Ligonier Banner., Volume 21, Number 37, Ligonier, Noble County, 30 December 1886 — Page 4

BR[ 0 I’éVN”S | WILL CURE HEADACHE | | INDIGESTION : BILIOUSNESS ‘ DYSPEPSIA : NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA . CHILLS axp FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY G PAIN i~ THE BACK & SIDES IMPUREBLOOD CONSTIPATION . FEMALE INFIRMITIES ~ RHEUMATISM ' - NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES . FOR SALE BY ALL. DRUGGISTS - The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red Lines on wrapper, 4 g TAKE NO OTHER. dhe Ligonier Fwnner ' THE BANNER PUSLISHING COMPANY. . THURSDAY, DEC. 30, 1886. e ] Miss Blank (to her cousin, who has “inadvertently admired her foot)—Yes, ‘papa thinks so much of my foot that while we were in Italy he tried his best to persuade me to have a bust - made of it. —Harper’s Bazar. At the masquerade ball in Adin last week, St. Jacobs Oil tock the fist prize. Nothing strange in this, as it is highly prized-in every family where used—especially in,ours.—Bieber, Cal., Mountain Tribune. ! : ee el <l et {t is predicted that pipe-smoking will become en regle in New York. An Undoubted Blessing, - About thirty years ago a prominent physician by the name of Dr, William all discovered, or produced, after long experimental research, a :emed; for diseases of the throat, chest and lungs, which was of such wonderful efficacy that it soon gained a wide reputation in this country. The name of the medicine 18 Dr. Wm, Hal’’s Balsam for the Lungs, and may be safely relied on as a speedy and positive cure for coughs, colds, sore throat etc. 35t4 - ——— 3 ! A new artesian well at the Sayan- - nah water works spouts 800,000 gallons a day. ‘ West’s Coukh Syrup, the most reliable remedy for all throat and iung “‘diseases. For safety keep it always in the house. All druggists. -32m1 Miss Catharine Wolfe, of New York, has given $2,000,000 to charities in her lite. ; : —_— - ———————— Children Starving to Death on account of their inability to digest food will find a most marvelous food and remedy in S¢ott’s Emulsion. Very palateable and easily digested. Dr., S. W. Cohen, of Waco, Texas, says: *“I haye used your Emulsion in” infantile wasting. It not only restores wasted , tissues, but gives strength and increases the appetite.” » Chilblains, frosted feet, and all frost bites cured by a few applications of . Wests World’s Wonder or Family iioiment, the magic cure. Try it. 25 and 50¢. All druggists. 32m1

The Mount Bt. Gothard tunnel, Italy, is 48,840 feet, or nearly ten miles long, the longest in the world. You are not old, yet your hair is getting thin. Your friends remark it, your wife regrets it. Parket’s Hair - Balsam will stop this waste,save your hair, and restore the original gloss and color. - Exceptionally. clean, prevents dandruff, a perfect dressing 32m1. . “Money is tight!” No wonder. So much of it goes to the saloon.—St. Paul Herald. et @ e Credit is due the German women and physiclans for first using Red Clover blossoms as a medicine, Best results are obtained when combined with other medicinal roots and herbs, as in Dr. Jones’ Red Clover Tonic, which is the best known remsdy for all blood diseases, stomach and liver troubles, pimples, .costiveness, bad! breath,piles, agueand malaria diseases, ‘ indigestion, loss loss of appetite, low‘ spirits, headache and all diseases of the kidneys. Price 50 cents of D. S.‘ Scott & Son. 3-23-Iy. The increasing. demand for West’s Cough Syrup is evidence of .its great virtue in all throat and lung diseases. Three sizes. All druggists, 22m1 et - e The first Catholic church in Cincinnati was built Gfty-two years ago and now there are twenty with 48,000 members. : il ————— >P— ‘ Those who are trying to breakvup‘ the baneful habit of intemperance will experience great benefit from the use of Prickly Ash Bitters, Liquor deranges the system, Prickly Ash Bitters will remedy the evil results and f restore the brain, stomach and liver to = healthy action, thereby strengthening the will power, thoroughly cleansing and toning up the system and removing every taint of disease. It is purely a medicine and ‘ while pleasant to the taste, it cannot be used as a beverage by reason of its " cathartig £r,operties. 36 4 ‘ ‘West’s Cough Syrup instantly re“ lieves and speedily cures bronchitis, . sore throat and all throat diseases. Try it and be couvinced. All drug-‘ gists, : : 32m1 Senator Edmunds breathed on the side hill on his Vermont farm, andl the people in the neighborhood are. using it for a tobozgan slide.—New Haven News. | —_—r—————————— o Some KFoolish People : | allow a cough to run until it gets beyond the reach of medicine.. They often say, Oh, it will wear away, but in most cases it wears them away. Could they be induced to try the successful medicine called Kemp’s Balsam, which we sell on a positive guarantee to cure, they would immediate- . 1y see the excellent effect after taking > the first dose. Price 50 cents and $l. ‘Trial size free at E. E. Reed’s, 3-7-1 y The old Brandreth house, in New York, is to be converted by the Baltimore & Ohio railroad company into . what, it is said, will be the finest railroad office in that city. e D @ Wi | Drunkenness, or the Liquor Habit, can be Cured by Administering Dr. Haines’ Golden Specific. It can be given :: 1 & cup of coffee or tea without the knowledge of the person %n speedy and permanent cure, whether the is a moderate drinker or an 2 ¢ wreck, Thousands of drupkards have been made temperats’ men who have taken the 1 Specifi mthd!&o without their knowledge, and to-day beliove ~ they qui m' of their own free will, No barmful effects esuls from 1710 Co,, 185 Race Street, Cincinnati, e - B— T Pw.l4 ~ e ;‘)v“' &*’ .’,i" " Vol e L e B e e

A TURKISH WEDDING. Murriage Costoms Among the Falthfal *'v Bervants of the Sultan. ? \ All weddings in Turkey, amon Turks, whether in provinces or citiesg, are arranged by old women and are complicated. tedious affairs. The bridegroom holds fete several days at his home for his men friends, and the rospective bride at her home with her gouug friends—girls, of course. The night before the wedding the married women of her acquaintance come and eat the married woman’s dinner with her, which consists principally. as Sam Weller would say, of a “‘swarry’’ of leg of mutton and trimmings. The next day the bride is taken to the bridegroom’s house in a sedan chair, with a retinue of slaves carrying her wedding presents on trays on their heads, covered with colored tarlatan. The procession is sometimes quite imposinfio The bride’s female relatives are also there in the new harem until nightfall, and they retire to their homes, leaving the bride sitting on a sort of throne, veiled. The bridegroom is then admitted, and he is to throw himself at the bride’s feet and offer her his wedding present” of some handsome jewelry and beg her to raise her veil and strike him glind by her beauty. Sometimes he is struck dumb by her ugliness, for he never looks on ‘her face until after the wedding. When a babe is- born in any house there is great rejoicing if it be a boy, less if a girl. The wife is proud for a mhile, but Turkish women are .not good wothers, They are too child-like themselves. When a girl is born to a Sultan they fire seven guns; when a boy, twen-ty-one. The boys die early; the girls are more a&n to live. - This is supposed to be a divine intérposition of Provit dence to prevent too many claimants to the throne. Babies are dressed like mummies in swaddling clothes for six months; then the boys are put in trousers, sometimes in generals’ or colonels’ uniforms, regularly made. o When the Sultan-jakes a wife no ceremony is considered necessary more than to present his bride. The new Sultan inherits all the widows and slaves of his predecessor,/ and every year of his reign, at the feast of the Ramazan, he receives a new one from his mother and takes any other girl or -woman.to his harem who happens- to strike his fancy. Slaves who become ‘mothers are instantly promoted to the rank of Sultana. Six months before the feast of Ramazan the Valide Sultana orders that all the ({oung candidates be brought to her, and she chooses fifteen and sometimes more of the lot. These are immediately put under diet and training, and at the beginning of the great feast she again chooses, and this time the choice is final. At the evening of the appointed day the Sultan, upon retiring, finds his new bride standing nude, with folded hands and lowered eyes at the foot of his bed. . After he has retired she must lift the bed-clothes at the foot and crawl into bed in that way as a sign of subjection: . Girls arrive at legal majority at 9 years of age and are frequently married at 10. Children of 12 and 13 are often seen with babies of ' their own. They are old at 25. The old Turkish women have a hard lot of it. Beyond a respect for age which they contrive to inspire by tooth and nail among other wives younger than they, their lives are not bappy. Stiil they are provided for, and aslong as a man lives he feeds his family, one and ‘all alike.—Brooklyn Magazine. .

1t is said that the exclamation *‘Rats!” oriéinated_ sev 'ral years ago at a theutre in Chicago wh. a lot of raw Italian ballet girls were dancing. They were awfully afraid of mice and rats, and it was the favorite pastime of the American members of the company to frighten the ballerinis by yelling ‘Rats!” at them as they stood in the wings waiting to go on, and then enjoy their shouts of horror: By and by the word came into use as a term of derision for a false alarm and the street got hold of it. o ——P e S The Proposal.

It happened at a hotel not far from the Treasury Building. He was a man of serious intentions and numerous attentions and she was rich and wedable. Monday night he was there, and they sat in the hall under the stairway. It was a nook for lovers. There wasn't a soul in sight, and he thou(‘ght his golden opportunity - had arrived. Down he flopped on his knees and clasped her hand. - *“Dear one,” he whispered, not very loud, but loud enough, *‘l have loved you with the whole strength and ardor of a man’s nature, when it is aroused by all that js pure and good and lovely in woman, and I can no longer restrain my pent-up feelings. I must tell you what is in my heart and tell you that never yet has woman heard from my lips the secrets that are throbbing and—'" ' Jnst then a rustle was heard on the stairs above them and a card fastened to a thread swung down and dangled not two inches from the lover’s nose. On it were these portentous words: I am something of a liar myself.” Then the awful truth flashed upon him and. he fled. As he went out the door sixteen girls at the head of the stairs sent sixteen laughs out into the damp night air after him. He makes no love in hotels now.— Washington Critic.

Where Shop-Girls are Well Treated. There is a shop in this town that I'd | like to advertise, but as that can’t be done directly in this column I'll just tell you something of its workings and let you find it out, if you can, for yourself. My attachment to it comes from what I know of the methods of the management toward their employes. They engaged their saleswomen at the usual rates, but with the voluntary promise that if the business went well salaries should be raised, and they have been. Moreover, one woman who was | engafed at 89 a week, from the first | found $lO put into her envelope each week, because the head of the firm | “didn’t see how she could make herself and her child comfortable on less.” A Yyoung girl was taken in tolearn the saleswoman’s business the other day at rates as high as some shops pay their reiular employes. £ nd this week all the women in the place have received presents of three complete suits of woolen underclothing of excellent - quality. All this I have | learned through employes, not employer, and I think a business run in that sort | of way deserves patronage; moreover, on a strict political-economy basis it is a good place to go, because the girls | are so much more civil and agreeable than they are under the usual grinding, | eruel management where they are not allowed to sit down and are kept at the point of starvation.—N. Y. Graphic. ’ e @ et | 100 Doses One Dollar is inseparably |connected with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and is true of no other medicine. A bottle of Hood’s Sarsaparilla contains 100 doses, and will last a month, while others will average to last not over a week. Use only Hood’s Sarsaparilla. < — It certainly is a fact that “land theories” emanate mainly from men who ] own no land. - : o

e

Cureg Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Cronp, Asthm Bronhitis, Whooping Cough, Inciplant Congump: 5 tion, relioves consumptive AR gersomu in advanced stages of §8 : O e he disense, Prico 25 cts, Cau- B 8 & o tion. Tge rs:m‘ulna I(l‘)r. Ii?ull"a o A L'w?hups‘m only in : d \ &l white wra;*ers, and bo,a.ra’our h # s reg:tmd rade-Marks to wits e 2 fl I’ Head in a Circle,a Red- B 8 A R (p Cantion-Label, and the SR 1 ea&gnutumlot.lnhnW. TRapE W™ A. C. Meyer & C0.,801e [ § TOEWET Prop's, Baltimore, Md., U, B, A, § | Ohe ‘t".. s Plugs—The great Tobaeeo An * " tidotei—Price 10 Cts,~Sold gyuf ugglists, +

Parlors That Crush Out Home Life. Did you ever hear of tyramnical parfors? "The costly earpets and curtains, the expensive ornaments, give a subdued tone to the room destructive to real hospitality and good times. A neighborli\ood social met from house {o house. One of the members was a bright boy; his mother had one of those tyrannical parlors, given up to formality and short calls. The bright boy said at one of the meetin%;s: “I would like to invite you'to my house, but' we never have good times in our stuck-up drawingroom.”’ . The little fellow felt the difference between his own home 'surroundings and that of some others of 'the social club. At one house the wise parents made the parlor so attractive that the poys and girls of the family said they “would rather be at home than anywhere else.” The carpet was not too nice to dance on or even to play blind man’s buff. The chairs and tables were not heavy and cumbersome, but were light enongh to be tucked away, leaving a clear space. The -children ‘were encouraged to get up charades and tableaux. A magic lantern exhibition added variety, and now and then a card party. ‘‘But that was very wrong,” says one stern parent. No! Father and mother took'a hand in' the game and there was not so much danger the children would seek questionab.e pleasures in unprofitable places. S e S Tobacconists say there is & marked falling ofY in the cigarette habit in New | York. The pipe is becoming the fashion again. A Question of Speed. . . Jabe Mathis, of the Thirteenth Georgia, was a good soldjer, but one day, when thre Confederates were retreating from the gory field of Gettysburg, Jabe threw his musket on the grounc{. seated himeelf by the roadside, and exclaimed with much vehemence: “I'll be dashed if I walk another step! I'm broke down! I can’t doit!” And Jabe was the picture of despair. *Git up, man!”’ excfi\imed his captain, ‘“don’t you know the Yankecs are following us? They'll git you, sure!” *Can’t help It,” said Jabe, *l'm done for; I'll not walk another step!” The Confederates passed along over the crest of a hill and lost sight of poor, dejected Jabe. In a moment there was a fresh rattle of musketry and a renewed .crash of shells. Suddenly Jabe appeared on the crest of the hill moving like & hurricane and: followed by a cloud of dust. As he dashed past his captain that officer yelled: “Hello, 'Juabe; thought you wasn’t going to walk any more?”’ *Thunder,” ‘ replied Jabe, as he hit the dust with renewed vigor; ‘“you don’t call this ‘ walking, do you?'—Savannah News. < et~ C——— “Teaison’ is the name of a class of diseases afising, it is said, from the wrong use of tea. L

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Tax CENTURY is an illustrated monthly magazine, having a regular circulation of about two hundred thousand copies, often reaching and sometimes exceeding, two hundred and twenty-five thousand. Chief among its many } attractions for the coming year is a serial ‘which has been in active preparation for the gixteen years, It is a history of our own country in its most critical time, as set forth in ' THE L!FE OF LIN(OLN, BY HIS CONFIDENTIAL SECRETARIES, JOHN z G. NICOLAY AND COL. JOHN HAY. This great work, begun with the sanction of President Lincoln, and continued under. the authotity of his son, the Hon. Robert T. Lincoln, is the only full and authoritative record of the life of Abraham Lincoln. Its authors were friendg of Lincoln before his presidency; they were most intimately associated with him as private gccretaries throughout his term. of office, and to them were t_:ransferred upen Lincoln’s death all his private pa ecrs. Herve will be told the inside histery of the civil war and of I’resident Lincoln’sadministration,—important details of which have hitherto remained unrevealed, that they might first appear in this authentic history, By reason of the publication of this work, THE WAR SERIES, which has been followed with unflagging interest by a great andience, will occupy less space durh“the coming li'em‘. Gett{ysburg will be described by Gen. Hunt (Chief of the Union Artillery), Gen. Longstreet, Gen. E M. Law, and others; Chickamauga, by Gen. D, H. Hill; Sherman’s March to the Sea, by Generals Howard and Slovuni. Generals Q A Gillmore, Wm ¥. Smith, Joon Gibbon, Horace Porter, and John 8. Mosby will describe special batties and incidents, Stories of naval engagements, prison lite, ete,, ete., will appear, : | NOVELS AND STORIES. - “The Hundredth Man,” a novel by Frank R. Stockton, author of “The Lady,‘ or the Tiger?” ete., begins in November. Two novelettes by George W. Cable, stories by Mary Hallock Foote, *Uncle Remus,” Julian. Hawthorne, Edward Eggleston, and other prominent American authors will be printed during the year,” SPECIAL FEATURES, (with illustrations) include a sedies of articles on affairs in Russia and Siberia, by George Kennan, author of *l'ent Life in Siberia,” who has just returned from a most eventful visit to Siberian prisons ; papers on the Food Question, with reference to its bearing on the Labor Problem ; English Cathedrals; Dr. Eggleston’s Religious Life in the American Colonies; Men and Women of Queen Anne’s Reign, by Mrs ‘ Olipbant; Clairvoyance, SpirituuhsmbAs:rolugy, etc,, by the Rev. J. M, Buckley, D. D., editor of the Christian Advocate; astronomical papers; articles throwing light on Bible history, étc. : PRICES. A FREE COPPY. Subscription price, $4.00 a year, 35 cents a ‘number.. Dealers, postmasters, snd the.bpublishers take subscriptions. Send for our beautitully illustrated 24-page catalogue (free), containing full prospectus, ete., including a speciat } offer by which new readers can get back nuwbers to the beginning of the War Seriesat a very low price. A specimen copy (back number) will be sent on request. Mention this paper. : Can you afford te be without TH& CENTURY? THE CENTURY C 0.,, NEw YORK,

Q Q‘b :i,\J fig ‘,‘. 8 SCrIDECr'S FEaAgaziie January Number. Vol. 1, No. 1. ~NOW READY. : CONTENTS. i GAMBETTA PROCLAIMING THE REPUBLIC OF FraAnce. Frontigpiece, Drawn by Howard Pyle. Engraved by Frank French. REMINISCENCES GF THE SIEGE AND COMMUNE OF PARJS. First Paper —The Downfall of the Empire. By E. B. Washburne, ex-Minister to France, With iul_lstratlons from portraits and documents in Mr., Washburne’s possession, and from drawings by Thulstrup, Meeker, Reich and others. SETR'S BROTHER'S WllFE.—Chapters I.—V. izy Harold Frederick. THE STORY OF.A NEW YORK House.—H.C. Bunner. Illustrated by A B. Frost, F, Hopkinson €mith and G. W, Edwards, SONNETS IN SHADOW. Arlo Bates. OUR DEFENCELESS CoASTS.—F, V. Greene, Captain U. 8. Engineers. With maps, sketches and diagrams. : . Ix A COPY OF THE LYRICAL POEMS OF ROBERT HEeßßlCK.—Austin Dobson, IN MExICO. A story. Thomas A Janvier. THE BABYLONIAN. SEALS. William Hayes Ward. With illustrations from seals in the author’s collection, and after De Clercq, Pinches and others. g : GLIMPSES AT THE Dmmnsv OF GOUVERNEUR Morris. Social Life and Characterin the Paris of the Revolution. First Paper. Annie Cary Morris. With portrait engraved by G. Kruell, from the paintingat Old Morrisiana, ! Socranism. Francis A, Walker. | THE NEW YEAR. Maybury Fieming. A VioLiN CBLIGATO, A Story, Margaret Crosby.: $3.00 a Year, 25 cts a Number. Remittances should be made by check or 1 . - " money order, ; } : s . Charles Scribner’s Soms, Pubhshers,g‘ 743 and 745 Broadway, N. Y,

THE NEW QUININE. : . N x o)y Kaskine g "( ( v{-l,‘i "-\'é/)) x Q@&gfl a @ WHAT THE ‘ \& . - 3 \»J . » ¥ 2 Plysician® i ; g 8 R say about it in = } fi > N ;‘-’g‘. ), | S N i “ fe——=Dßheumatism MALARIA, DYSPEPSIA, NERVOUS DEBILITY, LIVER, LUNG AND KIDNEY DISEASE. The eminent and celebrated Dr. Glessner writes. The Kasknie Co.—DEAR Slirs—"The first greatest successes I had with Kuskine were in chills and fever, malaria, nervous debility.rheumatism,dyspepsia,and liver diseases, and Icorsidered at that time it wasundoubtedly the be%t medicine ever discovered, but I was even then unfamiliar with its really wonderful powers in curing all the other germ diseases and disorders, particularly where the blood had become diseased or impoverished and the diges- ‘ tion impaired. Strictly speaking, Kaskine 1s tne only blood &urmer we have, [ use it'also very largely wi unfdllng success in all diseases | Eeouliar te women and children, In over three hundred cases I have cured there has never ‘been the slightest bad effect following its use, ‘and it is far superior to an¥l tonic or nerve medicine ever known to the medical profession,” Veryt.mnli' ¥)ours L. M.'GLEssNeR, M, D., #6O East 121st St. N. Y. Prof, W. F. Holeombe, M, D., b 4 East 25th Bt., N.X. ‘late Prof.in N Y. Med. College) writes: *Kaskine is superior to quininé in its a?eolflc power, and never produces the slightest injury to the 'hearlog or constitution.” The U. 8. Examining Surgeon, Dr. L, R. W:n‘;t,e“ writes: *“Kaskine is the best medicine e, ; : i o [Eyery patient treat--Bt. Francis Hospital,N, Y.ib oh ke Beuig'm Hospital, N, Y., “Universally lsuccessful,”’ = Bt. Josepb‘;gmim N.Y. “Itsuse is conlldxe.r:d indis; le, Itactsperfectly, - mwmt to take and can be used without ‘medical counsel, 4 Send for the ‘f*" t Hst of %fllfih un= & | oled ' !& \ h":&x Q&”mh‘g

THE ETHICS OF HUGGING. l.en.rnocfl)!nqnlul-ch{n Upon a v ry Popalar

sautan Tl ) Radasteyl e e A few days ago a youn ntleman residing on Po%l: avgnuog,hg%gq!, ‘his mm@gfiw with such fervor that three of the old lady’s ribs were disloeated, and she now lies in a precarious condition. This, 1 may add, is an unprecedented case. Men have hugged t‘:e opposite sex with such ferocity as to endanger their lives, but then the operation was not performed upon the grandmother. About a year ago a young man in'the east embraced "his sweetheart, and when the hug was over he found she was dead. But she had long suffered from a disease of the heart; so he was only in part responsible for this ‘melancholy occurrence. . Hugging is a comparatively modern institution. Our ancestors never hugged. They calmly 'and demarely embraced. Now, here I pause to draw the line between the hug and the embrace. The hug is an earnest, quick, impetuous contraction of the muscles of the arms and chest when theobject to be hugged lies within the circle bounded by the arms, while the chest is the goal or final point of the hug. The warmth of the hug is determined by the extent of muscular coutraction. But the hug is not, as anatomists assert, terminated when the object is brought in contact with the chest. *On the contrary, the sweeping in is but the shell of the operation. The kernel is reached when the space between the huiger and the huggee is annihilated, and the blade of a knife could searcely be inserted between both surfaces. This is, perhaps, the most dangerous stage of the operation. A pound, nay a few ounces, of extra pressure may result, if not in the displacementr of a rib, at leastin the bursting of a corset string, with the almost inevitable destruction of bangs, montagues, and such like headgear. The refease, if not skillfully managed, is also attended with danger, and should be as gradual as the e’l’emefitary pressure. Expressions of anguish on the part of the huggec may, as a rule, be regarded as hypocritical, and should have no effect in inducing the hugger to diminish the pressure. In like manner all -dan-ger-signals in regard to the arrival of a third party on the scene should be investigated by the party of the first before receiving the attention the genuine arrival of a parent or guardian might command. This may be done by a quick glance over the shoulder, and this rapid change of the direction of the bhead may be accomplished by a little practice without making any relaxation of pressure necessary. If the warning should prove to be without foundation the deceit may be punished by from two to three pounds additional pressure, but so gradual that none of the adornments of the person hugged may suffer. For these little accidents ruffle the temper and embitter the memory of the operation. The small affairs of the toilet are not accomplished easily, and the female mind is rufiiec%)by the destruction of the laborious embellishments of the morning hour. Near relatives should be embraced and not hugged. The embrace is merely the throwing out and partial contraction of the arms, without any special uttcntio? to an objective point. An especially young and pretfy aunt may be excepted, and I have known cases where an extremely juvenile and goodlooking step-mother hdas been the occasion of the merging of the embrace into the hug. ~ But this is rarely done, and is attended with much danger, particularly if the embracer is dependent on the purse of the old man for the necessitieés, as well as the luxuries, of life. To embrace a mother-in-law is a hollow mockery, and should be attempted only when some important objéct has to be atlained, and even then we doubt if it is excusable. A cousin may be either hugged or embraced, as the fancy of the operator “may dictate, the choice depending solely on the age and good looks of this most convenient and delightful relation.—Sacramento Bee. et e Tobacco-Growing in Eagiand. In reply to an inguiry as to the result of his experiment in tobacco-growing, Lord Harris, writing from Huntingfield, Faversham, says: *“My experiment has been so far less elaborate than Mr. De Laune’s that an account of it would lack the interest raised, and justly so, in his attempt to prove the feasibility of growing and drying tobacco in England. I planted about ten rodsin a garden at Belmont with two sorts (the broad leaf and long leaf), but the Intervals—two feet by three feet—were not sufficient to allow of passage betyeen the plants when in full growth, and conseguent]y many suckers which should have been nipped out on appearance, shot up and robbed the leaves that formed the crop. They aiso knocked each other. about a good deal in high winds. The land was not manured, but it is good ‘land, and the plantation grew so vigorously as to resemble a tropical jungle. 1 cut very late in September, after there had been two or three slight frosts, but the plants seemed in no way affected. In harvesting I strictliy followed printed instructions and split the stems from the top to within a few inches of the base. The crop cut was made an inch or two lower, und the plants straddled over laths, which were removed by the wagon-load to a green-house‘and rested on a temporary structure. We found the ‘stem of the long-leaved variety far more woody than that of the broadleaved. M{ intention had been to produce the yellow or golden-colored tobacco, but I found I could not get the house above 110 degrees in the middle of the day, so I had to be contented with gradual drying, resulting only in a brown tobacco. I have had no one in the trade down as yet to see my crop, 80 it is impossible for me to say whether my experiment has been so successful as Mr. De Laune’s, but to myinexperienced eye there is little difference as to | appearance and texture between the two crops. llshould imagine that it is impossible as yet to draw any comparison between our samples and any imported, say -American tobacco, because it is evident that the latter, whatever the process of packing may be, must undergo some pressure, - whereby fermentation is set up, and ‘I am. inclined to think that it has been the omission of this last process which has induced goople who have surreptitiously smoked inglish-grown tobacco to declare that it was flavorless.” Lord Harris adds that no difficulties whatever have been thrown in the way by the excise officers. London Times.

How Germany Treats Spies. The Paris Matin gives its readers the following information® respecting the treatment to which persons arrested-as spies are subjected in Germany: ““Some five or six years ago a Belgian subject was arrested in Germany on suspicion of being a spy in the pay of the FE:'ench government. No trustworthy evidence against him was forthcoming, and the cfiarge was sustained merely by the testimony of an entirely irresponsible individual. Nevertheless, the accused was condemned to ten years’ imprisonment, after having already suffered eight months” confinement. on suspicion. He "has since been to all intents ‘and purposes £8 one dead to his family. It has only been with the greatest difficulty that he has succeeded in obtaining permission from the authorities: to write a few lines every quarter. In this epistle, moreover, he is compelled, under threats, to sing the praises of the regime of which he is the innocent. victim. He has to herd with thieves and assassins, and, although suffering from a most:painful ph‘fsical Aillness, is on no account permitted to see a physician.. The Belgian government Eas,_it is said, repeatedly made effortsto obtain, if not the release, at all events the better treatment of this unhappy man; but in vain.” . : B The hop-growers of Mendocino county, Cal, are making preparations to gather their crops next year without the aid of Chinamen. : ) World-wide is the reputztion of West's Cough. ;t&y..the truly marvelous remedy for eca ffiu. :otlldv- :,ro;g; ' opi =,‘| igh. “ )‘ n cotl u - o T T, S ey e 1 : AN qd . A

\: SARHELEBE R LR R R :':\)\-&,\XE;?:‘}'\‘"\\\3‘?\‘“:}‘?";‘_’&‘?\'3 S e S T / ; oy . 2 Y:.iN & w 2 g 3<bX : 4 . Z V G z b 3 > ) 7 e ) : = 7AsEP o R % = 4 CLRE N AL G A e i SN e RO SRS N G T R R St RS

for Infants and Children

*‘Castoriais so well adapted tochildren that Irecommend it as superiorto any prescription knowntome.” ~H. A. ARCHER, M.D., 111 80, Oxford St., Brookiyn, N. Y,

e . R IR : N ot A BV e : v o, | AT H. b hd,a.jAs H - B s fl"‘&iw‘;.; S R i B J S et B B ol g 12 ; § il Bl B TR . 5 o = Eay e B b e K s AB g 5 o 0 pol B TRy M e SRR Ae AT

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i Fortunes are yearly made by successful! operators in Stocks, Grain and Oil. l These investments frequently pay from $520; to $2,000 or m reon each $lOO invested. | Address for circulars. Reliable cor respond- | ents wanted. WM. E. RICHARDS, Banker and Broker, . } 9-6 m 38,40 &42 Broadway New Yeork, . T ——————— e —— e e S e e T R | » 1 ! i ': 260 Pages. Illustrated in cloth andgilt binding 50c. | money or Fos:ngn. same, paper covers géc. This -‘book 1 containg all.the curious, doubt ful or inguisitive want te know. large editions, 10,000 each, sold every few months, Health, Beauty, Happiness, are promoted by its advice—who may marry, who not, why, medical aid, when secessary brought home to i)“' 50 wonderful PN PICTURES true to life, Sent sealed by Dr. WHITTIER, St. Louis, Mo., the great Speeialist. Consultation and pamphlet free: eS,A e A M i LTI TLS IR RO

. TURBNITURE-— Wholesale and Retail Dealer in and Manufacturer of = Chiamber Suits, Bureaus, Extension Tables, Commodes, Wash - Stands, e AN . B B D - T B A IS - A full line of Epholstered Work made a specialty for the Retail Trade. ATI KN DS O B'URINIEDURE Kept on Hand at Prices to Suit the Times. . Ligonier, March 20, 1884 o J. (M. BELL/TS. J. W. HIGGINBOYTHAM, g R : WATCHMAKER, s |Bn 5 A & Jeweler, SN AF ? AN “ e N “~AND- ‘ (S e F(e s OPTICIAN = é ’.F"!'fs‘aj;;‘ Ro o sB et o s ESc " B e ‘“L -—AND DEALER IN—WATCHES,CLOCKS, JEWELRY SILVER-WAR!, SPECTACLES Musicallnstrumentsand Strings, &c. Oxnpexsforselections solicited.’ |Fitted to allkinds | Watches Clocks and Jewelry promptly and neatlyrepalred and \vsrr'fl.nted.\ sighton scleatific o ~torner Thirdand Oavin Sireets. Ligonier. Indianz - i3s!_ principles.

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Castoris cures Colie, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhosa, Erudtation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes dion, ; j wxgfim::flom medxutim. 7

Tur CexTAUR CoxPaXY, 182 Fulton Street, N. Y.

NO FEEI! } ESTADLISEED 1851, ) Merrill UNTIL BETTER | DETROIT,MICH. { Block. : ; v The Regular, old-Established , PHYSICIAN & SURGEQN ; wfi {astill treating with the greatest | SKILL AN’ SUCCESS . — AT s X S ? 1 \IE ’@N ' QOD‘S 'YOUNG MEN, MIDDLE-AGED MEN 21d all persons who by their own acts of Impru= demce or ¥ok: yat any period of life have brought upon themselves, the evil -effects followinE closely ngon the hee!s of transgression of the laws of nature, should consult the celebrated Dr. Clarke at once. Remember! Neorvous diseases(with or without dreams) or debility and loss of nerve power treated scientifically by new methods with never failing success. £ It makes no difference what you have taken or who has failed to cure you. | Ba~The terrible poisons of Syphilis and ali bad biood and skin diseases, completel{‘ eradicated without mercury, Remember that thisone horrible disesze, if neglected ar improperly treated, curses the present and coming génerations A®~All unnatural discharges cured promptly without hindrance to business. No experiments, Both sexesconsilt confidentially. Age and experience immportant. A written Ennrantee of cure given in cvery case undertaken, Bp-Sufferers from any chronic disease write History and Symptoms of your case — plainly, Cases solicited which others have failed 'to cure, ZSend two stamps for celebrated works on !Chrouic. Nervous and Delicate Diseases. You {have an exhaustive sTiaptomatology by which lm'stud_\? your owrn: case. Consultation, personally or by letter, free.. Consult the old Doctor. Thousands cured. Ofices and parlors prilvate. You sec no one but the Doctor. Before confiding your case consult DR. CLARKE. A Ifriendly7etter or call may save future suffering and %shame and add golden years to life. Mediciney isefit everviwhere secure from exposure. Hours, Bto 8; Sundays, g to 12. Address, ' F. D. CLARKE, M. B, } A MERRILL BLOCK, DETROIT. Rilch

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Harper’s Magazine.| Fol s WANSTRARERY e Harper's Magazine durin\g.‘lSS? will contain a novel of intense political, social; and romantic | Interest, entitled “Narkd”—a story of Russiun | life—by Kathleen O'Meara; a new novel,entitled ‘April Hopes,” by W. D. Howeils; *Southern ‘Sketeches,” by Charles Dudley Warner and Re- | becca Harding Davis, illustrated by William Hamilton Gibson; “Grest American Industries’ —ocontinued: *Social Studies,” by Dr. R. T, Elys further articles on the Railway Problem by competent writers; new series of illustrations by E. A. Abbey and Alfred Parsons; articles by E. P. Roe;' and other attractions, A - HARPER'S PERIODICALS. D Per Wear: o 0 'HARPER'S MAGAZINE ...c...uuee. ... 2..84 00 iHARPER’S WEBKLY. .....c .o i iol 06 HARPERS BAZAR it v 40 HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE. ............ 2 00 HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY, One Yeer (52 Numbers)........ 10 C 0 HARPER’S HANDY SERIES, One Year (52 SNIDETB), wws silLos s b el Tel 1600 Postage free to all subseribers in the United | States or Canada. g . The volumes of the Magaziae begin with the numbers for June and December of each year. When ro time is specified, subseriptions will begin with the numbber current at time of receipt of order, (TR ¥ Bound Volumeés of Harper's Magazine for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $3 per volume. Cloth cases for binding, 50 cents each—mail, postpaid. Harper's ‘Magazine, Alphabetical; Analytical, and Classified, for Volumes 1 to 70, inclusive, June, 1850, to June, 1885, one vol .Bvo, | cloth, $4, ! (i Remittances should be made by Postoffice Money Order or Draft,to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. : S Address * HARPER & BIKOTIIEI{S, J Foniord New York. 1887, HARPER’S WEEKLY. . ILLUSTRATED.

Harper’s Weekly maintains its position ag’ the leading il'ustrated newspaper in Amexica; and its hold upon public esteem and confidence was never stronger than dt .the prosent time. Besides the pictures, Harper’'s Weeßly always contains installments of one, cccasionally of two, of the best novels of theday, finely illastrated, with short stories, poeins, sketches, and papers on important current topics by the most popular writers, The care that has beené suceessfuily exercised 1n the past to make Harper's Weekly a safe as well as a welcome visitor Lo’ every household wilt not be relaxed in the future, - - Al : HARPER'S PERIODICALS. o Per Year: J : HARPER'S WE KLY...c0i0.......cccip...84 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE it iioeia. 5o 4 00 HARPERS BAZAR!..;oiidiis oer wOO 400 HARPER'S-YOUNG PEOPLE i.....cp... 200 HARPER’S FRANKLIN SQUARE STI BRARY, One Year (52 Number5)........,10 00 ‘HARPER'S HANDY SERIES, one Year{2 - Nimmbers)x ..o s s g aies o 116 00 Postage free to all subscribers in the. United States or Canada. A LV

The volumes of the Weekly begin with the first number for January of each year. When nov time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the number enrrent at the time of receipt of order, . 7 : :

Bound volumes of Harper’s Weekiy, for three years back, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 per volume,

Cloth cases’ fo;fi:ficsl},volume;“suimble for binding, will be y mail, postpaid, on receipt of #1 each, - ; A i Remittances should be made by Postoflice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss, Newspapers are not to copyv’thls advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. 7 B Address HARPER & BROTHERS, - | S New York, 1887, o HARPER’SBAZAR. ILLUSTRATED. © . i Harper’s Bazar combines the choicest literature and the finest art illustrations with the latest fashions and the most useful family reading, Its stories, poems, arfis&ays are by the best writers, and its humorodus sketches are

unsurpassed, Its papers on social etiquette, decorative art,house-keeping in allits branches, cockery, etc., make it indispengable to every household. Its beautiful fashion-plstcs and pattern-sheet supplements enable ladies to suve many times the cost of subscription by being their own dressmakers. - Not.a line is admitted 10 its columns that could shock the most fastidious taste: g .

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The Volumes of the Bazar begin with the first number for J a.mia.ry of each year, When no time is mentioned subseriptions will begin with the number current at time of receipt of order. Bound volumes of Harper’s Bazar, for three years back, in_neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, or by express, freeof expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for $7 per volume, Cloth cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of $1 each, e Remittances should be made by Postoffice Money Order or Draft, to.avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers, e Address HARPER & BROTHERS, # : ; ' New York.

M) TRADE MARK _ ORA D e C "“-? SERER AVPI) QPN @ 550 SSOM : : A S es, {3 NOTICE TO.THE LADIES. I have'secured the agencfl for Dr. McGill’s Famous Specific, **Orange Blossom,” a positive cure for all Female Diseases. Bvery la%y can treat herself. A plain ta:k to ladies and trial box free. Call on . gl % C. ELDREF& SON, Ligonier.

ELEGANT SHAPE, !‘A 7 HEALTH and e /) | " x\‘: i\\k No,/e/ 22000 COMFORT || || 7ot R i A’l‘-‘.t"‘ Sl Perfeetly Combined in :% i i e ]F’f‘/, S PRI\ I 8 MADAME FOY'S | |l Skirt Supporting %fi;x‘ SRR | Eede i s CORSET.;, & | Ttis one of themost & 25) iR foxiul;r Bllld satisfac- i \K\;x‘i \\ the market, e un N ) ing dcalers. . eL2 h : Pricobymanstan. () GSN FOY, HARMON & ¥ L eSN CHADWICK, New Haven, Conn. 1

“vou. CONSUMPTIVE Y o o Have you Cough, Bronchitis Asthma‘ Ind!%eat!on! Use » IC without delay. 1t has cured EARKFRSION BUTLINT oned? S 5 s of the from hlnu;‘mre blood a.&x’d exhanst&o%‘ :?v‘}’le'sieeble ango “é:xk" strugg! against disease, an riftin, o gra 'wilfin mostcases recover their he’a.lth bymgeumol‘v un?t’l’mns'a Tonic, but delg is da.nferous. Take it in time. Cures when all else Gives new life and strength to the aged andinfirm. slat Druggists. \

FA_RM in Elkhart twp., contaming 80 acres; 856 acres cleared ; timber land is & little wet; good frame house and barn% and all necessary out-buildings ; orchard on the glwce. Price—s3,ooo; or will trade for smaller farm or town property. Call on or address J. W, Peters, Agent, Ligonier, Indiana, for particulars.

THE former residence of A. D.C. Harvey just south of Owen Black’s, in Albion and now owned by Herman Krueger; for sale or trade onafarm ata barfinln..dallonor address,i J, W. Peters, Agent, Ligoner, Ind,

I?OB. SALE—A two story house and lot on ' McLean street, contains seven rooms, cis‘tern, well of water and necessary outbuild=ings, including Jgocui‘homv.a barn. Will sell for %‘EOO on'time J. W. Peters, Agent, Ligonier, ].‘\OB SALE—BO acres, 2} miléa north-west of - Ligonier, near Goo«fi{ope. Best farmii ‘ land in the Haw Patch. 60 acres weéll elear%! all fenced. New dwelling. ‘Orchard, - Best of ‘filmber;p :xvm se!‘lfl{gr ‘per acre. Two %ond; rings, no L . 3 e o N W PRTERS Aeeni®

; 2 i 3 "i‘y i‘ % ‘:’,‘ \".4 ’ ~1 ILAKE. SHORE % _._.wa—- 'fi”';" 2 s siieh, soathere Hail Boad, Onand after Nov. 14, 1886, traing will leaye this : : station as follows: e e e : GOING BAST . . i No 2,Special New York Expre55......... 1 35pm No 8, Atlaniic EXpress........ccevnaeee. 12 46pm No 82, Way Freighit to Butler. .......... 11 45am ; No. 64, Way Freight to 8ut1er,...,..... T:45, pm Ly GOING WEST, - . _, No 3, Special Chicago Bxpress....... ... 1 35pm No 9, Pacific Express. .................... 58am No 83, Way Freight to E1khart........ ...1145pm No: 61, Way Freight to Eikbart.......... 9:00 am - Atlantic and Pacific Express train leavesdaily both ways, A : . P. P WRIGHT, Gen’l Supt, Cleveland, O, o W. P. JOHNSON, Gen’l Pass, Ag’t, Chicago, Ilis F. J. ELLERMAN, Agent, Ligonier, Ind. e~ eit et it S et ettt . e e e e T e e Cincinnati, Wabash & Mich.R. R.. . ! Time tadle, taxing effect June, 1885, . SOCTH. 3 NORTH. No. 4. | No. 3. (A3tan ue,Li No, 1, | No. 3. . ee e e 00 e | 0.3 2Uspmiloi6 pm | indiauapoils | 4 00 am 11 U 6 am 1230 888 pm Andercon J., ' 580 pmi23s pin 1204 - ' 809 |.Alexavdris.| 555 100 l‘sll?ruu Tis {--:Marion: . 1641 147 1629 628 | .Wabash..| 743 945 945 940 Z‘?‘M.‘.;.chestr‘ €l6 318 9GO 45(]5) ;,..‘\Ta:saw..% 3% 402 pm 831 {4B 1. Malatd. .| 928 430 811 1416 | Mow Parla.| 048 443 | 802 403 ...(iun.‘;en.._." @56 456 739 am! 340 pmlL. Elkhart. A 1020 5 185pme 655 | 257 ... Niles.....[llC6pm 609 pm ;600 am’ 205 Benton l!arl-r#?l)()p’m 700 pm 1130 pm| 850 |.. Chicuago...+Bo% goopm ° Through couches will e run oo trains Nos. 8 and 4 between Elkhart and Indianapolis, Through coaclies bétween Benton Harbor and Indianapolis, on trains at the Harbor 6 :30 a.m, and. 7:15 p. m.—on other trains :€3Ts are changed :at Union Depot, Anderson. Traing i.leuve Union Depot, Tudianapolis, via Bee Line, i \ NORMAN BECKLEY. Gen. Man.

* et : S P RReRe : ‘ kit - . Fee MR MR e, oW ! [FARMERSI™ FARR 1% . ot a 8 SOUTHERN+¢+ | i Asx Youn e KANSAS. | | FOR b = Lot [ONTHE LAND FO LadEnglarstioat 1o A 0 b IDEPENDENTE AT GRALN, - INDEPENDENGE VR D . : (R HARPER {f \4 “&STOCK.{ P 75 \1: 2,281,500 acres of 3§ - ‘ /;/;}‘.g»/‘rf“ - M .~ Government Land j 3 i g A $1.25 per acre. : AN o %%\ ) /cy*s’fi”i ~-L A - &= {}f‘/,; LRIV N S g T N i - N ) e %f/’:f;%/‘ : !?("E: \\ b/\ g = . R N eSS e my ERGRE R I 4 L TS I ! ; ; i;,{.;gsv».gam"!é;‘é‘i.\ agm ¢ = wand o il Sl s | SRR S : e g : eaiass g e ; o :/:315‘ N~ : O R eL e o U i o) RSP N nis WIS g T rOcR iiR g B 2 Soypo S Via 6o ; 3 k.')el," < TS i N 0K anea Wt YR . ; ¢ :“"Way j‘;?-,, > \‘.{a;_-’" : FReR, -it A \by - D _":x\u =2\ EohEeT e SN : &n‘%?‘}mw AR R ARI S T ‘;f'»"‘, % S e So NSRS - [t SN eR PR ; gfi.fi e % B S - Bl e ing = = {0 i L3k R fOdeEl Rane CE - 2 R Wf;?'rfl RN PRnid A e R 9% o N A SRR 0 o 1 ovag‘ .%' ), UTESVAF R SAR LS ‘ L Pl 3 R Al B IS YA Back e |8 " 238 y weeTean eLeC, Eut EREE -l > = FDYa B, LOUIS. ‘(‘s‘ ?flr"w\ A i ; 4 I For further informution write, toor call on J. HALDERMAN, Trav Puss, Ag’t, * T-8¢ Fort Wayue, Indiana, 3

WEAK 2URDEVELGPED T EW e ————— -—— e ———————e—— PARTS of theHUMAN 20ODY ENLARGED DEVEL OPED. 8L RENGTHEN £D.Fte., is an interesting ud-vestisero-~nt ione run in our paper. 11 reply toinauiries.we will Bay that there is no evideuce of humbug about this. On tle contrary, the advertisers are very highlv indorsed. Interested persons may get seale circulars givinz all particulars, b: ad;;msimz ;J}u MEDICAL (}o.i butialo, "L Y, —’l‘yievao‘fivenins Ree, " PR I BREER o O B 8 B 5O 5 STOPPED FREE e P e \ Marvelous success. B b= &5 G Insane Persons Restored ot < &y Dr.KLINE'S GREAT foyon 88 &2 NERVERESTORER 835a58 /0 al/l BRAIN & NERVE DISEASES. Only sure on _ cire Jor Nerve Affections. Fils, Epilessy, etc. B INFALLIDL® if taken as directed. No Ziits after Bst @ay' s wese, Treatise and $2 trial bottle free to Ewrs Fit patients, tahy paying expresschargeson box when B reccived, Uoud names, Pl O. and express adldress of | baied afflicted to 1012 IZLIN &, 031 Arch St., hl\adc‘lghia.l’_a. 9ce Drupgists. BEHARE OF IMITATING FRAUDS. e e e ———————————— M.W.AVER & SOM ADVERTISING AGENTS A2B PHILADELPHI EUILDING P SE H A v Cor. Chestnut and Eighth Sis. : Receive Advertisements for \t!im Paper ' 2 For NEWSPAPER ABVERTISING ¢ ESTIMATES at Lowest Cash Ratas FREE Send ioc ¥ T ) camsetor AYED & SON'S MARUN PRI (DS SR e i et el o s DA e S |o F B Tty JET ST . BTSN ™ 5> RCUABLE SELF-GURE Braa® A favorite prescription of one of the must noted and successful specialists in the U. 8, gow retired) for the cure of Nervous Debility, oot Banhaod, Wéakness and Decay. San! inplainsealed envelope free. Druggist.lcsngll it Address DR. WARD & CO.. Louisiana, Mo. O T SR AN S 7 AR eG RN Sanamra - YAL%E & B fesemsetamn ) Bpdd S e Mo = il b ASHRE b ey = These Washboards are made with SEeEe g eni.Wood rim, The StrongTessi==T v et boards and best washers in the- - T=-"lworld, For sale by all dealers, U srbor e Bj Dzkeno other. BINGLE P % R g SSAGINAW ME'G CO., porerE, & Sagiiiaw, - = Michigan. ittt e e ettt S et -LOANS I'per cent. to 4 per cent. per annum; ‘ will secure one BRUNSWICK £° THALE BOND and one ITALI &. RED CROSS BOND, the next rede 19 tion of which soon takes place. Hv: Bond participates: in Kour Redempti: ] Drawinmgs annually—more than one cifln to oblain & Premium $20,000 to $lOO,OO Bonds-at all times are worth toeir value, - Remit $3 by M(megaonier. Draft, Registere Letter or Ex&rcss. lance payable in monthlyinstalments. U.S. Government Bonds sold on monthly payments, | . ; . Address for Circulars, &e. G. W. FOSTER, Banker, = 9.6 m 24 BROADWAY, NEW YORK

: ON PROMISORY NOTKS. WANTED -Notes of well rated business men for one month to twelye months. Amounts $l.OOO to 31,000,000. Stricily confidential and safe. Bonds given, settlements made. CorTespondents wanted. 3 G. W, FOSTER, Banker, 29-6 m : 40 Brol(ivuy, N. Y.

The BUYERS' GUIDE fs tasned Sept. am March, each year. &3~ 3. B pages, 814 x 1117 inchies,with over 3,800 illustrations —=a whole Picture Gallery. GIVES Wholesale Prices direct to conswmners om all goods for personal or family use, ' Tells how to order, and gives exact cost of everything you use, eat, drink, wear, or have fan with. These INVALUABLE BOOKS contain information gleaned from the markets of the world,. We will mail a copy FRERE to any ad~ dress upon receipt of 10 cts. to defray expensc of mailing, Let ushear from you, - Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. 227 & 220 Wabash Ave% Chicago, Ll et e e ; l;" - i 500,000 ACRES CHOICE | - HARDWOOD FARMING = | _IN_NORTHERN WISCONSIN for saleat $5 AN ACRE or long tiie, 'fiw prosieeond ' 5 W T settlementin ;_:;.; ‘CENTRAL R. R., MILWAUKEE. WIS, = 26.1m° Aed 55 ‘,:!*‘?f«“ ST ATRg S N O A