Ligonier Banner., Volume 15, Number 25, Ligonier, Noble County, 7 October 1880 — Page 7
SCHOOL AND CHURCH.
—~Several undergraduates of the German University of Marburg have been sentenced to three months’ imprisonment in a fortress for duelling. -—Cyrus H. McCormick, Esq., of Chicago, has offered to contribute the sum of $50,000 to the Northwestern Theological Seminary, provided that the other friends of the institution will together contribute a like sum.
i —A New England paper asks the pertinent question whether children who wear point-lace and jewels at Saratoga will be well prepared to render respectful obedience to teachers in serge and cashmere when school begins. : —Suanday-school children are no longer taught to believe that Lot's wife was turned into a pillar of salt; but in the ¢ International Bible Studies’’ for Sunday-schools, it was said that she was caught in a storm, which ¢ suffocated her; encrusted her and possibly burned her to a cinder.”’ oo
--The City of Paris has purchased 32,000 metres of land in the Avenue du Trocadero (Sixteenth Arrondissement), for the purpose of erecting a Lycee or Government School. A fund of 5,000,000 f. will be devoted to that object, this sum having been given the city by an inhabitant of Passy. "The experiment will be watchdd by all who are interested in the’ educational system of France and are anxious to see the inadequate. principles of the same greatly modified. . :
~ —According to a recent report from the Russian Ifoly Synod there are in Russia, beside the cathedrals, - about 35,000 churches, of which 30,000 are parish churches. The services are carried on by 37,718 priests and 11,857 deacons; there are 65,951 lay church servants, such. as sextons, etc. The State contributes to the support of 17,667 churches (a little more than half the whole number) ‘the annual sum of €3,285,000. The total amount contributed by the State for maintaining churches in Russia is about $£3,900,000.
The Development of Fuhgoid Diseases.
- The Boston Herald prints a long interview with an eminent specialist of that city on the subject of pulmonary consumption, which, it is well known; is a permanent habit of theNew England coast towns. The following .passage copied from that interview upon the too common habit of shutting out light and air from our sitting-rooms has value and force in many other localities:
¢ What are the conditions favorable to the development of consumption? ““There are many. Among the most active, proper to be mentioned here, are bad air, darkened rooms, no sunlight, exposure, dampness, ete. To raife mushrooms for eating you select a dark, damp place. ‘That is, these conditions are favorable to the development of fungi. Now, yeast is fungus. All housekeepers are familiar with the best modes of its cultivation in the raising.of bread. Those who would agree with the Salisbury plans are prepared to see that, if people keep themselves continuously shut up in dark rooms to keep out flies and save the carpets, breathe the bad air, ete., they are -putting themselves into a condition favora~ ble to. the development of fungoid growths on and in their systems. Moreover, why the Bowditch dogma of dampness in localities is favorable to ‘consumption is because this is one of the conditions of eryptogamic growth It is a fact long noticed that New England people, to go no further, keep their houses shut as if air and sunlight were the natural enemies of mankind. Ride five miles in a carriage on a common highway, anywhere in this State, and I venture to say that nine-tenths of the houses will be seen to have their blinds closed and windows shut. I think such proceedings are often invitations to consumption. I suppose the reason is, not that the people do not love their health, but that- they love their carpets and hate flies more.” -
Sea-Coast Superstitions.
Sea-coast people, like sailors, are full | of superstitions. Near Cape Henlopen } there are some remarkable dunes, or hills of sand, about which the fishermen have hung legends as remarkable. These dunes arise out of the sea, .apparently without any cause and advance steadily to the south, inexorably burying whatever comes in their way. A lofiy pine forest near Henlopen shows now qut a ] few twigs of its topmost branches. The coast people account for them by the ' story that a pirate ship was wrecked on this beach in 1680, and that, when the drowned buccaneers were given Christian burial the angry sea sent in these living hills cf sand to punish the sacrilege. . It is a fact that they have covered the homes of the people: who bur-! ied the pirates, while the graves .long since were buried by the tide and the bones washed back into the ocean.
A singular fact is that of the large dunes which exist in the Landes of Southern France, similar legands are told. These vast hills, in their terrible march, have covered whole villages and farms, and according to the coast people, they arealways the messengers of gedsea to avenge some impiety against xod. ! i
Among the fishermen o6n our Northern' coast, it is believed that a child cannot die until the mother submits to let him go. ‘“ God,” they say, ¢ gives the mother a share absolutely in her child, with which even He will not:meddle, and until she gives it up Death cannot take it.”” Another belief is that death among coast people always takes place with the turn of the tide, or that ¢ the soul goes out with the sea.” - Farther south there is a superstition which sentences the souls of those unstable human beings who have been neither good nor bad in life, who had neither courage to resist the devil nor openly to join him, to float forever in the mist and fog, unable to rest foot on land or sea. Another makes the seahill and fishes the abode of condemned spirits. - - 1t would be curious to trace these superstitions to' their source and find whether” they have originated in the Imagination of sailors and fishermen during their lonely lives, or are merely the fragments of old heathen beliefs still lingering in these isolated corners of the world, among the descendants of old Saxons and Scandinavians.-— Youth's Companion. 3, ;
FARM AND WRESIDE.
. —To preserve potatoes they should be dried as soon as possible and placed immediately in a position from which the sunlight is excluded. - —Potato Pudding.—Boil and mash fine six mealy potatoes; beat into them the yelks of five eggs, half pound of white sugar, quarter of a pound butter, the grated rind and juice of a lemon, a little salt, and the whites of the eggs beaten to a froth; stir all together, and add a pint of rich miik or cream. Bake about an hour and a half in a moderate Oyen.. ; :
—Kipfel.—These light cakeg - will form an agreeable addition to the dessert, and are also suitable for handing around with tea and coffee. They are much used in Gérmany, and are made as follows: Beat up one pound pounded white sugar with the whites of eight eggs.and a little vanilla flavoring; when mixed, make it up into the shape of: small horseshoes, and having minced one pound sweet almonds, turn these kipfel round in them. Bake the kipfel on wafers, in a very moderate oven. —The majority of American farmers, living in the midst of all that is attractive in nature, are wnsensible to the beauties of their surroundings, and feel it #Buybent upon them to work early ~and laie to increase their store, and therefore never take time to appreciate what is really enjoyable about them, or to create for their families anything but the bare esssentials of existence.. Much of the discontent in farmer’s families could be remedied by a little thought for their comfort, education and pleas- . ure. : —Ragan Pickle.—Two gallons of cabbage, sliced tine; one gallon of chopped green tomatoes; twelve onions, also chopped; one gallon best vinegar; one pound brown sugar; one tablespoonful of black pepper; half an ounce turmeric powder; one ounce .celery sced; one - tablespoonful ground alspice; one teaspoonful ground cloves, one-fourth pound. white mustard, one gill of salt. Boil all together, stirring well, for two hours. Take from the fire, and add the spices; then put in air-tight jars. Set in a cool, dry place, and this delicious pickle will keep all winter. .
—Saving Seed Corn.—¢¢ My moade of selecting and saying corn for seed,” says 'a correspondent of the Country Gentleman, *“is when husking, to select, from stalks having two or moré ears, the finest and best ears—those having a small cob, well tipped out, rows regular and straight, bright and clear seed and with no strange kernels. On such I leave "three or four husks, and when a quantity has accumulated I take one or two dozen and braid the husks, adding the ears on one side. These ‘¢ trusses’ are then hung in some airy loft, where they will not be liable to be affected by moisture rising from anything stored beneath, or be attacked by insects or vermin. The deeper fhe kernel, with- a given size of ear, the smaller the cob and the larger the yield. The eye will easily detect this with a little practice.”’ - e
—A correspondent of the New York World gives the following: remedy to keep skippers out of hams and shoulders: ‘¢ Afterthe hams are smoke-dried —say the Ist of March—take them down and dip into a kettle of boili(z}g water; then lay them asideto dry. After they have been scalded pack them in a box the bottom of which is covered with salt.. Place a layer of hams, then a layer of salt sufficient to cover the hams and fill all cracks and spaces; follow with a second layer of hams, and 80 on until the box is filled, covering the whole with salt. ‘The hams being dry, will not take any more salt but will remain sweet and fresh. Treat shoulders the same as hams and you 'will lose no more bacon with skippers. You can pack the hams in good-dry oak ashes, which will keep the skippers out, but they will be troublesome to clean ‘when you want to use-the meat; therefore I prefer the salt.” :
— Aunt Addie’ writes to the New York 7imes that the best way to ecan peaches, pears, apricots and all small fruits, is this: Pare, cut in half, take out the stones, when: there are any; lay the fruit in a stone jar; the fruit should be in every instance ripe and of the richest flavor; make a sirup of half a pound of granulated sugar (some persons allow only a quarter of a pound) and one gill and a hdif of water to each pound of fruit; when it boils, skim well and pour boiling over the fruit in the jar; let it stand until next day, then put all over the fire and boil slowly for onequarter of an hour. Put in the cans ‘and screw on the covers. -
Soiling Stotk.
A writer in a recent mumber of the Milch Zcilung, on the danger to German agriculture from foreign competition, says that his own experience of fifty years has taught him that regular soiling of cattie is best for the farmer and his fields, bringing in greater profit and maintaining the fertilivy of the land ata higher point—that twice as much fodder can be produced on a given surface when the forage plant is allowed to grow as a. cultivated crop and reach a certain degree of maturity than when as in pasture, it is continually cropped off and trodden down. He believes, as do all the best German writers on the subject, that the most successful system of agriculture in the long run is that in which a large, quantity of stock is kept and fed well,’and a careful rotation of crops is followed, in which the same crop'is never put twice in succession on the same land. The soiling system makes it easier to carry out the second part of his programme, and the greater variéty. oficrops that can be raised on a long rotation provides a greater variety of fodder for the stock, so that these two features of the best modern agricultural practice work admirably together. The soiling system provides a more uniform ration in respéet to quantity, and avoids much less of manure. It may be pretty safely affirmed that the droppings of cattle in the pasture are more than half wasted by dryingin the sun, or by too strong dosing with manure in isolated spots here and there. Where land is cheap and abundant and cannot be profitably cultivated and carried up to a high degree of fertility, pasturage over a large portion of the farm may be allowable, but when high farming pays pasture land is a poor investment and may eat up a large part of the profits from the chti-vatéf fields.
The Latest Snake Story.
Saint Patrick. or some appropriate representative of that beneficent saint, is gjreatl{rneeded just now near Kingston, N. Y. They have snakes there eleven feet long and as thick as a man’s wrist who chase people about the fields and throttle them, and who are alto§eth{’er»very objectionable denizensof the elds and groves. - However diverting to the snakes their Rractice'_ should at once be forbidden. Irs. Rachel Dederick is feelingly of this opinion. She is the wife of Mr. Frederick Dederick, a wagonmaker of Cairo, in Greene County, N. Y. A few days ago she °was passing through a patch of blackberry bushes. She carried a tin pail and was gathering some berries for tea. This; proceeding was considered intrusive by a certain snake who dwelt hard by; and he made clear his view of the case without delay. It appears that this particular representative of the evil one was in the habit of whistling as hd went—not from want of thought, but rather as an indication of the depth and virulence of his mental processes—and that Mrs. Dederick as she sauntered along heard his dulcet strain amid the blackberry bushile's. She paused, she listened, she hesitated. While Mrs. Dederick was hesitating this particular foe of -man and womankind was peering at her through, not an apple tree this time, but a blackberry bush. At this moment the artful snake was whistling *‘Comin’ through the Rye,”’ or some other equally seductive ditty, and, catching sight of him, with .a shriek that may easily be imagined, Mrs. Dederick set out rapidly for home. L
Mrs. Dederick ran very fast; but the faster she ran the faster ran the snake. Presently, and while there was yet a great deal of the blackberry patch to get over, thegreptile (':;\lglit his fair prey by her ankle, and, in spite of her strenucus - remonstrance, reinforced soon afterward by & shower of blows from her tin pot, the snake continued to wind\\himsel‘f up very symmetrically on Mrs. Dederick’s person until he got to her neck. By this time, it is not surprisix%; to know, the poor woman had ceased to run. In fact, she had sat down upon the ground. And thus she was found in an animated argument with the snake when Mr. Dederick arrived upon the scene and introdueced a diversion. oy
This consisted in Mrs. Dederick being laid flat upon the earth by her husband and by that gentleman then executing a war dance ‘on the serpeut’s head with his ‘boot heels. The process was unattended by any whistling, and was directly followed by Mrs. Dederick’s happy release. ‘A blue mark surrounde{her throat where the monster had taken his final coil; and at-the moment of Her rescue she fainted; but these were the sole damages suffered by the lady who lives to tell the tale with racy vivacity to whomsoever may wish to hear it. i . o
Such in substance is the story told by our enterprising contemporary the T¢mes this morning on the faith of an esteemed correspondent at Kingston. It proves that even in our own happy land women are not exempt from the tribulations of our common mother; and Mr. Dederick’s neat performance on the snake’s head shows that prophecy, even at this remote epoch, continues. to be veritied in the most impressive manner. When Mr. Barnum receives the skin of this audacious descendant of the Tempter of Eve—which covering is, of course, some two fathoms long—and it is appropriately mounted and verified by suitable affidavits, our esteemed contempotary’s latest snake story will receive, no doubt; the admiring credence which its merits so richly deserve.— N. Y. Eyening Post. ; ’
«INQUIRER" asks: “Is the Great Eastern the largest vessel ever built?”’ An impression Thas got abroad that she is, but such is not the case. The Mayflower, in which the Pilgrim fathers came to this country, was the largest ship that ever plowed the waters. The old furniture scattered over this country brotht over by the Mayflower would fill the Great Eastern a dozen times or more.—Norristown Herald.
1 | ‘[Jackson Patriot.] - A Reminiscence of 1874.
In 1874, Dr. Jacob Meyer, Saint Louis, Mich., gave the following opinion: The Hamburg Drops deserve to be recommended. I have prescribed them for irregularities of the liver, disorders of the stomach and diseages originating from these disturbances, and have observed the most satisfactory results. The Drops also cure constipation in a short time. : '
THE MARKETS.
3 [ NEw YORK. October 5, 1830. LIVE STOCK—Cattle......... $750 @#%lo 25 Bheeple,. .. o 0 0 B EN @ 500 Hogs oo o 0 500 @ 1H 60 FLOUR—Good to Choice. ... 435 @ 625 White Winter Extras...., 415> @ 5 60 WHEAT—No. 2 Red.......... 108%@ 109 ; NOZBpring. .. ............ 1 63¢@ 1 08 CORN—Western Mixed....... 2@ 52V, OATS—Western Mixed....... 40 @ 43 BYE Whitern. .. ... ... 9% @ | 9% PORK —Mess (New)............ 1800 @ 18 65 LARD—Pteam........ ........ 8 32u@ 8 81% QEENSH .o 10 @ 12% WOOQL—Domestic Fleece..... 36 @ 48 ; | CHICAGO. BEEVES—Extra........ ..... $ 15> @ $ 40 CEhRoIBe. ... s e b 00 Gobd 00l kS @460 Medium .., o i 380 @ 400 But¢hers' 5t0ck........... %580 @'3ls . 8t0dkCatt1e............... 280 @ 290 HOGS—Live—Good to Choice 500 @ 5 80 SHEEP—Poor to Choice...... 300 @ 440 BUTTlER—Creamery.....,.... 28 @ 31 Good to Choice Dairy..... 23 @ 27 BGGs—Pyashi ~ .., i, 00 16 @ 16%% HEOUR-—-Winter.............. 800 @ 800 BDUaER. o oL A @ B B 0 = DRtentss. il @ 800 GRAlN—Wheat, No. 2 Spring 94%@ 94% Care NOL Do s 39%@ 40 OHtE NG Dl 80%@ . 30% RyeaNo 2.0 82 @ 824 S Baleve No. 2.0 i B @ 8% BROOM CORN— = - - T : ! Red-Tipped Hur1.......... 5 @ 615 - Binßdraen ... .. 6 @ -6% gateter.. . ... ok 3@ . 4 Shenlcade: . ol 2% @ U 8 RORK oo i, 1 00 @ A 8 10 LARD-=5team................ %80 @ 785 LUMBER— ; : Common Dressed Siding.. 18 00 % 19 50 HIOOHIn®. ... ... .o 18 80 32 00 Common 80ard5.......... 1000 @ 15 00 HOROIOE i v i 10% @ 13 50 Latfi 2 @ 22 A8hing1e5...............;.. 250 @ 29 a 0 EAST LIBERTY. L CATTLE-—Best.... ..c......... $5OO @ $5 40 Fa1rt0G00d........... <.. 4% @ 48 HOGS-—Y0rker5.............. 500 @ 515 Philadelphias.... ......... 540 @ b 5 €0 SH%%P—-vßest... %ga(" % :% mp0n........ : £ Pl BALTIMORE. CATTLE—8e5t................ $4 50 @ $5 87% BROMIN. o 275'% 3 62% H0G5+—G000d......;.....0..... 850 6 SHEEP—Poor to Choice,..... 880 @ 47
—Prof. jas. Law cites many facts to show that birds may be the victims of small-pox and be the carriers of this contagion from one. place to another. Pigeons and poultry in< Europe and Hindostan are quite subject to variofa. If it really be possible for the chickens belonging to a family in which there is small-pox to pick up the disease and carry itto some neighbor’s poultry-yard, then the neighbors of all small-vox cases are really subject to a very insidions method of. infection.—Dr. Foote’s Health Monthly for October.
THE oyster would live for eight years if he had a chance, but bhe is kept in such a stew that he dies young of heart trouble.— Graphic. L el e s [Detroit, Western Home Journal.]. : 81. Jacoss Oln is an exceilent medicine. Have used it:in our household whh great benefit. . : ; o —— - @ ; HERBERT SPENCER begins next year a tour of the werld] going from England to the United States. - ol e >_.-_ __ ; ““Aund the Xeaves Were for the Meallng of ‘ ! the Nations.” o ‘This is fully exemplified in the demonstrafion that so common a pasture weed as smartweed, or water-pepper, possesses medicinal properties which when combined with essence of Jamaica Ginger and other eflicacious vegetable extracts, as in' Dr. Pierce’s ‘Compound Extract of Smart-Weed. It constitutes a most potent remedy for :bowel affections as diarrheea, dysentery, fiux, ete. It is aiso an eflicacious medicine for colds, and to break up fevers and inflammatory attacks, and for the alleviation of pain. Every family should keep a supply of it. 5) cents by druggists. : cl g . : - A Happy Clergyman. Rev. E. F. L. Gauss, Galena, 1lls.: *‘l have been a great sufferer from Kidney disease, and after being told by my doctors that I could not get well, I commenced the use of Day’s KIpNEY PAD; which has now complete1y cured me. lam strong and again look ths ‘very picture of heaith. May all the suffering be helped as I have been, is my earnest wish.” i n ———te — - e ' | Deserve & Monument, =~ - . The Standard, Syracuse, N. Y., is the jourmal from which the following extract ils cut: “*That the proprietors of Warner’s Safe Remedies are entitled to a monument is unmistakably true. It is an indisputable fact that these parties must be and are looked upon as Good Samaritans,”? . | - ‘ ) % g e e e : : A Warning. o Coughs are caused by the changeable weather of autumn, and, if neglected, are apt to continue all winter. If cured now the lungs will gain strength to withstand the severe trial' of winter and spring. Piso’s Cure is the best remedy. [Fifty cent bottles are sold for 25 cents. 0 : S =g For Consumptives, Delicate Females, Nursing Mothers, Sickly Children, and the Debility of Age, Malt Bitters, prepared by the Malt Bitters Company, are Efixe purest and richest nourishing agent in foods or medicine ever compounded. ‘ : : Paysox’s INDELIBLE INK is the best for marking linen. Sample will be sent post-paid for 30c, by F. H. Btoddard, Northampton, Mass. & % - et e p EveErY Farmer and Teamster should know that Frazer Axle Grease cures sore necks and scratches on horses. Buy it anywhere. - Asg your- druggist for Redding’s Russia ‘Balve. Keep it in house in case of accidents. —i e ; WrLaorT's Fever and Ague Tonic. The old reliable remedy now sells at one dollar. . . : To HAVE good bread, use National Yeast.
—=MRS. POTTS'= S A {.,__‘FO SE BY — ’ THE HARDWARE TRADE. Fruit,WineandJellyPress Price, gfl $3.00. 4 gi’,’r( . | P e _ Vil DD For -Seedin and !Extr’ac,tg Juice ~ —FROM— - ALL FRUITS AKD BERRIES. (& EVERY FAMILY NEEDS ONE._&O Send for a Cutt}l?zue,‘ Free. o ENTERPRISE ¥'™'G CO., - Philadelphia, Pa. FOR SALE BY THE HARDWARE TRADE.
& & - SN > é‘/ KN o FOR CHILLS AND FEVER AND ALIL: DISEASES CAUSEQ BY Malarial Poisoning . . OF THE BLOOD. . . A Warranted Cure. §2" FOB SALX BY ALL DRUGGISTS. &8 "SYMPTOMS OF A TORPID LIVER. Loss of Appetite, Bowel tive, Pain i the Head, With adull sonantion ta the baok part, Pain under the shoulder blade, fullness after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability-of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected some duty, Weariness, Digziness, Flutterin§ at the Heart, Dots be~ fore the eyes, ello Skin, Headache generally over the riglx eye, flestlesgness with fitful dreams, hlgply colored Urine & CONSTIPATION. S R R (SRR e y i - TUTT’S PILLS p 1 i Ringie dose efoots Sach a change of fobi ing as to astonish the sufferer. " SOLD EVERYWHERE, PRICE 25 CENTS Office, 35 Murray Street, New Yorks
Y. ‘4,';, '’ - Pet 'o ~ : K/ . ot e /iR ‘o OB - : = | gy o - R A ] | £F4 2 TN 5l E/ X > ;A T & Sl e .é'i-;‘}"f R ; ; ; o - AN A ’ X A 1 Ay Ly ? | (NS g g R P> o PRt ot = iy | 453 = TTEY 3 T gt = ) { @ 5 £ T ;S 2 3 YSN N ™ AV i Rl AR AR - \ | Me Y '--. NP g “ R ! ¥ Ly.fi. {/ \ . & { 2 S Tzl sl P b | ‘ - T &N ?'i‘jr o] RN R . &' CRVEBUGECL T ¥ R B Lt BB | A 8 - ) eNa 03 RS, BSOE BY - ! CURE Ws Is made from a simple Tropical Leaf and is a POSK~ TIVE remedy for Pain in, the Back, Severe Headaches, Dizziness, Inflamed Eyes, Bloating,: Night Sweats, Torpid Liver, Painful Urination, Gravel, and all Diseases of the Kidneys, Liver or Urinary Organs. It is a safe and certain curé for Leucorrhea, Womb Dirceases and all Female Complaints. . As a Blood Purifier it i 8 unequaled, for it cures the organs that’ make the blood. , ; ; The largest bottle in the market. Price, $1.286. For sale by Druggists and all dealers. : A - H. H. WARNER & CO., | : . Rochester, N. Y. 70,000 SOLD YEARLY. The growing popularity and usefuiness of CABINET or PARLOR ORGANS is shown by thefactthat SEVENTY THOUSAND are sold yearly in the United States. The best are the 3 : i MASON & HAMLIN which have bren awarded HIGHEST DISTINCTIONS FOR DEMONSTRATED SUPERIORITY at EVERY ONE of the ' GREAT WORLD'S Industrial Exhibitions for thirteen years, withowt orfe single exception. . : NEW STYLES ; Are ready-this scason with important improvements. FOR LA l’.(%l:? CHURCHES, splendid organs, with great power and varicty, at 85, %480, 23%), and less prices; FOR SMALLER CHURCHES, SCHOOLS, &c., 234 {0 €2OO and upwards; SUPERB DRAWING ROOM . STYLES at 220 to 50, and upwards; A GREAT VARIETY of SMALLER ORGANS of equal excellence, though less dapacity, or in plain cases, at 81 to 2200 and upwards. = Also furnished FOR MONTHLY Or QUARTERLY PAYMENTS; 85 and upwards. : Thexe organs are certainly unrivaled in excelience, while the prices are not much higher than those of very inferior instruments, i ! Before purchasing any organ send for lqtest ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE (32 pp.4to), containing full descriptions and prices, including new styles, and much useful information for the purchaser of any organ, which will be sent free and post-paid. MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN GO,, 154 Tremont St., BOSTON; 46 E. 14th St., NEW YORK; 149 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO, THE TEMPLE. i 81, or €9 per dozen. By Dr. W. O. PERKINS. Such a full sized book as the above has thisadvantage over a smaller one: After you have been through its excelle_nt elementary course, have sung its cheerful Songs and Glees, its Spiritual Songs, its Hymns, Tunes and Anthems, you have on hand a large colleqtion which is just the thing for Choir practice, and. also fgr Home singing. Dr. Perkins is well known as one of our most skilful compilers. S THE VOICE OF WORSHIP, 81, or 9 per dozen. By L. O. EMERSON. This book covers precisely the same ground as does the TEMPLE, and people will use one or the other as they fancy the music or the style of this or the other excellent composer. 3lr. Emerson’s books are known in every household and every school, and each new book is intended to be an advance over those that preceded it. JOHNSON’S METHOD FOR SINGING ! ; CILASSES, 80 Cts., or &6 per dozen. By A. N. JOENSON. ‘No Writer-%exqefls- this one in the perfect clearness and simplicity of hisiexplanations and the thoroughness of of his work. The teacher who uses this method needs ' to have in his hand. the CHORUS CHOIR INSTRUCTION BOOK ($1.25), by the same author. The pages corresl pond, and the larger book gives directions for the use of the smaller. ; o 'OLIVER DITSON & CO., LYON & HEALY, | BosTox. ! - CHICAGO.
Of a Far Higher Class than any. other: proprietary medicine of the day stands y ; Tarrant’s Effervescent Seltzer Aperient, And for this reason: it is an exact cournterpart of one of the most valuable natural medicines in the world.. We refer to the great Scltzer Spring of Germany,to which thousands of the dyspeptice, the bilious, the rheumatie, and the victims jof venal diseases resort annually, and return to their homes convalescent or ¢cured. The Aperient is, one of the first and bj far the most successful of all the efforts made to reproduce, in a portable form, the popular mineral waters of Europe. o See that you purchase only the genuine article, +SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 1 FOR THE HAIR. . ‘ BURNETT'S . : ABSOLUTE CURE FOR DANDRUFF Y 4 * BURNETT'S ' - CURES BALDNESS : : AND SCALD HEAD. Beautifully Illuminated Floral Hand Book free. Send address to JOS,. BURNETT & CO.. Boston, Mass, SRRy VEGETABLE = Pk PIL LS ~‘ fl__"liap S % . et 28 Mildest ever known, cure ¥ /E\E#S MALARIAL DISEASES, V 5% & HEADACHE, BILIOUS. 3N NESS, INDICESTION and RN FEVERS. These Yone up the s s}em and restorg health to those sufferin r-on?) gerieral ebility and nervousness. Sold by all Druggists. 88 Cents per .vhox. BUCK BOARD 'MUD WAGON, WA DUANY - | ' Finished and painted ready for use. 13¢x6 Thimble Skeins, Solid Ifimom. Sem.-)Spr!ng Sem.,l‘flnamcl drifi Cushion, ‘‘Burr body” Dash, inch tread C wood hub Wheels, Ilx}{ Tire. .’A wagon for evervbody: just the thing to save a better rig if you have one, and just what ison wanf lfgou have none. Price. Spot Cash, net, 275. Scnd $5 with the order, and -have 20 sent C. O. D. by freight. ABNER C. LOOMIS, Corner Ann and Randolph Streets, Chicago, 111. EX. ID. . BIGELQW,.- i s GENERAT, AGENT : : HARTFORD STEAM BOILER INSPECTION AND INSURANCE CO. 156 & 1538 LaSalle Street, CHICAGO.
A -2% RS- Ryl - AU G I’ Km\nw()l% Tol
§ The Only Remedy [ JN\THAT ACTS AT THE SAME TIME ON THELIVER, , ld THEBOWELS, A . and the KIDNEYS.@ Y This combined action gives am B 8 derful power to cure allda’seaa_aea,_ & iWhy Are We Sick 2/ B ™ Beoause we allow these great organsg \dio become clogged or torpid,. -andly & poisonous humorsare therefore forced§gh \finto the biood that shouid de expelieal | p naturally. - ; i o 2
1 R Fiaty Iz i DRI 5""1‘” 7 i
LA R e B LSRR litF AR Y SR S R TS e M 8 BILIOUSNESS, PILES, CONSTIPATIQN, A ®IDNEY COMPLAINTS, URINARY " DISEASES, FEMALE WEAK-, A > BN "NESSES, AND: NERYOUS i . + - DISORDERS, ; g Yoy causing free action of these organisy o and restoring their power-to throw off . Why Suffer Bilious pains and aches? M Why tormented with-Files Consti{mtion? ! Y Why frightened over dison’lered Kidneys § Why endure niervous or sick headaches? ' - B Why have sleepless nightsi . - " " Use KIDNEY WORT and rejoice in ] ‘ health. It is a dry, vegetable comipound and B 4 One package will makesix qtsof Medlcine. . @Get i of your Drugqist, he will order il L 4 " for you. Price, $l.OO. 1o 9 WELLS, RICEARDSON & 00., . Proprietors, . Y 4 .. (Williead post pid) __ Burlington, Vt. L 4 N o Y T\ Tue WoMAN'S FRIEND/ ‘F|lB THE BEST REMEDY IN THE Q ; E WORLD: FOR FEMALE WRAK-/ o : H E NESS, CHANGE OF LIFE. /& : O & iy ; -00 l B! Slck HEADACHE, PAIN-# Q e <|. ‘ : | FULMONTH, FALUING % e B kot o oo : iy Woun, Dy Q 'YOUR uU,S'l‘t’J tj‘““” Moyzm, g “/ BAND TO ASK‘H i 7 f TH- 4 e e G &D/ T DrugaisT O o s ~ / yor 12 E: ' X » °l- - LARITIES: o : ; moch» & C 1 & ’ ; + | i ~ & h ) '.~ PROPRIETORS. '|® B % Lord, Stoutenburg & Go,, (2 1 /86 WABASH AVENUE, § | ! ‘Chicago, = = Illinofs. . "B~ Sole Agents for the United States. @ - -.AY, ; ERQR M : : ; v l R & -“Rffo, S s | N - o / : oo . e , U NN - ; | A CURE for-the most prevalent and fata} diseages that aflict mankind FOUND AT LAST. ~lnternal médicines never did nor never can cure KIDNEY DISEASE. STOPIXT NOW: apply . | Day’s Kiduey Pad AT ?NCE. and bg cured of i all affections’of the Kidneys. Bladder and ! Urinarvy Organs. It is -Lfie only treatment |, that will cure NERVYOUS ANID PHYSICAL | DEBILITY. and that distressing cemplaint, I **BACK ACHE.”. Itwill annually save many | times its cost.in medicines and plasters, which'at i best give but temporary relief. - Sold by Dl‘ll;l’.'glfi‘ls i or'sent by maii on recéipt of price, 2. Our book, | *How a Life Was Saved,” giving.a history of i this new discovery and a. large ‘record of most | remarkable cures, sent free. - Write for.it. b DAY HIDNEY PAD CO., Toledo. 0. - OUR CHILD’S PATD is the first and only cure ! for Children troubled with incontinence of urine, and who nightly wét the bed. - Price 81.50. sV gy U TAINEE . - = m‘A § = v ' ; =l\ | 7 P . . = P W - This Reineily actsasa gentle Cathartic, i a wondeérful Tonic, an unc)(('(-l;lti(mablo Alt¢rative, and a i certain Corrective, cleansing the system of all the mmpur- |- ities of theé body by its-perfect action upon the Stomach, | Liver and l{ly)u‘.f. Try it. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. : WARRANTED IN ALL CASES. Ask your Druggist fortit and for Teéstimonials. CLUM COMPOUNDING €O, Proprictors, Red Wing, Minn. FOP g S % .. g g = CATARRH . N E VR : S el R ) ) sk Sy oT~SE 0 Me ey 2 ‘Warranted to <'lll'<%er(.'uB T lars free.. Price 5O cents, o AN\ .Su]dhg'l)rm:gzisxs,or svm,hx , i AP/ mail, by AMERICAN FAD | ‘.\\"‘ @ 274 7A CO.; 356 Washington St., b ! “ 7R Boston, Mass. 'ENCYCLOPADIA o= E=TIQUETTEZBUSINESS | “This is the cheapest and only. "comglete and reliabler | work on Etiquette and Business and Social Forms. It | tells how ta perform all the various duties of life, and | how to appear to the best advantage.on all occasions. . | Agents kVanted.—Send for cireulars containing's | tull description of the work and extra terms to Agents. | ~.Address NATTONAL PuBLIsHING Co., Chicago, 111. Phm—rdorr——in i e i e e | > ’ - OF BOTH SEXES, A brilllant book, fascinating in style, pure in language, endorsed b¥ physicians everywhere. An elaborate ex?psirion of the Physical Life of Man and - Woman. - Elégantly printed and fullx Ilustrated. Extraordinary inducements to Agents. Ad- | dress . - JONES BROTHERS & CO., Chicago, 111. " |
AUGERS
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