Ligonier Banner., Volume 15, Number 26, Ligonier, Noble County, 14 October 1880 — Page 7
~ SCHOOL AND CHURCH. ~—The fund for the new professorships in Harvard’s Divinity School has reached $113,700. .- . —Mr. Spurgeon has lately received a legacy of $20,000 for the benefit of his Pastor’s College and $123,000 for his Orphanage. ./, - : o —Rev. W. H. DeMotte, D.D., of the Illinois; Wesleyan University, has accepted the presidency of the Karisas Lnstitution for the Deaf and Dumb, at Olathe. i . . —There are in ‘the United States 358 colleges. . Of these fourteen were established priorto 1790; thirteen between 1820 and 1850, and 251 during the last thirty years. B L - —The Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions received the pasb‘%'iea’.r only $1,518, but with this small® amount thirteen boarding and four day schools were supported, in which over four hundred Indian children are trained. ~ —The Marquis of Bute, who has " just returned from his villain Jerusalem intends to establish a Roman Catholic monastery for Inglish monks on the property. Plans are in preparation by the architect of the new Brompton ora~ tory, the cost not to exceed $25,000. - —Rev. Stephen H. Tyng(the slder), of New York, now in his eighty-first year, enjoys, a pension of .$5,000 a year from St. George’s Church, over which he was thirty-tive years the pastor. His three sons entered the ministry. The eldest died and the others are still in ‘the work. o - —Missionary Calhoun writes from Tripoli in Syria, . saying that as the Greek priests of that place could do nothing else to hinder the mission work they cursed the missionaries .and their doings, as well as the rooms, they occupy and the people who enter them. The cursing has not, however, greatly interfered with the missionary operations. . —Great Britain sends out 1,000" missionaries and expends annually £600,000.. The Continental churches employ 400 missionaries at a cost of £120,000. Anierica contributes 550 men and £300,000. In all there are now at work in heathen countries 2,000 Protestant missionaries and the churches.sustain the work by an annual contribution of about $5,000,000. ) : . —September 21 was the 500th-anni-versaty of one of the most important events in the history of the Christian world, the completion of the translation of the Bible into English by John' Wickliffe, who has not inappropriately been styled ‘the morning-star of the Reformation.” The event was celebrated by a convention of representatives of the Bible societies of New Jérsey at Trenton. ' .
—The Rev. William Taylor has sent out thirty-eight missionaries te South America in the last two years, who have established schools and preaching places chiefly in Peru and Chili. ' The missionaries are self-supporting. They are organized into a society called the South American Evangelical Association. A college is to be established at Santiago, for which an endowment of $25,000 is asked of the people of the United States. . Mr. Taylor, who is a Methodist, will send out reinforcements in October, both to Sduth America and India. v o
Journalistic Amenities.
The 11_n§ophis<taped_ readers of those
influential “journals doubtless imagine that the editor of the Petaluma Peavine and Vallejo Vengeance are bitter and forocious foes. It is quite possible that neither of these gentlemen would speak tothe otherin their respective towns for untold wealth; it would spoil the effect of the terrible personal denunciations indulged in throughout each issue of their respective sheets. But away from the glare of the rustic eye the case is entirely changed. These warriors of the flowing pen met in San Francisco last week and took lunch together—something of almost weekly occurrence, we understand. Happening to occupy the next box‘to the twain in the restaurant, we naturally overheard some of their econversation.
* How is it, my dear old boy, you - called me a ¢ putrid pirate of perdition’ only twice in your. paper yesterday?” " .said the Peavine man, reproachfully, } ‘¢ It was hardly the square thing when !, I designated you as a * scalawag of the nether slums’ four times on :Wednes(i;ay;’l ] - . i $
. It was entirely through the stupidity of my assistant, dear old friend. I wrote with my own hand a half-column leader headed *The Crawling Reptile Squirms Again,’ but a high-rate circus ad. came in and crowded it out,” replied the Vengeance proprietor. : . ‘“That was tough luck,” sighed the Peavine director sawing away on hgp crop; *“I felt it'all the morte as that very day I announced that you served two terms at Sing Sing for burglary, and there was no doubt of your having deserted three wives in Texas.’ ;
‘“Just like your kind of thoughtfulness,’”’ returned the other molder of public thought, as- he ordered more coffee. " *“ I was also exceedingly %rati-' fied and touched by your article of Sunday last week, to the effect that I committed forgery at nineteen and that my mother was a colored woman.”
¢ O, don’t mention it, old fellow; besides, didn’t you say, the day before yesterday, that I cheated a blind widow out of her last cent and was ridden on a rail in New York for infanticide?’
There was a moment of retrospective silence, during 'which both cronies were too full of emotion tos peak. Finally the Vallejo man said, softly: - . “Ididn’t mean to tell you, ‘Bill, old man—in fact, I intended it as a pleasant surprise for you—but the truth is I am working up a superb item connecting you with the Nathan murder, with absolute proofs, and affidavit of a confession said to have been made by you when gick in the Penitentiary for arson.”’ ‘‘Heaven bless you, dear boy! I don’t know how I get along without you these dull times. However, to-morrow I’ll complete a beautiful little thing I’ve been working up, provirng' you to be the %ounger Bengier, and appealing to the Vigilance Committee to turn out. I'll send you a proof.”’ Tl And paying their checks the two allies lit cigars and walking off arm in arm.~—San Francisco Post. - :
; . FARM AND FIRESIDE. —lt pays to sow salt and lime on ground which is wormy, especially the strawberry bed. = —Providence never hides a smiling countenance from thosé who manure highly, cultivate often and seed liberally. Al ‘ : .—Nut Cake.—One and one-half cups sugar, one-half cup butter, three-cups flour, one-half cup sweet milk, three eggs, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one cup of hickory nuts, one teaspoonful vanilla. : : , —lrish Potato Pie or Pudding.—One pound mashed potato, rubbed through collander; half pound ‘butter—cream with the sugar; six eggs, whites and yelks separately; one Temon squeezed into the potato while hot; one teaspoon nutmeg, same of mace; two cups.white sugar. Mix as sweet potato pudding; bake in open -shells of paste. To be eaten 0015. ' : —Green Tomato Pickles.—Slice one peck of tomatoes intd a jar-and sprinkle a little salt over each layer; let them stand twenty-four hours, drain off the liquor, put the tomatoes into a kettle with a teaspoonful of each of the following spices: Ground ginger, allspice, cloves, mace, cinnamon, a teaspoonful of scraped horseradish, twelve small or three large red peppers, three onions, a cup full of brown sugar; cover all with vinegar; boil slowly for three hours. —Grape Jelly.—Grapes too coarse or acid for table usé make good jelly; have them firm, sound and ripe. Pick from stem, wash in cold water, drain, put in stone jar, place in pot cold water, boil till skins are loose, remove skins, as they darken jelly and make slightly astringent; save all juice. Boil pulps once again, pour into flannel bag, squeeze through; allow pound lump sugar to pint juice; mix, boil steadily, not too quickly, until iv will jelly when tried on saucer. Put in small glasses which are first wet in cold water. Place over each a piece of paper dipped in brandy; tie closely and keep in cool place. v : ' —One mode of getting green food for cattle and sheep in early spring igto sow rye in corn stubble early enough to get a good fall growth. What feed is thus grown is as nutritious as ordinary pasture or roots and costs nothing except for seed and cultivating under. Really the feed costs nothing, for in sowing the rye. many weeds are destroyed, a new surface is turned up and the weed seéeds which sprout perish in the winter.. This alone is ample pay for labor and seed.. There is a further advantage in having the soil covered during the winter-instead of being naked, as it otherwise would be. Rye sown now will give considerable .feed for sheep and cattle this fall, and more yet in the spring before plowing. This spring feed is especially wvaluable for ewes with lambs after the ground has settled. - i
—How to Pit Apples.—Fall apples may be preserved in pits made as follows: Choose an elevated piece of ground in the orchard and scoop out a shallow basin, in which heap the apples in quantities of not more than ten or twelve bnshels; eover them with straw laid lengthwise from top to bottom of ‘the heap. Leave them thus for two or three days, during which they will heat and sweat. After they have dried, cover the straw with a light coating of earth, -except in three or four small places at the bottom and at the top, ‘where a large wisp of straw should be inserted and bent over to make a water shed. The apples will keep much longer in. this way than in barrels, and winter apples may be kept until spring’ in fine order. If the-apples are picked ‘before they are quite ripe they will keep longer. e
Successful Poultry Raising.
In raising poultry or stock it should be the aim of - every one to keep it healthy and improve it. - You can do it very easily by zx.dopting some systematic rules. These may be summed up in prief as follows: i T
1. Construct your house good and warm, so as to avoid damp floors, and afiord a flood of sunlight.. Sunshine is better than medicine. . :
2. Provide a-dusting and scratching place where you can bury wheat and corn and thus induce the fowls to take needful exercise. :
3. Provide yourself with some good healthy chickens, none to be over three or four years old, giving one cock to very twelve hens. - 4. Give plenty of fresh air at all times of the year, especially in summer. 5. Give plenty of fresh water daily; and never allow the fowls to go thirsty. 6. Feed them systematically, two or three times a day and scatter the food so they can’t eat too fast or without proper exercise. Do not feed more than they will eat up clean; or they will get tired of that kind of feed. 7. Give them a variety of both dry and cooked food; a mixture of cooked meal and vegetables is an excellent thing for their morning meal. @ 8. Give soft feed in the morning, and the whole grain at night, excepta little wheat or cracked corn placed in the scratching place to give them exercise during the day. 9. Above all things keep the hen house clean and well ventilated. 10. Do not crowd too many in one house. If you do look out for disease. 11. Use carbolic powder in the dusting bins occasionally to destroy lice. 12. Wash your roosts and bottom of laying nests and whitewashonce a week in summer, and once a month in winter. 13. Let the old and young have as large a range as possible—the larger the better. , : » 14. Don’t breed too many kinds of fowls at the same time, ! unless you are going into the business. . Three or four will give your hands full. - - 15." Introduce new blood into your stock every year or so, by either buying. a cockerel or sittings of eggs from some reliable breeder. = - 16. In buying birds or eggs, go to some reliable breeder who has his reputation at stake. You mayshave to pay a little more for birds, but you can depend on what you get. Culls' are not cheep at any price. e 17. Save the birds for next year's breeding and send the ollzhers to markj?t. In shipping fancy poultry to market send it ,grle:?se;:—%ural Nebraska,
l IN the earljer part of the last century there lived in Scotland a Colonel Townshend, who could apparently die ‘whenever he chose and come to life -at will. His frame would become rigid and cold, his eyes dull and ghastly, and his features shrunk and waxy as in death. In this state he would remain for several hours, and then would slowly revive. He once performed this strange experiment in the presence of } three physicians, 'who, perceiving no pulsations of the heart and no respiration, convinced themselves that he was really'dead. But soon after they left ‘him he revived. It has been asserted that, he died actually while repeating ‘the ghastly performance. o THE most strange, and certainly the most correct barometer in Paris, says the Continental Gazette, is the green frog, or reine, as it is called. The little animals live like goldfish in a glassbowl of water; a ladder or some such means of climbing up is placed in it, and the water: Eept clear. In fine weather the frog lurks at the bottom. If a storm or bad weather 'impends, somes twenty-four hours before it arrives, the little creature will climb up and thrust its nose out of the water, ‘nor quit that position till its prognostication is fulfilled. : L —————‘ob— ————— - A FRIEND of Edwin' Arnold, author of ““The Light of Asia,” tells how the poet found his wife: Mr. Arnold was in ‘the British-museum one day, when his attention was arrested by a pieture of Perugino’s which. a beautiful young lady was copying. Presently the face of the fair woman, in his eyes, grew more charming in the work of Perugino, and Mr. Arnold did not rest until Miss Fanny Channing, the d\aughter: of the Rev. W. H. Channing, of London, had become the central .charm of his own home. o —————— Y W— - [Albany ‘Evening Mail.], i i A Fatal Omission. ““Do you know that neither of the platforms suits me,”’ said one of our old subscribers to us the other day. “As both ,pérties seem to want health, strength and long life more than anything else, they cannot do better than have the Hamburg Drops and St. Jacobs Oil planks included. With these they can weather all storms, political and domestic as well ps dyspeptic and rheumatic.” His logic was good and convinced us.: S {5 T B A BostON happy thought is to turn the abundance of the apple crop to ac‘count for the poor people of that city. Bags are sent to farmers who will contribute, and the railroads give transportation free. . i _ : T e : ' [Allentown Democrat.] LAuBAcH, the Hamilton street drugoxist, last week sold at retail two hundred and thirteen bottles of the celebrated St. Jacobs Oil, whose curative powers over Rheumatism the ‘papers say 80 much of nowss-days. ; “§ou can’t play that on me!” said the piano to the amateur who broke down on a difficult piece of music.—AN. Y. News. _ . ' A et O . % . A Happy Restoration. - I can truly say that Il owe my present existence and happy restoration' to the hopes and joys of life, to the use of Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, and ['say to every one suffering from any manner of kidney, liver or urinary trouble, *‘Use this remedy and recover.” - W. E. SANFORD. . HoLLEY, N..Y., Feb. 25, 1880. - : =i . Dr. R. V. PIERCE, CONSULTING PHYSRICIAN to the World’s Disnensary and Invalids’ Hotel, of Buffalo, N- Y., has resicned his seat in COD%.I‘G:SS that he may. hereafter devote his Wwhole time and attention to those applying to the WorLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION for the treatinent of Chronic Diseases. Tmoe sales of the Frazer Axle Grease are increasing every day, because it is as good as represented. : WiLHOFT'S Fever .and. Azue Tonie. The old reliable remedy now sells at one dollar.
-Use Redding’s Russia Balve in the house, and use Redding’s Russia Salve in the stable.
THE MARKETS. ~
: ’ NEW YORrK. October 12, 1830. LIVE STOCK—Cattle.....;.., $7 50" @slo 12% SReep. o L) ges @ 500 o HoedL oo S 0 BUOOG s FLOUK—Gooud to Choice..... 465 @ 650 White Winter Extras. ... 460 @ 58 WHAT-No. ? Red i+ 701 loty 11y No.ESprEmr . L 0 g 12%2 2 1.13% COLLN—W estern Mixed. ... .. M w 5414 OAdn-—-Western Mixed. (... 89 @ 41 RYE_T-We5tem..........A..5‘.. 9% @ 97 POitlk—Mess (New)........0.. 1600 @ 102 LARD Stedin 0. ol g BTI w 8 Y 0 CHIIyeSRLE - ol gy @ 124 WOOL—DomesticFleece..... .86 & 48
. TCHICAGO. : BEEVES —Extra.. ......... $3 @ %70 Ghowe.. . ... ... 450 @ 510 Gold . g 5 w 43 Mediam o o 840 @ A 0 Butchers® 5t0ck.......... 250 @ 3815 Stoex@attle. . .0 ... 250 W 300 HOG3—Live—Good to Choice 500 @ 580 SHiEKEP—Poor to Choice...... 200 @ 450 BUTTER—Creamery . ........ 28 @ Bt Good to Choice Dairy..... 8@ 2 EGGSEMvésh 17 @ 18 FLOUR -Winver .. ... ..5 50 @ 600 COSEMEERSG L s ) e B D Badelite 000 700 G ROD. GRAlN—Wheut, No. 2 Spring 9115 ¢ 878 Corn No. 2 = ... S(@ H59%5 O NO 2 . 2% IYEyNO. 2. ol 8345@ 337 Baplesa Na 2 I e e BROOM CORN— . 4
v Red:lNpped Hurl. ... ... .. b @ 6lg KmeGreéen .... . 8 6 MREORIOR .o 0 o e 4 cCrodkke 0 2@ 4 PORK-— . . ... . 1800 @ 1805 LARD Steam . ... .. ... ‘BBz 85 LUMBER—
Common Dressed Siding.. 18 00 @ 19 50 Blooving.. ... ... ..., 1680 @ 260 " Common 80ard5.......... 1000 @l5 00 Feneing .=.0.. .. 1060 @ 1350 Baghe = v Ll R 0 @ 2% ABhingles... ... .......... 20860 @ 290 - EAST LIBERTY. CATTLE—Best....... ........ $6OO @ $5 25 ‘Fairto G00d............... 42 '@ 480 ‘HOGS—Yorkers.. ............ 450 @ 470 Enilddeihdes ... ... .0 510 @ 580 5HEEP—8e5t................. 425 @ 450 Comwign... .. ........,..., 850 @ 400 _ "+ 'BALUTIMORE. : CATTEE-Best. ... .......... $450 @35 31% Mediam .. .:.......... 800 @ 8% HOGS—GQE)I())d..“... e 000 2@ 814 SHEEP—Poor to Choice...... 350 @ 5(0
DrBULLS SYRUP
gor the Cure of Goughs, Colds. Hoarseness, Asthma, ronchitis, Croup, Influenza, WhooslngCough Inciplent Consumptien, &c. Price only 26 cents & DOttle,
Ty TR S T S T T T T e T T O S T D T T T v PRI s o B .i.l ge : == -ee = o L e e e S T T e Serneae e P eI s T S e s B = S e —— = o - o e el —— ™ e - ———— z———-m-m o e v b RS —— e gghres == e —aooeoes e, e SR e == g Bl e &= o ) e —_— e e = e SERey e e e e _— St e P ST T e S = e e — == eßets, oo B —== e N &= E = e B e e =t e o e i S e | B e e e e e e e : === e e | == e T g e e P = e - S o e e = s == S Emeoe Ry==== Pas R B Sty =0 —x R T = == = e s Seaees B ok R o SEp — § == == == = N = EEEEEE & % s B BT £ s SN = = = - == T e e Eren Sk PR b o ESU RS BB BN S = == : e B - EeeeseTe S B R = 8 B 8 o = S el e S 7 By S 5 B B o 8 N — = St B\ /T % e s e 0 Soey BB B 28 == S — 5 S 0 TreEsiee B o 8B HEme o W@ B 8 TS = == == Y - — . — - d - v ov— - — - - (o e e e - ety - = e B 2 5 B Es 8 % = ==3 == = e = e e TS s aS S === == = == e b = — =1 SlEsses S ey el = o= R =B = E B B = = — T — e ety S = = OB B = B = == S sy = — o = o ! s = B = = == A e P S e == F OE O£ BER E ELE E= = =z L I R o S == B e BB ERE . B SR S = = s e e peoee . A 2o = Eak BooS N B — = = == SheEr et SEeees gees £ = B'E2 = =2 B B = = S e e S gaoo e N s e B = 84 = o = ig2B=BS B =0 _— = _== p e = e = 2 A = &= £ = = === emcm Shme s, : = X == = T = BA > e e e S e e e S e T b e e . e e e e e e e B . o e . e e e e e e P b e e S R e o e S o e e e et 2 et o et S T S, s S - e e e T s T
No Preparation on earth e}i\;mfs ST.JACOBR OIL 88 & SAFE, SURE, SIMPLE and CHEAP External Remedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 CENTS, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of ite claims. ;1 RECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES. SOOLD BY ALL DRUGBISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE, A. VOGELER & CO. : : Baltimore, Md., U. 8. A. -=MRS. POTTS'= bold-Handle Sad Iro dili6 »all 1700, L Gemate B : NS R : i F N e R:‘\ - BR Ss e M* R : f sy U .. ‘QWQL,‘&;'~“’" 5 ' —FOR SALE BY— | Fruit, WineandJellyPress 2 e o S ~ Price, ggfg 3.0, = Sad f GG e . LPO gé{fi@”l ' ~ & ) [ B 2 T AR N it L %l?’f ® For Seeding and Extracting Juice —FROM — ALL FRUITS AKD BERRIES. {=F"EVERY FAMILY NEEDS ONE._&I s«;-jd for a Catalogue, Free. 18|y . . ENTERPRISE MT'E €O, Philadelphia, P FOR SALELI}_Y_TIHL{IABD WARE TRADE. IT HAS BEEN TRIED BY THOUSANDS SUCH AS YOU, WHO HAVE BEEN CURED! ! UNSOLICITED EVIDENCE ~ OF ITS MERITS! LEN'S LUNG TALSA M O corontt oo not be found a better cough or lung remedy. As an expectorant it has no equaf. " Sold by all Druggists. | o : ,‘.‘f.?’" : .:z‘ | o Sl AN 53 g | EENE ‘::: ey | R i’; | -.:z 3 o . %’ e N ?‘Sv s : i‘;’;} : | gx, = . ; . o e
. One Feive Thousand Dollar United States Registered Four Per Cent.-Bond will be forfeit d and paid by the MaLT BITTERS (COMPANY to any individual or to any society of physicians or druggists if MALT BITFERS, & Family Medicine prepared by them, does not excel, in a fair comipertitive examination, all other medical compounds now before the publie, called **Bittérs,” in the following particulars: 1. DIGESTIVE POWER. 2. NERVE POWER. 4. 8. BLOoOD PRODUCING POWER. | 4. FLESH PRODUCING POWER. ) : PUREST ANXD BEsT MEDICINE. MALT BITTERS, a ffll‘t". unferment:d Extract of Malt, Hops, Calisaya, | Iron, etc., are the Purest, most Economical and Best Medicine for all ages and both sexes ever called * Bitters.” | S : Malt Bitters Company, Boston, Mass. , WELCOME CHORUS. @1.00). By W.S. | TILLEN, for High® Sciools. Just out. SCNG | SBELLS. (0 cts.) By L. O. EMERSON. Just | g Bout: for Common Schoois. WHITE ROBES. | 80 cts.) for Sunday Schools. o GTICN BOOR PARLOR ORGAN INSTRUGTION BOOR (81.50), By A.N.JOHNSON,is out of sight ahead ofany others in teaching beginners on Reed Organ, both secu- . lar and sacred music, Sunday School, Temperance, Gospel and Hymn music. All teachers take to it at once. ' (|CHOIRS AND SINGING CLASSES will not forget our three superior books: Voice of Worship (81), by L. 0. Emerson; Temples (21), by W. 0. Perkins, and Method for Singing % Classes, (6)cts.), by A. N. Johnson. . J ‘ CHOIRS will find no better Anthem ‘ | Books than our new : I ot AMERICAN ANTHEM BOOK. (£1.25), by Johnson. ‘ Tenpey & Abtey, or EMERSON'S ANTHEM | BOOK, (81.25), by L. 0. Einerson, or ANTHEM ~ HARP, ®1.25), by W. 0. Perkins. : TEMPERANCE tI;EOPLE will be sure . ik - : TEMPERANCE JEWELS, (35 cts.), by ZTenney & Hoffman,; or TEMPERANCE LIGHT. (12 c!s.). bfi Hufi% & Servoss; or HULL'S TEMPERANC GLEE BOOEK, (40 cts.) : - Specimen copies of any book mafled for above prices. OLIVER DITSON & CO., LYON & HEALY; | BOSTON. CHICAGO. | CHAS. H. DITSON & CO., J.E. DITSON & CO., ‘B4B Broadway, N, Y. 1228 Chestnut St., Phila. i e e ————————————————————————teeseae. - | - OF BOTH SEXES. | A briiliant book, fascinating in style, pure in ; hngnnge. endorsed b{ %h'yslclans everywhere. . An | %p, orate efi-osmon of t e‘fhysical Life of Man and | oman. egantl{ srtnte and fully Illustrated, | Extraordinary inducements to ngntl. Ad- | gress JONES BROTHERS & CO., Chicago, 111. |
'rniE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY . o RHEUMATISY, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAG®C, BACKACHE, GoOUT, SORENESS ‘ ' CHEST, SORE THROAT, ‘ . QUINSY, SWELLINGS } SPRAINS, | FROSTED FEET 2 " EARS, ;:EBURNB g scA:“x-.;:Ds, : Geaeral Bodily Pains, { TOOTH,EAR " HEADACI'E, ‘ 1L THER RS ACHES.
A N TRE ATMENT gr Consumption, Asthma, 5 ‘ . ronchitis, Catarrh; Dys- ) GRS pepsia, Heandache, Debility, Neuralgia, Rhéumatismy ; g {ansau Chronic and Nervous Disorders. . P e i \ACTS DIRECTLY upon the great nervous and organic centres, : and cures by a natural process of revitalization, e s | 'HAS EFFECTED REMARKABLE. CURES, which are " 2 HAS BEEN .USED BY Rt Ry, John J. Keane, Bishop of s . Rev. Jo . Keane, Bishop of. G e Richmond, Va., E‘i,on. Wm. D. Kelley, T. 8. Arthur,.and othem,pwho 4 | Jhave -been iarstelv ‘benefited, and to whom we refer by ferml'éfl'on. ; IS STRONCLY ENDORSED: ‘* We bave the most unequivocal A Q P testimony to its curative power from many persons of high character i f and intellizence."— Lutheran Observer. *‘The cures which lfave been ob. ~ : AW - tained by this new treatment seem morelike miracles than cases of natural = = U g W healing."—Arthur's Fome Maga:ine, - * There is no doubt as to the genuine-. . ? ness :mg bositive results of this treatment.—Boston Journal of Commerce. iE: THE OXSGEN HOME TREATIMENT contains two months’ supply, LI with inhaling apparatus and full directions for use, - e g . e SENT FREE: n"l‘reatise on Compound Oxygen, ¢iving the history -of this new - discovery and a larxc record of most remarkable cures. Write for it. Address ] : : : Drs. STARKEY & PALEN, - - ; ADM! ‘ISTEBED BY INHALA-HUN 1109 and 11| Cirard St.. Philadelohia. P® 3-| 9 v K I:DNE'SZ‘ DISE éSE s CONSTIPATION § { ! ; o : e e ; s ) e AND PILES. are guickly and surely cured by the use of KIDNEY-WORT. is new amd wonderful remedy which.is having suchan immensesale in all parts of the country, workson natural prineiplea.. It restbres strensth and tone to the discaced organs, and through them cleanses the system of decumalated and ‘Poisonous, humecrs. Kidney diceasesof thirty yearsstanding have been cured, also Piles, Constipation; Dheumatism, &c., which have distressed the victims for years. We have volumes of testimony ofits wondériul curative power.. No longdruse Alcholic Bitters, which do more harm than good, or drastic pills, but useé natures remedy, EIDNEY-WCRT, and health will be quickly regained, . Cet it of your Drugict, Prico, 81. (Will send post paid.) WELLS, RICHARDNON & €O., Prop’s, Butlington, Vi
gl B RN E RYS T N B AT SR ErnTy IR 18 ) § &> & PR g 7, i, 7 oA P, .~ 4 7 H S/ yfi» kool Fm o Au 37 & < L A K = g o @X T 7 ST I - "{%‘; » 2 g e C o 5 ffi‘& 1 - X 7. ¢ ALY et 7 B ", Fe ',;/ h 3 7 e i SSRne ) 1 7 : SR LT N z& Ere X 5 e VA N s s S et V 0 TR Py % J‘ . ;." P i 3 ¥ I _—? ;,”::',3\' N AR A ] ;; fl_%,:&& b NN ');‘-.{4“:‘;;:7 %f"i 2 AR R S | A EOSERE B % § e N 7 3 5 B é" TR B Lo Ao S N g SR i o VEA RS ;\‘\ A LT e : B B TRt AW et S ) ‘r & LvF"{‘ ! “ 2y ‘;m N ';’,‘ KA RLY p o - Aot A i - BRA M ‘-4-4.___—\\3\ - 2 j.,f" e BPEEGg ¢ BESED gy‘ kA 1 (A 5 HRe M CURE ©2 ? et el eSS 2 A Is made from a simple Tropical Leaf and 15 a POSITIVE remedy for Pain {n the Back, Severe Head: aches, Dizzincss, 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 cure for Leucorrhea, Womb Diseases and all Femal¢ Complaints. *Ag a Blood Purifier it is unequaled, for it cures the organs that make the blood. 2 The largest bottle in the market. Frice, $1.83. For sale by Druggists and all dealers. 3 : H. H. WARNER & CO,, . Rochester, N. XY, For Strength, Purity and Flavor, the o Mk ' | B 5&..”‘ .3 LB T, AP ”/\~ ‘::f( ), i @ 5 TR : Ry z P (,_l;‘:\‘ NQERT e e T\ : O N ;,fgt‘ SBor '% Ak v-'-:éffi;é(} RN ."-"?.i-};' Fisaet "‘.‘?'3?‘.--'_-:l4)‘»#‘4@ l ‘.‘E"‘&'- l "T;f‘.%’f Itis sold in pound and half pound packages oi/v—never in bulk, See that thie seals are unbroken au:,l'Be:\r the signature of C. Jevne. There are four grades each of Young Hyson, Imperial, Gunpowder, Oolong, Japan, Souchong and Mixed. No. 4, 50 cents: No. 3, 60 cts; No. 2, 80 cts; No. 1.51.00. If we have no agency at your place, and you can’t get the Gold Mandarin Tea at your Grocer’s, get up a Club Order among your friends and send direct to us, and we will pay you for the trouble. C. TV IV XE, Wholesale Grocer, || 10 and { | 2 Madison St., Chicago, An Agent wanted in every town In" America.
- & Q% L I'FOR CHILLS AND FEVER AND A, DISBEASKES . . CAUSED BY : ’ Bl | S | Malarial Peisoning : : "OF THE BLOOD. ' A Warranted Cure. - . i Prlce, $ ' -oo- : 83 FOR BALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 8 FOR THE HAIR, Y 4 /. BURNETT'S o 0 THE BEST HAIR ~~ | DRESSING. : BURNETT'S - b Promotes the Growth : of the Hair. . Beautifully Illuminated Floral Hand. Book free. Send address to "9_B._'_ g_g_R_N ETT & co._._Bcsron. Mass. BEFORE BUYING OR RENTING AN Send for our LA’f"EST ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE (32 pp. 4to), with NEWEST STYLES, at £5l and upward; or 's6. 38 per quarter,and ulp. Sent free. MASON & HAMLIN OR((}IAN C0,,154 Tremont St., BOSTON: 44 East 14th St., NEW YORK; 149 Wabash Ave., CHiCAGO. ’ S FOR THE GREAT REPRESENTATIVE . Special. and Remarkahle Offer. : THE REGULAR SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF THE . (Hox. HENRY WATTERSON, EDITOR) IS TWO DOLLARS A YEAR; BUT IN ORDBER 1o properly post the people on the great political 1 s.lOOB now at issue, and letthem see what a strong, g:\ir. re¢liable and able pag)er the COURIER-JOURNAL is, it will'be sent from receipt of subscription to January 1, 1881 (postage free), for : : ONLY 25 CENTS. ‘ This will include our DouBLE HOLIDAY NUMBER iB- - during the Christmas Holidays, which is double the size of our regalar issue, and the LARGEST NEwsPAPER IN THE WORLD, and which i 8 alone worth the entire price charged. 3 o tDcm]ocrat.stint(iilhiso[. tlndim.x;:i %m(ii Ilfiinovg‘sf l:}l%}d}{o{imr T y-conteste ates, w n the COURIER-JOURNAL the most ettt X | %ai;:n Document tl{_lvy can use. Circulated freely among ‘ Aasuhli.cans, its influence would be powerful for good. ress i | COURIER-JOURNAL CO. -‘ | LOUISVILLE, KY.: LANDS and HOMES ceor JN MISSOURL. arms for sale at from §8 to 810 ), . cellent for Stock, Fruit and Farming, splfgr%cv]:;ntgr:' convenient markctr, £ood schools, low taxes, healthful fon ot Futm it riccs st 1 G 35 LT : €B, send to GEO. 5 hie THEWS & CO,, 61% &’liv_e Street. Bt. Louis. Mo. —_— W ANTED for %38‘}@ WANTED AGENTS Xigas o Cido Bistor{. glvingé.lflsfiory of North and South Amerlce‘a,;n Centra, America, Mexico and the United States, with a “({hr;onolm“g %ll Imp&giant evenits of Mxfifi!ca.n His- | A our s : ANDREWS, DECKER & Co., uei’:i&‘;o'i%’ét., ,Chig;:),;fil‘f S2OOPMZE puzzles in Comic Monthly, a mammoth Sictor.la.l for family entertainment. 21st {ear. _Sent on trial six months to any new subscriber | or 25 cts. MSfemmenls 10c.; none free. Address ~ OOMIO MONTHLY, 121 Nassau Stroet, N, X,
i BYMPTOMS OFA | - TORPID LIVER. Loss of Appetite, Bowels costive, Pain in - the Head, with a dull tensation in the back part, Pain under ‘the shoulder blade, tulle ness after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of nave ing neglected some duty; Weariness, Dige giness, Fluttering at the Heart, Dots be= fore the eyes, Y ellow Bkin, Headache generally over the right eye, fle'stles’_snesl with flt{ul dreams, highly colored Urme_ & - CONSTIPATION, . . - >3’ ~ ) . TUTT’S PILLS are espcecially adapted to such ca,ll'c-s-, - single dose e¢ffects such a change of feela ing as to astonish the sufferer, i o | SULD .E\'J‘.#i\\’d_hl@&. PRICE 23 CENTS. : Ofce, 35 Murray Streets Néew Yorks
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m TET TN THREE REMEDIES IN ONE, In all Hsorders—mild, pouté or chronfe— < Keep up the strength-and keep-the bowels freeg Glve a corrective, laxative and tonie,: .- i In one pure medium that cembines the three SELTZER APERIENT is that mediom gloriousy. It tones, refreshes, regulates, sustains, w 0 s And o'er disease for thirty years victorious,. * 1 The world’'s well-founded confiderice rerains. . - TARRANT'S EFFEEVRSCENT SELTZER APERIENT. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. : ‘, . SRy . VEGETABLE C/’\ k 3 2 . A2k PI L T (MBS EEF Mildest ever known, cure AR FERS MALARIAL DISEASES, ]E%},fl 2 HEADACHE, BILIOUS. N2~ NESS, INDIGESTION and S\ FEVERS. These. TR T A P Tone up the system and restore health _tg those suffering from general debility an nervousness. Sold byall Druggists. ™ - 28 Cenis per Box. ‘ = ; = 24 =gl - 3 - = Q@ Treatment 8 OHRD - o NAsAL AND BroncEDAL CATARRH For the complete eradication-of which we prescribe both internal and local remedies, . e i : Specially Adapted fo the Condition-of Patients, Hundreds of obstinate cases:have yielded to our treats ment where other laided, high-priced, so-called remes dies faibed to effect.cures.” We do‘not elaim to cure eve erything ir; the catalogue of ills, but judging by our suce cess in thet‘tl‘e:\t:nvnl of -Catarth, weé confidently believe that we can cure any c¢ase of this loathsome disease thaj is not beyond medical aid. . Not sold by druggists. Sen for circular, giving terms and other information. .. . Address LEWIS HAYNER. Troy, Ohio.
O TIOUETTEZBUSINESS
This is the cheapest and only ;comsletc‘ and reliable work on Etiquette and Business and Social Forms. . I tells how to perfom all the varfoug iduties of life, and how, to ap%ar to the .best advantage on all occasions. Agents anted.—Send -for c¢irculars containing a tulldescription of the work and extra termsto Agunts. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING Co ~ Chicago, lIL
2,000 PIANCS AND ORGANS 0@ ) . LY - Sent onni'%ul and returhed arto(lln" g;f)q—g‘ e expenss not as represented. Aos SASESRES S Prlxpces guarantced k)pw- R 'ffi"&ég"’l :‘3%‘:"7"4 i er than elsewhere. _Are ‘{;,m ‘&f‘:"x.—: ;”;:{ - manuf’rs of{ the Story & ’;!Q';ti,zfififi%f‘%g&" Camp Pfanos and Or- \;—\‘,r«z«f’t WL gans. ‘and Gen, Agents @ .‘Lfi»&f"*"" SN or Decker Brothers, =9B ‘t",mrf‘ Wi o Haines and Mathushek = €& #"\gz"- S "KL - Pianos' & Estey Organs. % '._;,,AT\' 3 WP STORY & CAMP, 188 & 190 "* e State Street, Chicago, 111! i : Faro
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AGENTSWAHTEB To write at - -once - -for- fulk pa:[lcum.rsconccming onr. ' On our improved I ADD Di FAMILY B¥BLES, : : v and other fast-selling . Address FORSNHEE & McMAKIN, "~ 190 West Fifth St., Cincinnati, Ohto,
D ey S RHDUAY L @]NF AT AYh N xfia s Nflfi‘fi , Rl
When you ask for Ridge's Food see ‘l‘{'.uciiffldtrzr E:_(?&E; the name is embossed on the lid and the label has the signature of WOOLRICH &-CO. . W G 0 Tu The QRIDEST and BEST Business College, Catalogue tree. Address-C. BAYLIEE}, Dubuque, Jfowa. ——— e ______ ‘,_,-_,_:__._.‘_A__.. GUNS Revolvers. Nus. Cataloguefree, Great Western Gun Werks, Pittsburgh, Pa. AGENTS SOMETHING Coe, Yonge & C 0.,. WANTED. = INTEEXAT.. St Louls, Mo. " —_— e eTR $72 A WEERK. 8123 day at home easily made, Costly outfit free: Addr’s True & Co. Augusta, Me. | A MONTH ! AGENTS WANTED ¢ 7.5 Best Selling Articles in the world; a sams= plefree. JAYX BRONSON, Detroit, Mich, $6 6 A WEEK .inyour owntown. Termsand $6 outfit free. Addr's'H. Hallett&Co. Portland,Me Sl TSN sS S eDR AGE"TS ‘Coln mong' with Dr. Chase’s Newr . ‘Recelpt Book. Qurs the onl% one gen= uine. By mail, $2. Address Chase Pub’ng Co., Toledo, Q. 2 . Boy - 3 s t s U ggdady athome. S‘auégl_esworthss : 0 » Address STINSON & Co., Portiand, Me, A. N. K, st as NG I S sOk WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, please say you saw tl}.'e.Advemtdgth ) n this paper, = nTER TR
