-conductor; consequently, food cooked in the latter is rarely ever burned, the degree of heat net varying perceptibly during the process of cooking, thus preserving the flivor of what is cooked, as well as uniformity throughout the substance of the meat, vegetables, or grains, until the process of cookingis completed. The Ere in stove or range that parches and burns in jyon vessels, and either impairs or spoils*he food, is powerless to injure che contents of earthenware.=-Dr. Focte’'s Health Monthly for February. . ; FARMERS, now that they, have time to think/ over things, should consider whether the space they allow for their %ardens is as large as it could profitably e. There has been some improvement in this respect during the last ten years, but there is room for a %’reat deal more. A garden should be large enough to raise a full supply of all kinds of desirable vegetablr':ms for both winter and summer. Some vegetables, it is true, cannot be kept for use through the winter, but many can, and they are about as. palatable as in the summer ‘months. Every' family should put up their own tomatoes, .corn, okra, beans ((wintef and lima), cabbage and sauer|kraut, onions, carrots, ¢clery, radishes, ‘horse-radish- (in*a bed), 4nd so on. ‘When once done, so as to meet fully the wants of the family up to May, they will then only appreciate the desirability of it.—Germantown Telegraph.

'Western Competition. NEARLY all parts of the farming world are frightened at the prospects of Western competition. Not only all Europe but the Eastern States of this Union acknowledge sorrowfully that it is useless to struggle jin competition with the main articles produced in the Misgsissippi valley. Mr. Gladstone, in his recent speech at West Caldez, Eng., tells the British farmers some plain ‘truths on this subject. He says the struggle of the Engflish farmer is not a struggle with all of the United States, but rather with the Western portion of the States; the portion remote from the seaboard. He comforts his people by telling them the competition is mere keenly felt in the Eastern half of the Unite}%fi}ates than it is in England. The glish farmer, he thinks, need not e‘xpeqt relief in re_cigrocity and protective tariffs, but rather upon a more diversified agriculture; the cultivation of superior articles on a small scale; the cultivation of vegetables, of flowers, of fruits of every kind—articles, in fact, which rise above the ordinary character of farming production and rather_approach that of the garden. More attention, he thinks, will have to be given to the growing of a variety of objects which are sure to find a market in a rich and wealthy eouniry like England. e The Eastern dairymen of the Middle and Eastern States are also seriously inquiring what they shall do in the

future. The Eastern press is especially exercised on the subject. They have been of late awakened by finding Western éoods takin%lpremiums in their own markets over their own productions. Nor is this all. They find the Western article called for and preferred in the markets. The notion that good dairying can only be successfully conducted in the New England States or the valleys of New York, New Jersey or Pennsylvania, has to be abandoned. And the truth is now seriously impressed on them that the great West and North‘west are successful competitors in dairy products as well as in .(frains and beeves. This leaves them nothing except their nearness to market. They plainly see, in the fact that the dairy and beef feeding lands of the West are of almost unlimited extent, and that the capacity of their productions is not a tenth developed, the matter of successful competiion is presented as one of serious import. . They do not, however, recommend their farmers, like the British. to turn their attention to ¢‘ fruits and flowers,” but appeal to their dairymen for ‘““a more diversified dairy productin order to promote home consumption; and certain delicacies of the dairy, such as clotted cream, various kinds of soft cream cheeses, will give the East some advantage in manufacture by reason of its mnearness to the sea-board cities, where such goods enter into quick consumption. An effort should be made in all possible ways to promote the consumption of dairy goods at home. Dairymen must not look so extlusively to the great cities and foreign markets for t%le disposal of their products, but strive to promote consumption of these goodsin the interior. There are hundreds of villages and towns in the interior where large quantities of cheese, of cream in a variety of preparations, would find quick sale at good prices. But all these must be in attractive form and of a quality that will whet the appetite, ana induce people to have it coustantly on the table. This is the province of the Eastern dairyman, who has a good market almost at his own door, if he has enterprise enough to occupy it.” The New York dmerican Dairyman recommends just what we have insisted for years should be done by dairymen. It seys that during the past summer when ‘our best factory cheese was selling at five to six cents per pound for export, retailers in the interior towns of the dairy districts were selling imported Neufchatel cheese at the rate of Bix to eight shillings the pound, and it certainly appeared to be a wicked neglect on the part of dairymen to allow their own markets to be sooccupied. Grocers in the interior say they could sell lar;?e quantities of small cheese if of good quality; but it is impossible to obtain a supply, because they are seldom made at the factories, the run being on styles for export.—Jlowa State Reguister. ; :

/The Wages of Farm-Labor, THIS is the time of the year when labor on the farm becomes the question of the hour. It has been said that among the drawbacks to intelligent agriculture in our country is the uncertain tenure of the soil. The farmer who rents does nothing permanently because he may leave the next year, and the farmer who owns knows not at what moment he may sell. There are many who make a permanent business of the farm, but there are thousands who do not; and these keep down the average of good culture. , But it seems to us if evanescent settling is an injury to farming, the frequent cha.n%e of labor is at least as bad. The agricultural laborer, as a general thing, is employed for about nine months in the year. In the spring he is to be looked after, and before he is secured . numberless little matters, which result in great moment after awhile, are left undone until the help comes, when it is too late to do them properly for the best results for that season. :

~ Where farms are large enough to afford it, and those who farm are engaged in a life* pursnit, the best results have been found to follow from so managing as to have the help employed all the year round; and all the better if such help be married, and can be comfortably domiciled in tenant-houses on the ground. Advantage can thus be taken of every turn of good weather to get the work done at t%:e proper moment, to the g;‘leat benefit of the subsequent crop. oreover, a man regularly employed is likely to take more interest in his work than one who knows he is but temporary, and the employer has more chance to bear patiently with the man while both are learning one another’s wa.iys. R here is besides the absolute ques tion of labor at this season another which always troubles one, namely, that one of wages. The carpenter, for instance, who gets in the city $2.50 to 83 per day has to pay perhaps $l6 or $lB per month for house-rent, while provisions of every kind have to be %urchased, and often at high rates. ven the smallest scrap of fuel has to be bought, and there is nothing but what costs hard cash to get it. A hand on a farm, especially if %xe is comfortably tenanted, has less. rent, less expense in provisions, and less demand on his wages in every way, and this should always enter into calculations as to the worth of services. Even when the single man is boarded in the family, it is still'about the same. Sixteen dollars per month and board in a family on a farm is better for the hand than $1.50 without any other privileges in a city, as any single young man who has tried the difference can readily testify to. : It is not, therefore, a fair comparison between the actual cash of the city and the cash wages of the country. Nominally less, the result is generall-y‘ greater, and this result should be the asis of calculations. There is no doubt, however, that we lose much by transitory labor, and it will be wise for all who can to make such arrangements as will enable the laborer to be steadily employved the whole year.— Germantown Telegraph. 4

—A Bridgeport (Conn.) girl recently got a button in her ear, szl has suffered terribly ever gince. Some ' villain suggests that the young men thereabouts ought to see that &e breast buttons on their coats are well sewed on.

The Outlook Brightening, THERE are some uncertain things. No human foresight can intorm us whether a season will be wet or dry, or whether a winter willbe open or severe. Men may %ruess, and %;uess correctly, but it is only guess-work. No study of tables of rainfall or climatic changes for any given period of years will enable us to judge of the future with any degree of certainty. .

The wise farmer will not plant orsow under the direction of any Frophetic seer. The wise fisherman will not be deterred from preparing his boats and nets because the winter has been open —or the reverse. But when the re%ular fishing season arrives he casts in his net; if he succeeds, well—if not, he tries again, and continues trying till he suceeeds. So will the man of push and energy and faith do in all the relations of life. The farmer is no exception. He has practical faith in an unseen yet controlling power that has promised that seed time and harvest shall never fail. : : The ill-success of business enter_prises and the consequent hard times of the last four years, while it has changed the current that was setting in from country to city, has accomplished a vast amount of good of a permanent character. The current is changed, flowing now from city to country, where bread and. butter is sure, and we are to have more producers to increase the aggre%ate wealth of the country. The mass of our farming population, not regarding times and seasons, have continued steadily. sowing and reaping, having faith in their business, and now, since the revival of business has actually commenced and prices of all farm produce have advanced, they are reaping the reward of their confidence. Those who had most faith are reaping the greatest reward. .» : Nothing shows more fully a great mind than a persistent following out of a well-matured and wise plan or course of life. Reverse after reverse in various parts of the great army of the Republic only made one of our great Generals declare, ““I will fight it out on this line if it takes all summer.” So true pluck and a persistence in a well-directed and wisely-chosen course always declares. Men who have acted on the principle that ‘‘it is a long road that has no turn’’ are now-rejoicing at the tavorable turn business is taking, and at the brightening prospects of the outlook before them. While we cannot foresee what will be the continuance of the present advance in prices of farm products, we cannot fail to see its stimulating effects upon every branch of industry. It has put money into many an empty pocket, and started afresh the wheels of many a mill and factory to supply the demands of increased consumption. During the last four dulliyears supplies have %een worn out. hey . were turned over, patched up, refitted, so as to last a little longer, until they were all worn out, -and. necessity comipelled the purchase of new outfits. And thus, when the business boom came it was a big boom. Men reason truly that when: prices advance better times are before us; so capital is liberated, investments made, new enterprises started to meet productive demands. Never has there been such a stir and hum in business circles since the close of the civil war. The acreage sown to wheat this fall has been unusually large, and if foreign demand continues, our exports for the ‘next twelve months will exceed those .of the past year.’ To our mind there is no discouraging element in all our industries, least of all in agriculture. The only caution we wish to utter is—keep out of debt and be sure that your expenditures do not exceed your income. Keep near enough to shore, so that if an unexpected storm arises you can reach the land without swamping.—Practical Farmer.

Thomas’ Music-Trap. A BENEVOLENT and ingenious Cincinnatian, who has temporarily turned from pork to philanthropy, has devised a method of reducing to a minimum the injury which may be done by a musician who plays out of tune or time. In accordance with the plan of this able inventor, every member of Mr. Thomas’ orchestra will be seated over a separate trap-door, so conhected by wires with the conductor’s desk that as soon as a false note is played Mr. Thomas can touch an electric key and spring the trap, which, in sinking, will carry thé offender down into the cellar, -and instantly silence his instrument. It is understood that the newly-invented traps are now being placed in the hall where Mr. Thomas’ concerts are given, and that they will be in working order by the Ist of March. They wi%l give the conductor such a control over the orchestra as he has never yet had, and though, of course, every time a trap is sprung the orchestra will be weakened by the temporary loss of a musician, it is better that ten cornetists should be eliminated than that one bar should be falsely played. Mr. Thomas himself is said to be delighted with the invention, and to have suggested, as the only improvement of which it is capable, the filling of the cellar with water, so that offending musicians might be drowned as well as eliminated from the orchestra. Whether this amendment has been accepted or not we are not informed, but it is certainly worthy of careful consideration.— N. Y. Times.

—Dr. William 'A. Hammond, late Sux‘geon General in the army, lectured in New York the other evening, for the benefit of the Young Men’s Hebrew Association, upon *‘The Nervous System and Some of [ts Manifestations.”’ ‘I am free to say, he said in the course of his remarks, ‘‘that the emotion of anxiety kills more people than anything else. Some of the ladies may }Zint of love, but I am happy to say that the number of men who commit suicide on account of love troubles is growing less year by year.” « s - @ - —North Carolina has six newspapers edited by negroes, Louisiana three, Tennesee and Texas two each, and Virginia, Alabama and Mississippi one each. : : ~—__....‘_&’——-——-———- e —-A woman may be well gkilled in housekeeping, but it is the profesSional gurdener who knows best how to make up a spring bed. :

—Hominy Fritters.—Take hominy hat has been well boiled (the large aominy is best), mash it fine, and add @0 it three eggs (well beaten), one cup of flour, two table-spoonfuls of milk, and salt. Make it the consistency of hominy batter, and fry in hot lard. These proportions need about a quart of hominy after it is boiled. A very nice breakfast dish. eSI e o —A boy recently hung himself because ‘‘somebody found fault with him.” That boy was certainly not born to be a country editor.— Turner Falls Reporter. : : : e —A great many laymen talk in their sleep, and an equal number of clergymen sleep in their talk.—N. Y. Herald. An Important Personal Item, CHARLES 8. PRENTICE, of Toledo, 0., went to Paris and thence to Entgla.nd tu be treated for Bright's disease, and after the best physicians of both countries had done what they could for him, gave ufiin despair and returned to America to die. ere he received further treatment from other skillful physicians without benefit, and while *‘listlessly lingering in gain and anguish,” as he says, heard of the safe Kidney and Liver Cure, took it and was completely cured in a few weeks. He gives circumstantial details of his painful experience and astonishing cure in a long letter<to H. H. Warner & Co., which will be forwarded on application.

¢ Now You See [t.” GiLT-EpGE BurreEr MAKER takes the ‘witchesout of the chuarn,” and turns tedious, unsatisfactory chuening into gratifying success. Sold everywhere. G HAMBURG, N. Y., May 28th, 1879. JoHN E. PIERCE, Sec’'y World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Butialo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—Yours asking as to reputation of ‘“Gilt-Edee Butter Maker” received. We have never kept it until lately. lave sold one case (3 doz. boxes) and it has given the best of satisfaction. Yours respectfully, T. L. BUNTING. el S GENERAL DEBILITY.—In this complaint the good effects of the VEGETINE are realized immediately after commencing to take it; as debility denotes deficiency of the blood, and VEGETINE acts divectly upon theblood. There is no rethedy that will restore the health from debility like the VEGETINE. It is nourishing and strengthening, purifies the blood, regulates the bowels, quiets the nervdus system, acts dirctly upon the secretions, and arouses the whole system to action. It has never failed in this complaint. ‘ i _——.———— . The Deaf Hear Through the Teeth Perfectly all Ordinary Conversation, Lectures, Concerts, ete. . by New Channelsto thie Nerves of Hearing '’ by means of a recent wonderful scientific invention —the Dentaphone. For remarkable public tests on the Deat, also on the Deafand Dumb, see the N, Y. Herald, Sept. 28; the N. Y. Christian Advocate, Nov. 20, etc. Send for ¥rREE pamphlet to the American Dentaphone Co., 289 Vine Street. Cincinnati. Ohio. —_— Tne genuine Frazer Axle Grease is said to be the best in the world, and we believe it.

H n CELEBRATED En s % | ‘ & \": f‘ . '— P | ) o ;.‘3 SN TR NG L ot Toohl, QRN S == TN e 0 G i O ee LY g S e TR e Y B '/4"51","},',,',’(.";’”'/ o 7 ¥ ' NN Ps B A R TN AN A @ T =\ ~§?\w‘¢;% &D 1 By R G s N:«,fi}‘ :/?}!‘7“ B l ISTOIMACH R S 5 ! E & Do you feel that any one of your organs—your stom,_ ach, liver, bowels, or nervous system, faltersin its work? If so, repair the damage with the most powerful, yet harmless, of invigorants. Remember that debility is the ‘“Beginning of the End ”—that the climax of all weakness is a universal paralysis of the system, and that such paralysis 1s the immediate precursor of Death. qu sale by all Druggists and peale;s generally. ‘s Anthem Book Emerson’s Anthem Book. By L. O. EMERSON. Price $1.25, or $12.00 per doz. It is a pleasure to look through this fine book, and Choir Leaders will all be pleased with the general beauaxOf the music and the great varicty. There are more an 90 Antr.ems, Motets, Sentences, etc., including an Anthem Doxo:iogy, and some fine new Hymn Anthems. Also 18 Reponses and Chants. Music for Christmas. Easter, and all other special occasions is provided. THE SLEEPING QUEEN, (80 cts). Fine Operetta { by Balfe HAVE YOU SEEN &b ” WHITE ROBES, The new Sabbath School Book? It is a grand good Book and is meeting with an unexampled success. Only published two months ago, it * takes ” so well that the pubiish.rs are forced to issue edition after edition to keep pace with the demand. To state it tersely, . WEITE ROBES has gone straight into the hearts of all lovers of Sabhath Bchool Music, and the fact is due to its purity, freshness and orlglnallty. Send 80 cts. in stamps for a sample copy. $3 per doz. nm%ram:e Jemela,lg 85 cts.), by J. H. TENNEY, should used by all Temperance and Reform Clubs. Any book mailed, post-free, for the retail price. LYON & HEALY, Chicagoy llil. OLIVER DITSON & CO., Boston. ©. H, Ditson & Co., J. E. Ditson & Co., 843 Broauway, N. Yo 1228 Chestnut Bt., Phila.

Qg . VEGETABLE APk PILLS W) RS G T % BV AGaZ 8 Mildest ever known, cure : ””ps.g MALARIAL DISEASES, \ @@hz # HEADACHE, BILIOUSS NESS, INDIGESTION and Bl FEVERS. Thess RHEY b B B G 4 T B A 5 AL ;ffl; : T R ] ?i & P Tone up the system and restore hzalth to those suffering fron?) general debiiity and nervousness. Sold by all Druggists. 25 Cents pexr Box. FOR THE DEAF. Invented by R.'S. RHODES; of Chicago, (flrm Rhodes & McClure). KEnabies the DEAF 10 HEAR WITH EASE, through the medium of the teeth. Itis of fan shape, plain or ornamental. and its upper edge is aF Elled tothe edge of the upper teeth. No difficulty In earing or conversing. A large number already sold and giving entire satisfaction. Orders increasing daily. 1 use it for hearing general conversation, public speaking and music, and it is the only instrument that ever gave me the slightest benefit.”” A. N. KELLOGG, 79 Jackson St., Chicago. Editor of this paper knows Mr. Kellogg. ; : Send stamp for bO-page pampblet, containing full history of the Audlfhone, personal testimony and tests in Deaf and Dumb Institute. Address RHODES & McCLUR ¥, Methodist Church. Block, Chicago, IV NTS wanted for NMustr’d Life of James Brcthers AGEA TFIB;‘I:LING Nt;tw BOOK Terms free W. 8. BRYAN, Publisher, 602 N. 4th St.. St. Louis, Mo 'F YOH ARE SICK, address, with stamp, the Dr. A, W, Cuask Mrpicine Go,, AnD Arbor, Mich. IT MAY SAVE YOUR LIFE. A, W. Cuase, M, D, (Author of Chase’s Recipes,) Sups,

. 2 N A Home in the Celestial City. : ' MINNEAPOILS, MINN. Dee.'ls. 1878 H. R. STEVENS, Boatotts : ! About nine and 'a bhalf years ago I had a fever; the doctor gave me some Poisonous medicine, drove the disease into my leg, and it broke out, and has been from two to ten running sores ever since. I could not sie*p a fourth of a night once in six months, and a great. many nights was compelled to get up and take opium—a piece as large as a pea—to deaden the pain. 1 have tried everything I could hear of, in fact, I have Pald out hundreds of dollars, and found no relief until I commenced taking Vegetine, and now I can go to hed at eight o’clock at night and sleep until seven o’clock in the morning, and no occasion to waken from pain. I was used up, perfectly dead inwardly, and frequently when 1 would get up would be dizzy, and have to put my hand on something to keep from falling; but since I commenced taking Vegetine it has all disappeared, and I feel like a new man. My honest 'conviction is that it will cure m{ leg entirely, from the present looks and feelings. shall continue taking Vegetine, and recommend it to all whom I come across; aud 1 hope the man who introduced Vegetine into the United States will have a home in the Celestial City. Yours most sincerely. ‘ W. S. LEACH, Mr Leach Is a gentleman well known here, and is the owner of the celebruted Turbine Water Wheel. ————— Vegetine - Completely Cured Me. NEWPORT, K¥., Feb. 26, 1877. MR. H. R. STEVENS: . Lear Sir—l write to say that seven bottles of your Vegetine have completely cured me from a very severe case of Scrorula of many years’ standing, after trylng many medicines and doctoring a great deal. lam now free from all sores, and can work as well as ever, and think the Vegetine isa god-send, and no onp ought to do without it. I remain, respectfully yours, J. A. PATRICK. VEGETINE is now prescribed in cases of Scrofula, #nd other diseases of the blood, by many of the Liést physiciaus, owing to its great success in curing all diseases of this nature. ) . « elt = 3 - Vegetine. ‘ PREPARED BY H.R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. { ee e Vegetine is Sold by All Druggists.

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Warner’s Safe FPills are an immediate § stimulus for a Torpid Liver, and cure CosRl tiveness, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Bilf ious Diarrhceea, Malaria, KFever and # Ague, and are useful at times in nearly all § diseases 1o cauise a free and regular action of the Bowels. The best antidote for.all Malail rial Poison. Price, 26 cents a Box? 8 Warner’s Safe Nervine quickly gives ® Rest and Sleep to the suffering, cures Ileadi ache and Nenralgia, Prevents Epileptic Fits, and is the best remedy for Nervous Prose tration brought on by excessive drinking, i over-work, mental shocks, and other causes.

[ sare 2 fverl B .I'(.!.";.Ng'?cuflf ke LI S UL Yo 5“&3-'1‘5!??’?@; e B N (Y] {5 Wi & rxg:

NEW EDITION., : e, D R < s~* L m .\Ni“. Sl vWt Q\\m‘:‘g}g& B 3l o TR RN a 0 6 e DICTIORARY o TPLENENT {9 ¥ emre sW\ sy TameT S - B YD £SR e R ) GET THE BEST. - » . WEBSTER’S UNABRIDGED. - 1928 Pages. 3000 Engravings. FOUR PAGES COLORED PLATES. ~ Containinga SUPPLEMENT of over 4600 NEW WOKDS and Meanings, ’ AND A NEW ‘ Biographical Dictionary . of ever 9700 NAMES. Published by G. & C. MERRIAM, Springfield, Mass. 1 " ‘j——;’ 'NTER The Illinais Cend'] : Ofl’g }mg sile?lgr"ge w g(uantlty of Land in | Southern portion of HE AT State, along the line of its Road. Climate Good water. Best cropsof ANID (18 mild and healthy, Winter Wheat and all kinds | of Grain; Flax, Hemp; Fruitl Ru I I of all kinds, Early Vegetables | and Berrvies of every variety are predaced in abun(lauce.‘ X ¥or full particulars apply to P. DAGGY, Land Com’-’r, v Rtoom: 11, No. 78 Mlchigan_l LANDS Avenue, CHICAGO, ILL. !

1. CLENDENEN, M. D, . OFFICE, ROOM 7, 145 Mad?so-n Street, Chicago, Cancer, Tumons, B, :BY a Scientific and Unfailing Process, e Catle o et N AN ol S SEND FOR REFERENCES.

-All persons interested In : Kan as should subscrihe for ““THENATIONB ALIST,” the oldest and most infiuential paperin ( ntral Kansas. It isa 48-column Republican shieet published we~kly, at £1.50 & year, in advauce, by Albert -iriflin, Mavhattan, Riley County, Kansas, the cen.er of the blooded S.OcK inter oBts of the Stute.

) ISTOTRAN Ry IRy ;{"";‘f GRY Banr- T PRt s ¢ RN g @By B B W g h e S T i g 0 :%; 4 . 3‘ l i d F

Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures all Humors, from the worst Scrofula to 8 common Blotch, Pimple, or Eruption, l:r%ngelm, Salt-rheum, Fever Sores, Scaly opr Roeugh Skin, in short, all discases caused by bad blood; are conquered by this powertul, purifving, and invl§omtin% medicine. { : Esg:ccinll_\' has it manifested its potencz in curing Tetter, Rose Rash, Boils, Carbune cles, Sore Eyes, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, White Swellings, Goitre or Thick Neck, and l'}nlm'fed Glands. : ! ) if vou feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have sailow color of skin, or Fenowlahflbrown s‘pots on face or body, frequent hemiache, or dizziness, bad taste in mouth, internal heat or chills glternated with hot flushes, irregular appetite, and tongae coated, you are sufl‘erina from Zorpid Liver, or ‘‘ Billousness.” As a remedy for all sugh cases Dr. Picice’s Golden Medical Discovery has no equal, as it eflects perfect and radical cures, - : In the cure of Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, Weak Lungs, and early stages of Come sumption, it has astonished the medical faculty, and eminent physicians pronounce it th® greatest medical discovery of the age. Bold by druggists.s : Lip gt

WS ehiL n \%\_to ooR t\tets The * Little Giant** Cathartic, |

about Stomach, Rush of Rlood to Head, take Dr. Plerce’s Pleasaut Purgative Pelletgy Sold by druggista | wORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCLATION, Prop’ss, Buftalo, N. B/

PERMANENTLY CURES ' KIDNEY DISEASES, l LIVER COMPLAINTS, HConstipation and Piles. d IT HAS q ® sk JEL: . BTN = I BECAUSE IT ACTS ON . THE I SMLIVER,THE BOWELS AND KIDBINEYS AT THE SAME TIME. L] Because It cleanses the system off } Bl the polsonous humors that develope inKidney and Urinary diseases, Biilousness, Jaundice, Constipation, l Piles, orin Rheumatism, Neuraigia | and Female disorders. B EKIDNEY-WORT is adry vegetable compeundand can be sent by mail prepaid. 2 |_lOnepackage will makesix qtsof medicine. L i TRY IT NOW 2 : Ruy 1t at the Druggists. Price, $l.OO, I WELLS, RICEARDSON & €O., Propristors, il } 5 E Baurlington, Vt,

APPLY FOR PENSION NOW. Arrears of Pension granted on Claims filed before July Ist, 1880. Address T.W. TALLMVADGE. Washington, I C. He will notify you WHAT BOUNTY is due you or when the new Bouaty Law is passed. He will collect payment for your HIORNE LOST during the war. He will obtain PENSIONS FOR MEXICAN VET-. ERANS. . He prosecutes ¢laims in all the Departments. Recommended -as a reliable and capable Claim Agent by N; H. Swayne, Justice of Sl?r:‘nm Court; John Sherman, Sec'y of Theasury; W. K. Rogers, Private Seey. to the President; A. G, Po’r%er, First Comptroller ot the Treasury; Thos. Ewing. Member of Congress, of Ohio.

P R N RSO O Vad BH g by g : X o B A 53 it bel N 20 & BN B H 858 A ‘:"")'é;’ . S 2SO NG ke S P it AR 3 B T g R s 9%;3‘. a 7 v Sa"“‘.‘g,“w“:? ‘\%fi? AT A Syt (e (2 : S2T RS "{"‘- Ry ’ Vo ) v YAbBB B Ol ™0 § i Vo BRSY e &1 i s 5 I 1 O @ B v Ul Foy FUA i A T Ts W g W e

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¥ine, solid, plump babies are the result when fed on RIDGE’S FOOD; thousands of children whose chief die{ has been .BID(}E’S FOOD are living monuments o health and beauty. . .

For any cas® ; REWARD of Blee’ding . Blind, Itching, or Ulcerated Piles that Deßing’s Pilo Remedy failsto cure. Gives immediate relief, cures cases, of long standing in 1 weeg ! and ordinary cases in 2 da{x w W CAUTION ovie.2ver d‘ black a Pile ‘m%“rwe”m& wrapper has printed on it in black a Pi {oneg an Df}-’fp P )lilfe)rr’a signature, Phila, %l a{ofl,}e.}{&)fd by all druggists. Sent by mail by J. P. MILLER, M. D., Propr.. S & cor Tenth and Arch Sts., Philada., Pa: e TR We guarantee to sell A v“‘h"‘.‘"‘““‘ 'i‘;;;\r; :4.,‘! ' 0 Ui Dionos and rpang i rdl EoRER SRSt quring the next Ygixty R e wewehe . 2yS JOwer than m{f | \'_:_u--u k 7 other house in the U. s i e et S, 'We handle only firsto Jelpnr 5% |9 class instruments, such - BEL RAo ENAEae B as Decker Bros., Mathu- = f"{?d/(?flif;'fi"""»@d }‘l' zhgk. Este%V a;ltg Sk}l‘! =2 O Se Y am liia us lox 2 i 3 \4\(l_ figfi*fl’fr’?fi* - pamcug'am Story & it ;\ Camp, 188 & 190 —— State Street Chicago. AGE"TS WAN TE nfor the RICHLY IL~ ! LUSTRATED and only cfirrxlfie fnd authomit’ic mfiory of the great tour of It Describes Regal Entertainments, flo&l Palaces, Ra.rno Curiosities, Wealth and Wonders of the Indies, China, Japan, etc. {3 A million people want it. This is the best chance of your life to make money. Beware of * catchpenny ”” imitations. Over 900 pages. Prico only %38, Send for Circulars containing a rufi descripe tion of the work and our extra terms to Agents. Address National Publishing Co., Chicago, [il.

It relieves the J»ETFSB? all diseases and is never injurious to the system. The best of all Nervines. | ‘Bottles of two sizes; prices, 50 cts. and sl. (" WARNER’'S Safe Remedies are sold by Drugglsts & Dealers in Medmne every where, H.H.Warneré& Co. Proprietors, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 07 Send for pamphlet and testimonials. - s BLR W T

PRLLETLTIT o CosIALLENS LUNG BALSAM TS I B _‘N‘ YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT

: : Testthem! Buy them! Gard z Manual and price-list torls% : " NOW READY, and mailed free. > Send forit. J. B. ROOT RS Sced Grower, Rockford, I, GUMPUUND XYGEN ““ Heolth and Life,® ; No. 1, a record ok remarkable curesin onaumgu‘nn, Catarrh, Neuralgia, and other Chronic Diseases by the new Oxygen Treat ment, now ready and sent free. Drs. STARKEY & PALEN. 1109 and 1111 Girard St., Philadelphia, Pa. ;. e ’ :%9 ) » .;‘ 4 u-‘iv?f’&::\’marigi;-l.::d’:fi:lo;n polhlv:l.q'u ~ 5 \'h P from its use. Tt works like magiec and never fiils, N B\ [ 5 L el othenkn el gTy = Ve soo.BoloA st Palatinec Tl Allothors oountot fulhy $2 000 to 810,000 made in one 5 year. 'Olfiy $25 to- $390 m&ulred. For descriptive circular and terins to Agents, address LOWE & CO., 16 S.F¥ifth Street St. Louis, Ma. ey Morphine Habit Cured in 18 6 to 20 days. No pay till Cared. _ DR. J. STEPHENS, Lebanon, Ohio, R T L R Se R e ; Wholesale and retail. Bend for pricelist. Goods sent C.O.D. . Wigs made to ordey. E.BURNHAM, 292 W. Madison-sL.Chlm% ———— The OLIDEST and BEST Business College. Catalogue free. ; " Address C.,BAYLIE%, Dubugque, lowa. Morphia Habit Cured at Home. 1,000 OPI Cured. Beware-of 10 or 20 day cum i w Address Dr. MARSH, Quincy, M $66 A WEEK in gour own town. Termsand@ $5 outfit free. Addr’'s H. Hallett&Co.,Portland,Mé& 85 t szu per d%y athome. Sarr(n)gles“worthss 0 tree. Address STINSON & Co., Portland, Ma& S72A WEEK. $l2 a day at home easily made. Costly outfit free: Addr’s True & Co., Augusta. Ma. —-'—~"“'°'—~‘—c:—‘———‘—"‘°—“‘——"_—'—_——"-——. Gu " s Revolvers. Illus. Cata.}gé'ue free. Great Western Gun Works, Pittsburgh, Pa AN K. 68. b 5,

No use of tnkins,,the large, repulsive, nauseous pills. Thesa Pellets (Liutle P’ills). are scarcely larger than mustard md.o s : A Reiug entirely ve*‘eul.le. no particular care is re%uirod while using them, They operate without dlzt:xrbance o the svstem, diet, or ococupation. For Jaundice, Headache, Constipation, Impure Rlood, Pain in the Shounlders, Tightness of Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations from Stomach, Bad Taste in Mouth, Bilious auacl:: Pain inr region of Kidneys, Internal Fever, Bloated feeling

B LR TR TSVA o 2050 (Ol e B Piso’s Cure for Comnsump--8 tion 18 also the best cough medB icine. Dose small,—bottle B large, Sold everywhere. 25¢. and $l.OO, 8 Wairanted to first buyers. . REE AR 008 RNVI i SNO R B S