Plymouth Democrat, Volume 15, Number 1, Plymouth, Marshall County, 9 September 1869 — Page 4

Redner th Taxes !

The publication of the monthly debt Statement give occasion tor another of the senseless periodical jubilations of tinKepublican press. It is asserted that the national h ht has been reduced more than live millions during the month of August, and the country is asked to admire President Grant ml his Secretary of the Treasury lor so auspicious a result. But what have fA done, durinir tin: month of August, to entitle them to this shallow and j fulsome praise? They have been journeying and junketing, attending dan M and clam bakes, horse-races and monster musical festivals; flitting from place to place on pleasure excursions leaving the Government to be run by clerks and side ordinate; the President and win to Cabinet being absent from Washington, and as free from care as the gayest butterflies of fashion that flirt and talk nonsense on the corridors of the watering -place hotels. If the amount of the debt is lessened, small thanks to our jaunting, loating Presidenl and finance minister, who have contributed no more to this result than they have to the unwonted abundance of the August peach crop. Dismissing their agency in the matter as too ridiculous for consideration, let us look into the actual state of the case, and see if it affords a fair subject of congratulation. The debt has been diminished out aftUM! which were laid by Congress before General Grunt was inaugurated. Ii' Secretary Bout well had never lilted a finger, if no bonds had been purchased, if the Money sent to him by the collectors of the revenue had lain in the Treasury, the monthly debt statements would nevertheleai have shown a reduction. The net amount of the debt is reached by subt ratting the money in the Treasury from the sum total of the bonds anil greenbacks; and the balance would have been about the HUM if no bonds had been purchased. What the country is asked to rejoice over is the enormous amount of our taxation. The capacious pool of administrative wastefulness and extravagance is not only tilled but runs over, if the revenue were less redundant, if the Dconle were not so " P M plundered by taxes, there would be less money for the Republican olli ials to j squander; and because they collect more ; than enough to gen their rapacity, we j are expecttd to admire them as great geniuses in finance ! Instead of praise for saying a little out of the overflowing reve- ' nues, they deserve censure for spending and wasting H much. The bnjjnew of the , country is crushed ander oppressive taxa- ' tion, and such reductions as have taken ! place in the debt merely attest the prodigious amount ot the Federal taxea -;- The Republican gtorifcatbm over the monthly debt statements is b.)t!i foolish and knavish. It overlooks the disastrous and ruinous effect of our cruhing taxes. m the business of the count it ; and it ismade a con venu nt cover tor the raseality and extravagance of a spendthrift party. It is used to give a deceitful and delusive impression of prosperity, which blinds the people to the prn Hgnl expenses of the government. If the government eosta three or four times as much as it did Ik lore the war, the country is expected to feel that our resources are loundless ami we can afford it, inasmuch .as we have a constant surplus to be applied to the piwiunt oft he debt. That surplus is a trifle, and the country could well enouirh stand it. if it were not for the hundreds of millions that are annually raised and squandered to produce this delusive show f prosperity. But the country cannot stand the enormous taxation by which so many great industries are c rippled ami crashed : ami the fact that there is a surplus over and above the prodigal expenditures of the government, proves that our taxes could be largely and immediately reduced without injustice to the public creditors, or detriment to ihe public c edit. All that is required ol us is to meet our obligations as they ma'ure; and money that is not nee. nnwy for that purpose 'had better be lelt in the hands of the community to Ihi productively employed in increasing the national wealth. A redaction of the rascally tariffand the ahoBUon of the income tax are'among the most urgent financial reforms demanded at this juncture of at fairs. JV: Y. Wotht, fkm 2 aaaaaa .. Tlie Political Situation. urn uispatcnes tins morning concerning the political situation are interesting "and important. Attorney Genend Hoar has at length transacted to the War Department his opinion with reJerencc to j the question of requiring the Reconstrac tion test oath of the members of the newly elected LagJahtfUf of Virginia. The opinion appears to h a somewhat eomplicased one, hot the gha ol it i.-. that the adoption of the new constitution of Virginia supersedes the Reconstruction la WS. so far BS . hey could apply to that State, and that that nstrument prescribes the only legal qiialitications ol the members of the L ghdatare This would seem to make th; General Assembly of Virginia a pro-: visional bodj until the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment. That measure baring ben adopted, the Stale becomes rehabilitated and sorereign. Bo the Wells orliadical party of the Old Dominion are lelt in the vocative, and it i tapposed that, acting under suggestions ham Washington, Gen. Canbv will proceed to the inauguration of Governor Walker and 1 stt ps be taken to Convene the Hew Legislature at an early Way. It iurther appear- by our advices that President Grant has emphatically declined to favor the Stoke eheiue of IJa jea! revolution in Tennessee. I recognizes Scute r as at least as good a Republic m as his opponent in the recent election, and so will not interfere to nasal the verdict of the people at the polls. The evidences accumulate that the President no longer inclines to tin- ttathraJ views ot BoatweH and Creswell of his Cabinet, if Indeed he ' has ever really dine so, and it seems not improbable that an opes raniars aanosarthe executive officials is imminent in conseqiience. These circumstances are likely to have a very important effeel in the fall elections, and our waciäagtoa correspond- 1 SSM mentions a prevalent Radical opinion that a Democratic triumph will be the result in the coming popnlar coat est 1, e cent in Vermont and .Maine. In this connection, we may airiin refer to the ( lection bad Tin-day in California, where, aaeaadhaj toasnr reports, the Dena crats were generally sucei-ssful as far as beard from. San Francisco S( UU a full Democratic delegation to the L gidature and the indications point to an increased majority in hat body. The efcetion in Wyoming Territory has also resulted in a Democratic victory Mixnuri IUfioUirh. Oept. 4 An Oiiiinou GriiM 1 from Leading Republican Journal. The commonly assigned reason for the. President's pilgrimages is that he may in- ' form himself of the state of the country and the drill of public opinion. Not rerr familiar with either before assuming office, ' it may well be that he is now, if not an apprentice, at haal 1 Joaiaf JfsSlO, acquiring while he practice- th. art of civil gorernment. These are his wanderinir years, and he is to come out of them a finished master in political wisdom. The people are very lotstant of saeh an explanation as this, which flatters our vanity w hile it promises 1:0 1 results furan in. jerienci d President. But they will noon begin to inquire why it is that he confines himself to so small a part of the great country he governs why h- honor- New York and New England wit h soaaaeh of his coin pany, and neglects a journey through the South. That portion of the land ( alls for his closest inspection; it U with that he is least acquainted, while needing to 1m- BBQll 84). If he know - sU little about T Onessec, MissUsippi and Te.xa- that he cr.nnoi d;tinguish his tri mis from his eswasies there, he ought to gf down and b arn to discrinii- , nate iM'tter. If he is debiting whether to phw e Georgia under martial law or ii"t. why should he not visit it, anil tr for him.Mdf what it seeks and w h.il it need.-? The industry, the tinances, the oiitics, and the social aspect of I lie South all demand his closest study; why, thru, doe- he avoid the line of travel thai Would show him something of tin in ? Is it Ik cause in his l i t journey there, under the oeder of Andrew Johnson, his observations and his report were -o qui kly onradicted by treats that he bears a displca -v . ...

in t recollection of the trip? We believe he i Snot traveled through any Southern

State since that flying journey in the win- I ter of 1865-4 which ended in what Senator Sumner called a "white-washed report" ot Southern affair Is it not time that he I should repeat that journey, and compare his oioervaiions men ami now r v e ire serious in this suggestion, and we have in view the President's beat reputation in aakingit It is likely to be said shortly, elsewhere than in the Democratic news papers, that Gen. (Irant is traveling fr pleasure, not for Iiis country's good, and nothing would In more Injurious to his prestige than such an opinion, should it hud a lodgement in the minds of the people, To while away the time is the task o. kings, not the duty of American Presidents. Their business is to know their Country! wan'-, and to meet them; to take counsel, not of flatterers and friends merely, but of opponents and of advisers and difficult circumstances. The supremacy of the party that elec ted Gen. Grant is hut paig away in the South, and it is growing weaker all oyer the North. Before the reaction culminates, and while yet there is time to temper or avert the shock of defeat, it behooves the head of the Administration to give earnest thought to the problems of Southern politics. He cannot do so better than by traversing the region of cession, gauging its needs and it- desires, and lecEing to shape his policy, t promote its best inb rests. We urge I mm i wlii tln r t eoereion or coneilation. so as Cen. Grant to make his next journey to be southward of Washington. sprinyJulu, Mn., Republican, Auynxt 26. Tylcrizalion Proclaimed. The work of Tylerization, upon which the Preaidi nt entered immediately after being sworn into office, and which was undoubtedly comnieneed by him some months before, now stands open ami confessed. The divisions in the Kepublican party in the South were under discussion in tlit Cabinet on Friday, and the President a " Secretaries rah, Cox, Rawlins and K m had determined to sustain the CoBau retire movement in the South ern States. So tar as the execution ol the les' onth in the Virginia Legislature is concerned, Attorney General tloar acted with the President and the Secretaries aboye named. Probably the regular Republican organisation in the South knows what the Uonnarrative movemenl is, and what its leaders intend Does not Stokes know who opposed him in the late election in Tennessee! Is Wells igoranl of the elements of which the opposition to him was composed in the Virginia election? These two prominent leaden in the Republican party sar that the men calling themselves Conservatire Republicans in the South are Democrats and ex rebels, acting in unison With a few men who have hitherto been "loyal," and that the purpose of the Conservatives is to overthrow and ntterly annihilate the regular Kepublican party in the States which were in rebellion. This view has also been taken, since the ! Tennessee election, by a majority of the newspapers of the ruling party. Before thai election they fa voted the Conserra- , lire movement. Now they assail it, and i demand tint war shall be made on Dent ; in Mississippi and Hamilton in Texas, al- ! though those gentlemen are working for i precisely the mine results that Walker and Center souffhl to accomplish in Virginia and Tennessee. Since the election In the States fast nanied, t c Republican press appears to have gained information about the Conservative movement w hich has led it to change tront. The President has not changed front. He was with the Conservatives, secretly, from the first lie is now w ith them openly. He knew what tbeir plans were, and knew that with Iiis assistance they could triumph. If the prevailing opinion in the Republican party concerning the Conservatives be correct, their successes are, in fact. Democratic victories The President and majority of the Cabinet, in Contempt of this opinion, pledge their support to the Conservatives and, consequently, to the movement w hich proposes to crush the Republican party in the South. In this the l're.-ident is sustained by General Bhei nam. What the opinion of tn latter is concerning reconstruction, and the class of men entitled to rule in the lately rebellious States, may be known firona a reading of the agreement with the r. be! o nend Jo. Johnson, at the time of Johnson's surrender. It is as notorious that Sherman has a good opinion of the ex-n Dels, and would treat them generously, as that his influence with the President i greater than that of any other man. These facts will, in part, account for the persistency and industry with which fjfraat has pursued his Tykrizing plans. Those plans, by the close of .November, will not only have taken the States of Virginia, Tennessee Mississippi, and Texas from the control of the Radicals, bat they are now working dissension in the ranks of the ruling party in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maine, Maryland, Delaware, and Massachusetts. The fact thai those dissensions exist, and are largely caused by the Presidential appointments, joined to the fact that (.Irant has, to ull intents and pnrposes, declared that he would Ty-leri-, by joining the Conservatives, amply justifies the suspicion that the appointments were made with a view tTj leriation. What agencies the President has recently set at work in the Northern States to disrupt the rtilin n ir! v i ill donbtlesa, he dtscloaed a 1 1,1 j " 01, before the next t resKicmiai election. There j. good reason to belieye that the Tylerizing movement has been accelerated by a reaction of public sentiment against the parly in power, w hich lias suggested to lac President the policy of a renewal of ni-connection with the Democracy, in OfdV r to obtain a second term. 15' tiii- a-it may. the question now- fairly come- up whether the political situation i- such as to Justify him in Tyleriimr. Of coarse, he does so al the expense oi con (listener, and in violation of pledges, expresseo and implied, as sacred as any which can be given by a politician. It is .1.. I....... 11.. -i .. . t me una 01 a j resn 1 e n I 10 do what he thinks Im -t for the public interests, but it is also his duty, before he accepts the nomination of a politieal party, and pledges himself to stand by its policies and matmim, careniiry to examin its proposed course ot action, ami come to a l tiint conclusion thereon. There are such things as party obligations of a grave and binding character, and these, in Tyleri.ing, t he Pr sklent casts aside. We hope good may come of it, but it now looks as if " moral id-a-" will meet w ith sundry pullbacks, because of the nnfiuthfulnessof the President toward meat. Chioojm IfMmm, Srft. u. The Modest Slokes. A Washington dispatch t the aasnansf states: " Besides the removal of Seiiter oaseSSB in Tennesst , Blokca waul the President to agree that in ease Slokes returns to TeaV lies. . arid assumes the Oorernorship, and Calla t hoSC who ran on the ticket with him together as a Legislature, the administration would recognise them as the choice of the legal raters, and therefore the st;tb Government, and in case of trouble, ad upon the eafl of Stoke- as Qoremor, and tarnish military aid. The President Is decidedly opposed to the course of Stokes." The time has gone by w hen intelligence like this would create any surprise, it is a perltet illustration of the impudence, audacity and revolutionary character of Radicalism. Doubtless General stokes caa cite man a Radical precedent in support of his demand. CoQgrCM has furnished divers instances of men being admitted to lestfl in that body who had been rejected by the people, anil the course ot the Radical party has desenast rated, throughout, that no ordinary obstacle stands la ha way to prevent Use absorp tion of politit al powers This appeal by Stokes, however, although not surprising, - a little too far to meet with a favorable response from President Giant It em- to look to a combination of tarioaa usurpations, for which the President I S its vit unprc;.ared. Wi re Congress in Ms -ion we might expect a sinjcdy compliance with Stokesf wishes. Mimouri tupubliran, Steffin 1' 2. Al.AWYKliin ew 'ork. who was plead iiiij. the cause nfan infiint plaintifT, took the rhild np in his anas and presented it to the jnr snnuaed ana tears. This had a great effect, till the opposite lawyer asked what amde him cry. "He pinched me," answered the little innocent.

Saturday Night The Warth of Woman's i Love. !

' : UILT ttiiOlfier ween ! How short it has been seven davs 1 seven chapters of light and happiness--of toys and sorrows of hopes and fears -of trials and conquests of births and marriagesof sickness and of health. Hut a little thing is a week but it is a life to some, in the results it doth bring. To-night we were made to feel sad, yet happy. On the way home we passed a woman in calico leading by the arm a weak, tottering, trembling old BUUL His step was hardly a step he could hardly lift his feet from the pavement his face was wrinkled with the lines of ninety-one winters, while his scattered hairs were silky and white as the purest snow. And the woman was at fifty. Her face was kind her eye told volumes. The crowd on the Bowery turned aside a? it hurried by to let the oU man toddle on. "Good evening, good woman can we help vou " " Oh, no, thank you." And she looked so kindly at us. W are almost home a few steps farther, and you are in a hurrygoing home too, perhaps." Almost home ! Yes that old man who little heeded the crowd and who looked with mazed and puzzled gaze on the busy scene was almost home! A few more Saturday nights and he will be there with Him, ami then he can walk, and run without stumbling or 1 . . ........ l.itn II. other sunoort than He And we passed on to think, and think, and we thought of woman's love, and the worth of it. How she cared for him we should think her father. Perhaps he was cross and petulant years ago, if not now, yet she was kind to him, and with care steadied his steps lest he fall and the busy crowd trample him under feet. And we thought of thousands and thousands of good women in different places who love, are good, and true, and pure, and kind who deserve happiness here and Heaven hereafter. All over the land we saw them as we walked home. The entire line of clouds seemed to be rolled back by some gn at hand as somebody said, " Look at them everywhere." And we did look into thousands of homes. ly the farmer's lire and in the woodman's cabin. Br the sick bed and kneeling with grief-laden hearts and tearWct faces, beside corpses and collies. We saw them in calico and homespun by thousands, and they all told of woman's worth, love and devot ion. Little do men know of woman's sorrows, heart aches, hungerings for love, temptations ami resistings. Hen go and i come. They are busy. Avenues of labor and amusement are open to them, for they have the power to open tosuil themselves. They plunge into business, engage in enterprises, hunt, lish, sport, idie. dissipate, go and come, mixing, talking, eager to be , interested. When tired they rest, but woman's work is never done, and she must labor on, a prisoner within close walls, like a caged bird seeing the world but not mixing therewith lesl she be lost, We know oi a home where a woman works cheerfully, lor those she loves wrks like us. She wears calico, and knows nothing of opera. Her hear! is in her home, her loved ones, she is happy, for they all live for her as sh,. does for them. And oh, the wonderons depth of her 1' ve. She is by 1 he 1 Yl . .11 ncosuie, me laoie, she is monarch of the ( hair, everywhere, home, queen of hearts, and willing tributes lo her subject- pay. Her band stills pain, her hps greet with such pure, earnest, loving hisses, Her words are ever so kind and eentlo. while her life is not lost in scllishin ss. gbc is not a vain beauty, cold as marble, in Iii' j ferent to others, caring only for herself, for positioa und the outward adornmcnl 1 of her person, tyrannizing over heart-, compelled by the ukase of society to pay Towi where none are due. But she is a : good woman, a loving woman, a loving, affectionate, gentle, caressing woman a man always loves, and i- ' for, protect and defend. willing to cafe We love a good, warm-hearted woman. ; Not one of these simple beauties who are gay, painted, padded, befrixed and beftizxled adornings of fashion without heart or S true worth. Such are very nice to look , upon good to llirt with nice b take to the opera, the race-, the theatre, or toskir lnish w ith w hen the coast is ch ar and willing ones seek for adventure, but they ; don't wear for keeps like the good, plain, : sensible women who have hearts ami ! whose worth is more than pen or tongue can tell. Women would be better and happicT If ; men loved them better and were more true to them. If nun would strive as i much to make home happy as they do to seek happiness elsewhere, the world would be better. Hours do come when men admit the ! power, the worth of woman. Not in Ban- ; -hine so much as In shade and storm. When engrossed with business and rolling on the sea oi success, we too often folget the ones without whom life would be a blank, and only fly to the bavens and shelters the lore and gentle caresses of woman when the waves are high and to rc main abroad is to perish. Then comes the hour w hen all admit the power of the weak. It is the care of woman which makes millions of homes beautiful, and makes love's palaces of laborers cottages. It is the love We have for WO111:111 tin- love they have for us nie)., thai drires us ahead ti conquests nnd victories. The words kindly spoken, the smile of those we love, the commendation of those we respect of women, make men of all who arc not debased, and draw our hearts to them with irresistible power. And as we see them day after day patiently, earnestly toiling to help others a alk, as we see them leading t he w eak, aiding the unfortunate, and by the wondrous, power Of their (bid given love, and the magic of their bo. d -. caresses, and prayers, we wonder that all men do not pay more tribute to the worth of woman's lore. Nem York Democrat. Birds on the Ifta The body of the bird does not require to be much lined by each stroke of the wing; it only requires to be sustained; and w hen more than this is needed as when a bird ! rises from the ground, or from the sea, of w hen it ascends rapidly in the air greatly ha teased exertion in many cases, very violent exertion hi required. And then . it is to be remembered thai long wings I economise the vital force in another way; when a strong current of air strikes 1 against the wings of a bird Ihe same BUS taming effect is produced as when the w iii! strikt s ansinst the air. Conse qiiently, birds with very long wings have this advantage, that with pre-acquircd momentum, they can sustain themselves a very long lime without flapping their wings it all. Under these circumstances a bird is sustained." very much as a boy's kite is sustained in the air. The stritflr w hich Ihe boy holds, and by which he pulls the kite downwards with a certain ibrce, perfbrmi for the kite the nunc offlo s which its own weight and balance and momentum perform for the bird. The grcal long-winged oceanic birds often appear i float rather than fly. The stronger the gale, their flight, though less rapid, is all the more easy, so easy, Indeed, as loan pear buoyant ; because the blasts w hich strike against their wings are enough to "sustain the bird with COmpara lively little exertion of his own, except of holding the wing ranea streb hed ami exposed at proper angles to the wind And whenever the onward force previously acquired by flapping be comes at length exhausted, and the ccsaehi, inexorable force of gravity is begin ning to overcome it, Ihe bird again rises bra few easy and gentle half-strokes of the wind. This is a constant action with all the oceanic birds. Those who hive MX 11 the albatross hare described themselves as never tired of watching its Ld,,r;,ls and triumphant lim tion Trniinil ii-p.i( med. nurl floatn Mow; Kvcn in it very motion there was re-t. Rest where there i- nothing else at rest in the tremendous turmoil of its own stormy icas! s etimes for a whole houi together this splendid bird w ill sail or wheel round a ship In every possible variety of direction without requiring to give S single stroke to his pinions, (low, the albatross has the extreme form of this kind of wing, its wines are immensely long ihout fourteen or fifteen feet from tip to tip and almost as narrow in pro-

portion as a ribbon. On the other hand, birds of short wing, though their flight is

sometimes very last, are never anie 10 mislam n very lung, i m- uiu,ui ' ""'" they ret mi re is greater, because it does not work to the same advantage JlOSl oi the gallinaceous birds (such as the com mon fowl, pheasants, partridges, etc) have wings of this kind; and some of them never fly exeept to escape an enemy, or to change .heir feeding ground Duke of Argyle. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Down in the world A miner. Kochester boasts of two base-ball clubs, called the " Early Birds" and "Unfortunate Worms." In a recent match the latter beat the former. An observing correspondent says that New York city is a growing town, owned chiefly by hotel ch rks. "Mamma's darling didn't hurt his little j cousin purposely, did he, dear? It was all an accident, to be sure." "Yes, mamma, and all I want is a chance to crack him again." Ix view of the modern improvements, it has been suggested that old Father Time should throw away his hour glass and scythe and buy a watch and mowing machine. u Won't you take half of this poor apple v" said a pretty damsel. " No, I thank TOIL I would prefer a better half." Eliza blushed and referred him to papa. The Buffalo Commercial speaks of the Vanderbilt Crawford wedding s the onion of December and May. It is more like the union of December and April L Detroit Tribune. A EKAliOrjl expressman of Buffalo, wishin ir to convey an idea of great celerity in the prosecution of his business, has daubed on tue side ot his wagon the intelligent notice, " LITEM eXPRES." Tu last society spoken of in California is the 11 Pay-Nothincal it is said to he The pass-word is The response, alarmingly prosperous " Lend me a dollar i "Broke!" As they have stopped lxnnr the St. Louis artesian well at a depth 01 843 feet, Mark Twain, in the Buffalo foyrrrj, asks why they don't go around nnd try the other end, as there must be water there somewhere. A man who had been arrested as a va grant protested that he had a regular trade I and calling, to-wit : Smoking glass for a total eclipse of the sun ; and as these oci cur only a few times in a century, he was not to blame for being out of employment a ; good deal A i'n rv of Frenchmen were discussing i foreign customs, and one of them remarked upon the American habit of designating -:icts, nt after celebrated men", noted battles, Are., but by numbers, as Sevenlecniti street, Fortieth street, Ac. "Exactly," remarked one of the party. 14 And the Americans name their generals in the same way. We have just had here General An individual, the other day, went to one of the drag stores of Boston and called for a pint of w hisky, claiming that he wanted to pot it on some roots for medicine. He obtained the w hisky, and immediatoly raised the bottle to Ins lips and imbibed a grown person's dose of the ardent. The drug clerk remonstrated w ith the customer for his duplicity, and was informed that it was for the roots of his tongue for which he desired the whisky. Western Patents. The following Western patents were issued from the United States Patent ofB e for the week ending August 81, ihn!, as reported by Messrs. Far well, Ellsworth k Co., solicitors of patents and counselors in patent causes, luv! Lake street, Chieago, 11!.: run auiMH, runp A DtxoH Aiirorn. Mangle P. 11. II nk A; ji. K.iack. MoUne. sprnu; r. n not om -c. & at. Hogeboom and tm K-ck. W in-low. Bssc Burning stove M. W. Lester, l liirago. I lot -Air Purnsee M. v. Lerter, Chicago. Pence . M. Prentice, Aurora. Vapor IJiiruer William Aortek, Chicago. Spring W l'h Seat J. 1. Hear, Decatur. r urlliig and KeeBttg Sai! B. W. brown, t'umDnain. Lamu A. a A . Dorr, CMcano. Plow ClevU T. Dorr. Yorktown. Ditch (laage s-m-. Goto, arlinville. Uiain Drier 1C. (out.. Chicago. W iter-Wheel J. Ueppcrlr, Peoria. Cooking Stove C. Mc4 lain. Carlvle. Plow Coupling Wm. Peck, Ucadota. Windoui ;. ShataweU. Chicaga. Molli Roof Lining J. R. Smith, Chicago. Milltitone Balance U. W. WUaoo, Tokmo. Steam Kmrine PJffori u. Withv. Chieago Stove O. Bartletl A s. D. Ktsoa, RockrortL Com Planter and ;raiu Drill i;. W. Diekiasoa Charleston. Cosapoaml tor Curtag ChoVra in Hees und Chicken A. c. McManan, Lincoln. Rotary Washing Machine W. 11. Welch. DlooiuIngton. Fon wnconanc. Secilin Machine W. A. Van Brunt, Horicon. IhiL'-Holder 3. N. CoiHno, Menanha. nninuig attachment lor Sewing Machine J. rafrbairn, MilwaakM. Wagon Staudard- Ii. Richards, Richland Centre. Hollow (irate Bar N.Shaw, Went Ran Claire Corn Harvester A. w. Shaoard, S. Brvau & o. II. run Iowa. Wafhint Machine J. w. Mvera. Lyoaa. Wa h BTikr . Baldwin, Keokuk Parlor H.-dread .1. A Morgan, Bloomncld. iriiai Binder L F. Parker, Darren port Rake tor Uarvesatra C. B. Perher, Vfarfdngtoa. FOB INDIANA. Bnttouor Stud J. B. Carter, ll.irtsvlllc. Marker lor Corn Ground O. 11. Cater, WUUaBMlm ir. ProceHMof Prapariag Weed Fibre for Panet stock K. Maninil. LanreL lt.iels for Siiiiar. .Cnaaa, S;ilt. Mary A. S Mitllin, i:t.-i.-i... i Table Slide O. K. Hanfbrd. La Porte : nit Cotter J. (i. Schiran. ladiaaapolia. Kvaporator A. W. Bbldler, South Bend. Clod Pender I). Applegate, XobleavRle. Tank Regulator J. M. Cro e, Lebanon. A. li. Jumper, Sanaa . seat? ror Kciiool, Ualla, cii urckoa, a. II. Richmond. O-'horn. KTaporator ISurSngar and other Ltqnidi lin antl A. M. Scantlln. Rvanavlll L. Scant - Planter and Cultivator . WhitekalL Newtowa Plm J. c. Bell, Lebanon. Corn Planter -I. A. Jokwon Prndkit . Cultivator R. WaTker and A. A. Piait, La Porta. The Oldest CM in the lVoiM. DAMABCTJg is tlit? oldest cily in the world. Tyre an. 1 .Sidon have crumbled on theshore; ßaalbec is a ruin; Palmyra is buried in a desert; Nineveh and Babylon have disappeared from Ihe Tigris and Euphrates. Daamacns remains what it was before the days of Abraham a center of trade ami travel an island of verdure in the desert "a presidential capital," with martial and sacred associations extending through thirty centuries, it was near Damascus that raul of Tanna aaa tbe light above Um brightness of the sun; the street which is called Strait, in which it was said M he pravetl," atül runs thron i:h the eiiv. The caravan comes and goes at It did a thousand yean ago ; there is st i II the sheik, the ass and the water wheel; the merchants of the Bnprates and the Mediterranean still " occupy " theae " with the multitude of their wares." The city which hfahontel surveyed from a neighboring height, and was afraid to inter "hecause it was given to man to have hut one paradise, and lor his part, he was resolve' not to have il in this world," is today what .Julian called the "eye of the East," Ba it was in the time of Isaiah " the head ol Svria." From Damascus casae tbe damson. i i n ions apricot ofl 18C0 damask our ' our blur plums, and the d Portugal, called damaseo beautiliil l:ibrit' ol cotton and silk, with rines and flowers raised upon a smooth, bright ground ; the damask rose, introduced into England in the lime of Henry VIII. the Damascus blade, so famous the world over for its keen edge and wonder ful elasticity, tbe secret of whose manufacture was lost when Tamerlane carried oil' tli ' artist into i'cr.sia; and that beautiliil art of Inlaying wood and steal with sllrerand gold, a kind of mosaic engraving and sculptural united called damaasenliui with which buses, bureaus, swords and guns are ornamented. It is still a city of flowers and bright waters; the streams of Lebanon and the "silk of gold" still murmur and sparkle in the wilderness of the Syrian gardens. During the morning sei vice at the Unitarian Church, in Leominster, Mass , on a recent Sunday, a lady went into a tit Two oilier ladies immediately fainted, ami before these were all dlsOOSSd of, a nies came to Mis Wm. II. I.ockc, that her lather, M r. Stevenson, who lived in Lam as ter, had luddeuly died while in the act ol shaving. The news caused her to st ream aloud, but f In ring all tbe disturbance the minister kept on with his sermon "all the same."

FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.

USEFUL RECIPES, ETC. Cookeo meal is nearly double the bulk of uncooked, yet quart for quart it is said to go as far. The difference is, that much of the food is undigested unless cooked. It is said that the juice of one lemon a day, taken in water, will cure the most obstinate case of neuralgia. No sugar should be taken, as it has a tendency to counteract the effects ot the lemon juice. Two quarts of hot water, one pound of Indian meal anda quarter of a pound of unbolted wheat flour, will make more eggs when fed warm to hens than twice the amount of whole grain, bo says an ex change. The black knots on plum and cherry trees have been decided on good authority to he neither the production nor the sne cial nest of any species of insect, but a , little parasitic plant ol the class Fungi I The only cure is to lop off and burn the ' affected branches, as if left until late in the season they throw on lnnuniucraoie sim, which lodge on healthy branches and there vegetate. When hogs are kept in pens and cannot hunt trreen food, they should have clover and other succulent grasses given them occasionally. Sods, charcoal, stonecoal or clay should be given to them frequently. These tend to correct and prevent diseases ami are very much relished by them. A little attention to this subject will prevent inuch disease among hogs. If you plow down your weeds before they go to seed they will prove a heneht to y our land instead of a curse. If they are allowed to go to seed they will be source of endless trouble. Plowed under they are worth as much as a dressing o manure. Beside, enriching the soil they tend to keep it loose. It you add from twenty-five to ntty nusnem oi nine per ucreito the ground, and harrow it in, it will convert your weeds into plant food. A lady sends to the Farmers' Club the following pickle prescription, which she has used several years with success, am she has repeatedly heard the piekles calht superior: I'ick over uie vines every other day, select the perfect fruit, wash clean, ami cover with u strong brine lor twenty-four hours. Then take them from the brine, rinse with clear water, am drain them dry. When dry, pack them close in stone jars, and cover with good vinegar. Red peppers may be added if we like. Good old vinegar will keep pickles prepared in this way for a year without its being; changed. Watered, flsshy vinegar win scum over ami uceu to ne changed." WHBAT vs. CHEAT. "Wheat never turns to cheat, nor does cheat ever turn to wheat. If cheat is not sown with the wln at, and there is none In the ground, there will be none found In the growing crop. Cheat is often found growing so closely among the roots of wheat as to have the appearance of having come from the same seed. But that is not the case. Wheat never will become cheat, however badly it may be damaged or degenerated. The two are (piite different plants. Farm Journal. PÄCKnra Bi ttf.r. It is of the fir-t importance, in packing butter, either for market or home consumption, that the vessel in which it is placed should not only be clean, hut made uf a material from which the bulter will not derive any unpleasant flavor. In speaking on this subject, the Toronto Qkb$ warns fonnera against tin nseof pine firkins and tuba, antl continues : " The idea of using pine originated wit li country storekeepers who generally furnish tbe package to the farmers' wives to till, and desire to go to as little expense as possible rather than to give the buttermaker a good name in the market. Use stone jars or crocks for packing butter for home use, or to be sold to DeighborsGf to city consumers. Wben wooden ; ackages are used, have them Bta de only of the best seasoned whiteoak, maple, or any hind of itohI, lmr.i wood. Pine, or any kind of resinous wood, however well it may be seasoned, scalded, or whatever else is done to it, will still give a bad flavor to butter when used as a package; the salt in the butter seems to draw out the resinous flavor from the wotxl at some time or other after the butter is put in. Ve Should imagine that so cheap and strong an article us glass could be made much use of for the purpose of making batter packages." Items of Agricultural Experience. 1. AlX soils are benefited by being itnoerdramed, but the neneiu is more apparent and lasting in those of a clayey nature, Off having a subsoil retentive of moisture. 2. After drainage, suhsoiling and good Cultivation are necessary to ensure good crops on heavy soils. .. Lime is the best manure to supply strong clay soils. It renders tltein more pervious to light and heat, ami also corrects their acidity, by combining with some of the chemical salts in the soil, making plant food of poison. 4. Summer fallow ing tithe most efficient and profitable means of preparing strong soils for wheat, and of beginning a rotation, after grass has been grow n for a length of time. .. Green crops plowed under, when in the most succulent state, are powerful auxiliaries in rendering a light soil fertile, but if this is done too often successively, the soil becomes overcharged with carbonaceous matter. 6. Leached ashes applied in large quantities to sandy soils, or those containing too much vegetable humus, will greatly ameliorate their condition, and render them more compact. 7. There is no soil so poor or sterile but some mode may be found of ameliorating and enriching it. 8. Blowing sands may be gradually made productive by spreading six inches thick of straw over them, to remain till rotted. Then seed thickly with clover on the surface, w ithout plowing, ami when the clover has taken hold ami becomes es tabtished, pasture sheep upon the land for I two or three years preparatory to manuring and cultivating il. !. Two successive grain crops on the l atme land leave it very foul. 10. Summer (allowing ameliorates soil, . and if properly done gets rid of most of the weeds and noxious plants Infesting it Canada Farvnr. Removing Iloucy.ltocs from Hives. Evkuv skillful apiarian knows that If he depends upon the increase of the colonics alone as the only means of making his apiary profitable, and render the bastness of Rcepina bees worthy nf his attention, he will fail to realize success. Hence it is that hives have been invented, and brought to a high standard of excellence, for the purpose of obtaining surplus honey, and at the same time not to interfere with the operation of the bees in rearing broods, and increasing their numbers Supposing the hives to be of the most improved patterns, and honey boxes placed npoathssaat the proper tana, I propose to give a few directions as to the best way i nit l oi removing mem wnen iuieu. n is never giMKl policy to destroy a single bee w hen it can be avoided, and especially in the honey harvest, w hen every bee is required to git her the produce of the flowers. Careless apiarians arc very apt to destroy bees unnecessarily while obtaining surplus honev. When hives arc so constructtsi as to allow of the use, a piece of sheWlroii or tin to slide under the Imx tobe taken oil, so as to prevent the Im-cs from below from (lying alt when the bOS was removed, is vi rv handy. Sniok of sonic kind, (either tolwuco, rags or wood, will an wer the purpose) ami should always be used to quiet the bees, and prevent them from slinging the operator. A litlle blown under the box as it is lifted from the hive will cause the hees lo be very peaceable and harmless. As soon as a has is removed, U empty one should be put Ota, for il it be delayed, the bee keeper will often löte the best of the harvest, for a few .'iivs in the height ot the hom y season ire often of more value than wcekfl sfterwardi would be. The best method I ha ve ever 1 l it tl (of driving the bees from the boles, is U) lake them off just betöre night and place them upon the table alter supper. They should

e inverted, as several 01 ineni can ue

dared side by side, and a box of some kind turned over them, which is just large nough to cover the ent ranee ol the caps. In the morning the bees will be found clustered together, when they can beset out ol uoors and allowed to seek their own hives. Or if it is preferred, ehch set of boxes may be numbered, and kept separ ate trom otiu rs, aiel the bees emutied in front ot the hive from which they were taken. The chief advantage this nlan possesses over others is that it prevents the Jarring of the boxes, which in warm weather, when the comb is tender, often does serious injury to the honev. both in appearance and value. Cor. Itu ml America n. Washing Sweated Horses. A CORRESPONDENT of the London Field anawera an inquiry whether it is a safe practice to wash sweated horses in cold water. lie says he has adopted it, ami with beneficial results, both in summer and winter. After washing, the animal should be rubbed dry, as far as practicable, and the legs especially. Should the hair on them be too long to admit of this beinfc sufficiently done, flannel bandages should be put on, and a woolen rug thrown loosely over, but without the roller. In the course of an hour the horse will be tolerably dry, and should have another rub down, and be clothed In the ordinarv manner. If horses were treated in a more rational manner than is often the case, with pure air and scrupulous cleanliness disease would be far less common. What is more refreshing to a man after a hard day's shooting, or rather luxurious exercise, than a warm or cold bath? And I believe it to be equally so to the horse, To the tired hunter, a warm foot bath and fomentation, if the animal is sufficiently quiet, is most refreshing. "With gentle treatment, most horses can be used to almost anything. Some years ago, I visited the royal stables at Buckingham Palace. There, as I was informed ami at the time myself witnessed the operation every horse, summer and winter, was washed from head to foot with cold water, after returning from work, no matter whether it had been out one hour or six. A regular bath house, cold water and plenty of it, two men after the ablution, scraping, scrubbing, etc.; a kind ol web cloth was thrown over to admit the evaporation, and the horse was afterward rubbed down ai d clothed as usual in the course of an hour or two. We cannot all have such appliances, but still 1 consider the plan rational and conducive to the health of the horse, il only ordinary care is taken. Fanal for Faiteabif sheep. The questioii is frecftreritly asked: "Whit kind of grain is best for fattening beep? 1 answer, for roe, corn is the het for tbe main (ecd, aHbongb I like a few "ats mixed to start with, and have no objections In beans, peas and oil-meal, if they don't eo.st foo mach. Whenever they cost as much or more than corn, 1 dispense with them, as a Bhecp feeder must count his cosi as well aa his reputation if he intends to sm eoed. Another question arises: "Do you find whole or gonnd feed lu-si v" For hoist s, cattle and pigs, T prefer ground feed, but for sheep, especially fattening sheep, I choose whole or unground feed, find that the sheep will grind it jut as well as the mill to which we must give every tenth bushel, besides having the trouWcof hauling the grain to anil from it. 1 also find that Gal slurp will hold up u their full feed much better, especially in soft weather, on whole than on ground feed; Consequently drawing grain to and from thu mill, ami uavinir toll. is. in mv estima tion, labor and lift ncy lost. It is aakedy u What kind of lmy is liest for sheep? Emphaticalbr J t-ny clover, but it should be cut t ally, and cured nice and green. Timothy is probably best for hoist s, but for cattle and sheep I prefer clover, and would rather have u ton of nice green tine clover than a ton of timothy, although in market one ton of timothy will bring as much as two of clover. I have sometimes fed some timothy hay to my sheep, bUt always found tha't it was not the kind for them; they would grow b and thin upon it not a very- good sign that a fattening animal is thriving welL As soon as they got the clover again they would plump up ami look fulr and nice, and I can assure yon unless jr our sheep look tun and plump, inej are not fattening very fast. Is straw good for feeding sheep? One feed at noon of nice blight oat, barley or pea straw, 1 prefer to hay, as they not only relish it, hut it is a change for them. Sheep are very fond of a variety, and will cat daisies, weeds, thistles or almost anything of the kind that is cut and cured green. Nice green corn-stalks are not very bad for sheep, and when 1 have plenty of tin m I always feed the sheep with them at least once a day, and consider them as good as hay. I prefer, however, feeding them the fore part of the winter, as towards spring they, will sometimes contract dampness, and then the sheep do not cat them as well. With regard to the value of roots for feeding, my experience is that whenever they are worth more than seventy-live Cents per bail el, and corn not over from one dollar to one dollar and twenty-five cents per bushel, the corn is the cheapest, and I Would use only- a few roots as a stibstitute for green food. 1 consider carrot and ruts bagas better than common turnips; still by feeding a little more of the hitter than "the former, I think Ute sheep do just as well on them. JV. Y. Agricultural Report. Dolt-Breaking. It is by no means an uncommon practice with persons in the eountry, who wish to break a horse to harness, "to put him into a strong cart, and then he can't do any harm ; perhaps he may not, hut the chance is, that, by this mode of commencing his harness education, he will do no good. This may be breaking; it is not teaching. The horse is not accustomed iy nature to propel anything with his shoulders ; tin act is therefore unusual to him; his natural act would be to recoil from it if he could. Of course, therefore, the heavier the weight he feels against aim is, the more disposed he is to recoil from it. A good and well-trained carl hone will pull twenty limes running at an immovable object, for this reason : he has been accustomed to lind t hat by increased exertion he aas generally succeeded in moving an object to which tie has been attached; he therefore always expects to be able to do this, consequently will try to do so ; bat the nonioc in harness, if he feels a grcal weight behind, will most probably do everything but what he ought to do, which is, to resolutely Bel his shoulders to the collar. The fact is, in this as in all cases with borst s, tin y should never, If possible, be put to do that which it is likely they will refuse to do. It is quite natural a horse should at lirst refuse to 1'acc a collar with 500 lbs. pressing against him none would refuse lodoso with 5 lbs. The öoO lbs., therefore, should never be tried till We know be will draw the 5 lbs., and then Increase the draft by degrees. 'Neglecting lo do this is one of the great causes that produces jibbing, which is the almost certain result of injudicious treatment, Prairie Farm- r. Btray Qraias for Chiekens. Under this title the Hardener x Magazine (English) gives the following hints Ft eil your poultrvjjuii raw onions chopped tiuc, mixed with otlnr tittl, aboal tSflce a week. It is better than a dozen cures lor chicken cholera. Fowls exposed to dampness sire apt to be Iron bled with fcatarrh, whith will run to roup, if not attended to. Uctl pepper mixed with soil feed, led several limes week, will remove the ooU. I'ul i ri.etl eharroal, given occasioually, is a preventive of putrid affections, to whit h fowls are very subject. Bitting hens can be cured by patting water In a vessel to the depth of yne inch, putting the hen Into it, and covering the top of tan vessel tor about j hours. The vessel should he deep enough to allow me low i iti staiul up. 1 Ins is the best remedy I hive ever tried. I'tih erit d nialk adtnlnisteretl with soli h ril will i urt i li .4 1 -rhea. This disorder is caused hy want of variety in the food, or hy l'M much green Htm. Garlic lee I OBCe or twice a ceU is excellent lor Cokls,

What au Eclipse Might Be. A couresponoem of the Boston Pot sa s : "pew people trouble thaoiselvet to think what the effect would ba if the eclipse of Saturday were to last any Vngth of time, and the sun were blotted from

the heavens. Philosophy declares that not only would a horror of darkness cover the earth, but the moisture of the atmosphere would be precipitated in faal showers to the earth, and the temperature full to a fearful point of cold, nothing less than 830 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit The earth would he the seat of darkness, and more than arctic desolation. Nothing could survive such freezing cold a moment, more than one could breathe in scalding water. In three davs after the cooling I process began, nothing created would be auve nui monsters mat wauow in me deep ocean and the eyeless reptiles that make their haunts in eaves which penetrate far under ground." Pruslmr s Vinegar. At the pickling oaaon is now at hand and many housekeepers are concerned shout getting Vinegar that will keep th" ir pickles, we deem it our duty to inform our readers that Prusssiasfs Vinegar is admitted by all who have tried it to have no superior in the market for this parpose. Mr. Prusaine warrants bin Vineirar to be tree from all poisonous acids, and to pre serve pickles. His works are the largest of the kind in the United Slates, and owing to the extra quality of his Vinegar, it is rapidly superseding all others w ith the city and eountry trade. Dealers and consumers should not fail to ask for H when replenishing their Stock. TtSffiiM Journal. The Express Companies' buyer and sell cr of Gov t bonds, (A. L. Stiinson, Chica go), also selects and purchases any kind of goods wanted by the readersot this paper. Briggs House, Chicago. Chicago is noted for her great under takings and great successes. See her lake ami river tunnels, tier boulevards and driving parks, and her incomparable hotels Prominent anion cr the latter stands th Briggs House, centrally located and near to all places of amusements. It contains 2i0 elcaantlv furnished room". R. II Skinner, the host, takes the World M he finds it, and never frets. Geo. II. French, the affable superintendent, has been twelve years in the house. Frank Weatworth is cashier, and "The Man who Laughs1 and enjoys the good things of this life, can always be found at the Briggs. Painless Digestion. " Xn man.'' ny Sir Astley Ctxiper. "onght to know by hi wuiwtluan th.it he h:i :i stomach. lu other sards, when disertkm Ii nerfoct there in ueitber pain nur netaBMM in tlie luloa where tt takes pfaee. Ifattsea, iraat of appetite, flatulency, ppprgitdon after eatiMf, Bhootfas pabM la the pt-LM-trhun. Bofhfag Of tl face at iiie.il time, and it Sured UkafjM in the morning, arc ntit'iij; the lireci symptoms of Indigent ioEL CootipStfri )iltoaäaear, Iwssacas, nervous UrftabiUl;'. physical weskaeM, Rod lew spirits, are its Sfaaost invariable ECCoMpaauMata. All ihe-e tndicafiaaa of bvbvb MA, whether imiiK-tP.ae or M-condary. are usually iiL'-iavatt il by hot weather. The rtoM of saauaer latheretawauVe peaaaa wbaa the vieiim ot dywpcjBttia nuft amESW aaeS a tonic ami reajalatins Ettcdieine. tf ovane, every iamdM has many :ulviers. One frieml recoiiimeiitU nie lri!. KBOtber aaotaer; hut in a multitude of coimxellora there is not always HcSaty. The tawukd BEN BDI OW THU rBSBBKT It laDiOESTIOX, In all it rtages, i- IIOSTETTER 8 bTUMACH BITTE its. Time, th.it proves all thinjrs. ha estahllshed in repwlatkMi on ;n lEapregnaMe founihition. the spontaneous t'--tinioiiv of millions of intelligent witaessei. No acrid oil or acid defile itf stinitilatKn principle ; iis tonic constitn'iits arc the finest that botanical reoeardi has yet divcovereS : it oaaa binea taa properttea ofa rBatfe eTKSsatsisSoi deparcat, ass aa aati-bihowi medicine, nnt lavto orating Qualities l" lh- liiliest order, aatd is admitted hotli l th- puhlie em the profession to he the rarest protectfoa saissf all ananas that are produced or propagated by peatfferoM air or unwholeMane water, that hat ever been used either in the United States or Tropieal America. In caaeo of ctaaitipatioa resaMaa from i want of aealar tone in the i'ttestines. the eftacl of tlio BITTBKSia perftletly marvelous: nnd without ihe dangetwaa Ecqaeacea tf uiercury. it restores the disordered liver lo anormal condiiiou. No Hunnen. AVre do not wish to inform you, reader, that Dr. Womlerful, or any otln r man, has discovered a remedy that eures all diseases of mind, body or State, and is designed to make our sublunary sphere a blissful paradise, to which heaven itself shall be hut a side show, hut da ir.si to injoi-m yu that Dr. frige1 Cotarrklvhhdn Ml cured thousand MSSJ of catarrk it, Um tearM forms and gUtges, and the proprietor will pay $500 for a case t this loathsome disease that be cannot cure. It may be procured by mail tor sixty cents, by addressing R. V. Pncncst, ML 1) . Buf falo, N. Y For sale by most druggists every where VmluabU Ififormatinm from tfi" Bra. JUn 8. Saas, a HirntHtu of (fiattayiHatoa' attoUmnn't aii i -uUtd restitution ; New LOVSOS, Feh., I85L 1K. s. A VTEAVER, DBAS Siu: -I feel coniclled hy a BSBSSaf dotj to tbe suilerin'. to savin regard to yotar (anker and Salt Uhetim Syrup, that 1 have used it in my family for SMN than one year with mont deeith-dly happy reults. I considei it adautetl completely to MtetalB the reputation whit h is CMttnai for it. In a nninher of CaOM within uiy kiiowlctle. where it ha- been taken for BryatpeHM and Salt itlietim. it baa boos atlemled with complete MOOaaa, when other remedies had completelyailed. Sohl by all Drafrjrjat. The purest and sweetest Cod-Liver oil in the world Is Hazard & Casweil's, made on the seashore, fron: frech, selected livers, by Casweli Hazabu Co., New York. It Is absolutely pure and rreet. Patients wr:o hAve once taken It prefer It to all others. l'.iy- . have divided it suicrlor to any ot the other oU In market, . at Chopped ftT-if, face, rongta skin, pimple, ringworm, salt-rheum, and other cntaneons affections, cured, and the fikin made soft and smooth, hy usinz the Juniper Ttr Sip made by Ciawr.LL, IUzaid a Co., N w Tor. It Is inorti convenient and aslly applied than other remedies, avoiding the trouble ol the creasy compound novr In use. M EsSKKcn of Ink." Beantifhl Black Ink for 10 CtS. a half pint ; the only ink that w ill not corrode steel pens. For sale by stationers, druggists, dbc. BrKKKT A Co., 31 dim tact urers, SM DlondWBJ, New York. The Most Popular Medicioe Eitaut ! PERRY DlVlTPilN KILLER rrai PAIX aTLUm is 1 f inally appttcabte and eSksaekMalto young or old. rpiIS PAIN KILLER 1 Is holh au Internal and External Hetnedy. 'IMIK PAIN KI1.I.KK will cure 1 Fever hikI Ai;ue when other remedies have failed. I 'HK PAIS KU. I. KU should le use t al the lirsl inauifestatiou of told or Cou;:h. rriHX PAIS KILLER X Is tlie Ureal Family Medicine of Uie age. THR PAIH KM LIB 1 WUI cure Painter's Colic. 'IMIK PAIS KILLER 1 Is fOOd loi .scalds ami Hums. rpHR PAIN KILLER 1 ll;is the Vei .tiet of the People In Its favor. rrai pi L tdes A IN KII.LKK ni versa! .stif.ictlon. riiK PAIS KILLER -1 Ih'wnie ol Imi i'a i loss ami Cocxterkeits. rpat pain KILLER 1 Is hii Hhuost eert.iln cure for CIIOLRKA. nd lout, without doubt, itetMi more leeeeaafal la cartas thti ti rt tile Ill-ease than an v other known renitdy, oreveulhe atoat eminent or akStfnl Phralclaiia. In India, Afrtea and Chlaa, vhera this (lrr.ii :l Maeaaa lsw- more r less prevaMt. the PAIN Kill. KU is r on idered, It th natives s well :ts Kuropeau resident in thee cltihnte, A M UK REMEDY . 1 BK PAIS KILLER each lt. Ull is wraijM'd witli lull directions lor use. riMIK PAIN KILLEB 1 boM hv 11 L Draasna and iH'.-dVr la PaiaUy Melicines. AGENTS WANTED ! roe " Wonders of the World," ooPBwiwe Start llnK lncl1enfa, Intaretlnf Scene and Won.terfttl Kventa, In all Conntrlea. all Area, and Hniong all resale. By C. O. KoeaNBani. OTXK OM THOI W) ILLUSTRATIONS. By the moat dUtlnpnUhed ArtUU In Kurope and America. The iv:i, Ixwt iwlllri. tart Ulnatrated. mtat eatSaas. ataualng, Injunctive. enterUlnlng, tartllnjr, baaftofSat nd attractive imhrrtptton back rver publlehed. Bend Tor circular with Usrma at onoe. Addreaa, ÜH11ED STATES PlTBLlsniNH CO., I an . UliirU Htrr. CMra. wta inm iraT ofa-Taoofcwrinow aasf H Pntfd M ater Proof Vapett i Hoofing, Siding. Cettmg,l ( 'arpeting. II a ter Pipe A I Kave Uniti es, .Vr. AmUrml la J . FAY & 80N8, Camden, New Jersey. V

FIRSTS LASS CHjHOUSI? ' r tf'tft . Ininorters.

IAHUliM- J . - 'If, Ave 4 ti. u and 6 - ü ;tioni SSabsn in Dry Uoo a"41 ol,on' otton. it. A: COu SS ana 55 'k" M -Wlit.l-. ilt-Ocalcri 01 iiHitV 1 u B Mllliiiorv iiil.i MrUU f:ni1IL tfr ordt-r. ioUciUxl and mUsBm tion . .ii.-if.Hl Hinl i.ai UfiWt Ion yuanuiteea II Akkis S. 1 ." , ; South Canal St., Fjre irai Borglar l'rttuf Safe A !. U. I MVIS L. 0i;!- (Mief BT JtoCqlwm A ' Patent Attorney ; s .uoiior, " BLOCK. 7 lark Mr. ii i fMT Semi for Ii.ventorc . ;:' in-ia. .'-j .;. WANTED ! AÖlS.NTf for rf. fAKSUR'S Laws of Business With m.L Ptmcttons and Komb warn ix TX ACTIO B IM EVERY STATE I THE MO. THioraiLi ?AR)os8, LL.D., Profeasor of Law in Harvard L'nb eralty. and anthor of many Law Book. A New Hook k. .r Kvkkmioi.v. relations of life, a wcU a very lüna of contract and legal obligation. , s.t i.iA, f'tH. mrrvm-f nd -mnvlrU that do - --! can atfo-'l 'o c without it. tintw.nymv- in i'uim form the rctr't-1 " t iror d nuy - arsaasseW writer of law boow InUteconntry. WoETH TUN T1ME8 THE PKI. E ASKKO VH IT. r. Circular. Adttress .! IS K J. J I N KIN & Ct.. I EMiter. 1T tUi.th f'l.rb St r'l,i.r7,, tl. AVI ÜUULU VLlik k?l.,VUll.R.i . NOW f CUR GREAT WESTERN DOLLAR HOUSE -AT15S Süitc St., Chicago. BRANCH OF S. C. THOMPSON & CO. 13ü Federal Street, Boston Onr OTtEAT WFSTF.l'V BBAECH HOtTSB ha SeaH eatahlikheil fur he purj.-- of irlvlns; "tr At!lt tl -aaatat ot Ua. baaoy redar-d Kxiireasraare, ami that they may mcehe Uieir in the Bii'Ttet OH.hl3 rXiiaui !) hi- hflea acllrt M asaaaa fvr V- iku LAU IHM st: - ot" ttie Ktist, Iii lind it to their ad-. :nt;--1f to aaal directly MS Our Chicago Branch. ! The in:il;ty or our lino lt :ur- fully etjual, an'' ou' terms to Axetit are notcit ;ir.; hy any re-pun W Uoupc" ln our line ol h . - ,, . AtJENIS V A N T Trill try town ai. l vi' In the Wofctrni Statt s. CERTIFICATE Clvlnp a rotn;It SeaCTlpOon of articles t!it will Ik-oJ for One Dollar each, aill I aohl at Uie rate of Ten Uenta each. Ten tir ft.rO ; SS, with coinnilHSlon, for f'-OO: an. with commlt-shm. for K3.00: 6" ami rmmni.-toioii, f r ; 100. with com iuision, arsnuia Any person sending for a ctnh rr Twente, cm. have aa connhir.-i tt on ol ttif roOowUtS articles: 15 y:r'!a Bheedns; MS Pletfwe IMmtozraoh Allium : 11 t4tiert'r Honev 7 o;nh y.n't : Ladies' Nt-e liutton Boot, r your choice of tut-.iierou? oitior articles for aliove t tub named on circular. For ft Cliih wf Thinv on" of the rollowlns artl-re-virda iibeetlns:; l tr II siey ( otub Qi.ilta ; Tatm araora tfiw KicLan re l.i-t, d-c, :c. For m t'luh ! riixiy he ( ir Manchester Quitt - National rVtorfaf Wc'lonarr. with 1W0 pazes and W laaiSlblp fix artier Horn l-lxciiau Lii-t. &c. For a Club of Our 1 ii nd re.l " yar U phecV hi ". 10 artleW from Excbam:.' I.'- t. &c. pjrsaMl MoaeTfaslaK'-. ' Ue--i tt-r r Poatoffice Moner tinier. nr- Wfm take .lea-ttrr In referr''- ''.' wl".T neVr had ihmBafi with tt, u. tt. lat JC ar. naiiy in the DsHe I States, the ISESK f,," Rtioa Bxpaaaa CaairaMT. 'M to W aah.'ustoa J a.-t.:. Man., and through Uwm to Ui. . r -a' u - tlirotiphom the country. jgtr SEXD FOR CIRC TLARS. JL S. C. THOMPSON & CO., 15S State Street, Chicago, DL i M r f.: dfru, st. i iEaTan. nianp. Worse than a Bed of Tliorns are Hire miseries of ludiaeaSluii. Toen-ae them, men have comniiited nutcide. Yet they are hanii-hed sut.im.'irilv. ami the vi'or of the -tiini.trh j.eniKinently restored bv the arxatfonal nrsf Taaaas r a Ertsnvsvnsat SEi.Tr.Ka assautst. It effc-t aaaai the di?e-tive, aecraiive and excretive orv'ann i nsi al nt. -try. It n-novatea and retrnlaten Ihem. and i not o: fy aalabrioaa but acreeabte and refreliiiip'. ' SOLI) BY ALL DBlTUGlSTa AGENTS ! READ THIS ! MTB WILL lA' AtikNTM A Stl.AKi S.'tO inn week and eipeneea, or llow a Unrc comtuiasion to eil our new and wondcrliil in .eniioits. Addris M. W.UiN'Ki; &. l' .. M vn m i.. Mich. vimm ! "Hiestek white pmss, rvaaEtiiM iid Irtunalri BCCKS AND EWtS irotii Let center HI K Imported I sti.M-k. ircnlar freu. AddiTei Mi t Kti:V A sl.Ai K. M il. sllle. Ohio. TIIK a MUT COMB wSleSaasS ny tohnT h;,,r "r lwanl to a HTin:iin-nt Black or Brown. One '"."'' : :,T hv mail for $1. For nale bv inerchan nd tlruv:'-' gaawaBy. aaSRM aaaoOoatB4 .. sprmti:cii. Ma"IM: B. A. FAIlJSKSTtK'K-S V ICH I Kl (K. VINEGAR ! artic!. Warrar.ii Sab vonr t;rocer for Paraataoa t'tuEB VineoaB. A most eptertdld arrar.ted pure and t.i ppe-rve nickfli r 1 IVO 1 i lifi.Mll .U HI III I . 7. r I til. emu i i Chicaeo City Fair. Largent arks of Uie kind In t'. S. EeUblltühed 1S4S. .3311 and 34 1 btate St.. t'h!--aco. fllK'T niiPIIlP II 1 O ftl 1 . r 1 ul I In How I Bkade It In sii nuinth. trret anct taa s.,:,.e mailed nee. , n LLAM, V V. 17MPMH1IKNT th.n mm, K"r t.artictdar, ad1 1 dreaa s. M SPENCER m Hr.ittlclK.ro. Vt. XAJI Xj capa1 AMIN K Ttl IISKI.F:'" l.earn what ire y..tir ahilitit. a hat pursuit in life l follow, ami irhut Lfon iun tk 6-'." alao. ' vnd uhouito niari7," hy reading tlta new I k entitV'l - i tm Heoil ("haiQt ter." a " ef-'.rmmn'r." containing lie etigravlnira. ami a chart for rectinlhij: the ie ot all tl' arawatef tSehratn. Price, In paper, at ; in mcalta. (1.2V. Ntnt Ii t st peat hv s. K. WKU.s, No. 3M . . Nea York. -nt wanted. OKIiAMiT' HMI PAVIIIN. a coBectloa af tt OSaai for Iba Orsaa, bv Lf jraarh. Ilatttmin. llrunuau :unl olhcr. scli ttl. iiir.mt.l and pahliahedb s. T. tJordoa, 7ltti Ih da-ay, Kea Ifork. Plica in t'lolli. a,'.t0. lloan'.s. 1 .V). , Tue Hioht RaLaTfom or the Sif : a new m pnlar, sricntirtc lUxik, uivln practical lnstructhni mm t who Khonltl and aim nhottld not utarrv. BoubatEb'ia have it. In extra grit, f.' 90m aMpaflt. hr S. It. WEU.S. 3S Uroadwav. N . A ts a:.nt FEXDEKlrXTOWV. Ksox Co.. I Kocnitier 2, l!t8. J LrprrvcoTT A Baeewell I-ot t Vra . I recehed voor aecond ItiHt lacket A'e Cevpreafc. and now acknoltge the ante For tie lef.t of all hose deatrea or necesaitie maken their bmttiieas to chop Ith an ate. I would Bay: Tit tha Red .lacket: and, a the Sunreiite Court ha e heldf b at a Doctora tiplnlon atthont his re tnn I of little al' e, I m 111 gle in p'asous: ftral Tbe Uel .lacket c 4a dei'T than the common bit. At ima It la-lng rrmnS on the rut. it dins not stica in ttia -omI. T. ,r.l fCverv chopper Ith tlie common ave in nut d1acoer that tin-re Is at much labor anil Mremjth epMiiled in takinc tlie ae out .f the cut as in maktni; the blow. ;! th i hi Ui the Kfd .Tacket la all avoided, am half the labor I a ed 'ti cuttin the Uist .tacki t In nil ' Me.l. and rrom one tturd to on d to OII IB he same t,iiaiiOty. A' 'V. pv p'ttthi In the aame lalior thai t- neeeaaary with a Cointnon ae. Ti u can eaaily make al least thirtythree per. cent. morc'a.xMt In tlM aame Mine. Yon are safe ü. Iru.ini! anr tiom-st man trv oir Ke.1 .lacket on theae teu, and if It Uli, refund him hi money. ReatiecUliItv, toura. H Mil: Y BALOWIN. For aale hr all reaponaIWe fleak'r. ami the manufacturer. UPPINCOTl A RAKI Ml. 1ittihckoh. I oa-iiera ot voimini a an i i.ea .lacket FatciiU. W 4 SWEET pwitt UriKiMB, t tcirrant(A eoual-Ooae i ror tl' e to the nlphate (bitter) (julntDe,wlUi the Important a'. vantai. at Oetmc. wect tntean ol ntitftr. bTAPNIA. t tlPlt TU Pt'B.F ID of Ita 1ckentnc and pctaonoaa pro pert lea, It is the moat perfect ANOflTNK and BlKITHING cl'lATK yet dlacov end tw 8ol 1 by nnaTirt, pr crlbei hy the bet Ptiyelclana. Made only b Steam Farr ACi.. MHiiuiactnrlnz t'hmlata. New York 'ARKER'S'i) i - r BEST M THE WORLD. j CONN 5.LND ICR A CIRCULAR Hew York Offioe, 27 BEEKMAN ST.

1

QUININE'

Svapnia