Plymouth Republican, Volume 23, Number 7, Plymouth, Marshall County, 30 January 1879 — Page 4
The Republican.
Waste of Farm Muohlurrj. How many of our readers or their immediate neighbors have a plow, harrow, valuable wheat or corn-drill, wheeled rake, mowing or reapingmachine, or other vahiable farming Implement and machinery lying out of doors iroprotected from the weather? Hundreds we will venture to say. HuveaDy of those careless fanners ever endeavored to cipher out the actual loss such inexcusable negligence entails upon them? A mowing machine or drills", threshing machine or any other piece of complicated machinery, sutlers more bv exposure to weather in one season than the wear and tear of putting in or harvesting of half a dozen crops. The implements and machines on many farms in the western country owe 50 to 7G per cent, of their decay and breakage to the effects of weather, while 25 to 50 per cent, of their usefulness only go to benefit the owner, who has paid a high price, and probably bought them on credit bearing a high rate of interest. Is it at all strange that Buch unthrift should keep those "happy golucky farmers always in strained circumstances? They need a guardian to save them from inevitabe ruin. It is not a reasonable excuse to allege that they have no proper place to house machinery and farm implements. Every farmer should provide a store house large enough to hold all his farm tools, carts and wagons before he expends money for them. He bad far better hi: e the use of a drill, mowing and reaping-machines, and a thrashing machine than to buy such costly articles without a proper building to keep them in, dur!ng the ten or eleven months they are not in use. At this season of the year every faim implement should be cleaned,
oiled and carefully laid away in a dry building, where it should remain until the season comes to use it again. Hundreds of dollars are WHutonly wasted by the too prevalent practice of having exposed to tue weather, plows, harrows, cultivators and other more costly machines. A shed covered with strawr cornfodder, for Jtoring tools under, is far better than to have them lying out in the fields, and in fence-comers, but all such buildings leak more or Ihs in wet weathei, affording but poor protection to tho tools stowed under them. An observant writer on this subject attributes two-thinls of the mortgages ob Western farms, to the loss on farm implements and machines which were bought when they could so very well done without, and no care being bestowed upon them, they soon become utterly worthless, freU4Dtly before they are paid for. To sum the matter up, too much money Is paid, or too much debt contracted by purchasing farm machinery that could be very well dispensed with, and too little care is taken of It. A system of wise economy Is as profitable to the farmer as are good crops, while carelessness keeps multitudes poor and tbslr farms and buildings in an untimely and unsightly condition. Kamtax Farmer. i - mm Staple Lessons. Every boy on the farm shou d be learning while laboring. Agricultural che mi --try is considered by even scientific men to be a very ab struse science. Yet many of its sim pier questions, but one the less important, can be easily solved by farm boys. We all know that sand, callt-d silica by the chemist, should constitute a part of all farm land". This furnishes but a small nutriment to plant life, yet it gives strength to the talk or stem aud hardens or gives fiFmness to the grain or seeds. So all grain farms should contain in the oil a due proportion of sand. The young or old man in buying a farm near home, or in seeking a home in n aew country should kno-r what kind of soil he is buying. He cunnot decide whether it contains lime, potash, phosphates, inagueva, sulphates or nitrates, but he can ascertain if it contain i lay, loam and silica. Aud how to do this is one of the simplest
lessons in agricultural chemistry. Take a small vessel and put in a j handful of a fair sample of the soil to fee tested. Put in sufficient water to !
make it a thin liquid. Htir up thoroughly, so all the particles are dissolve. 1. Add water until it is all liquid. Then pour the liquid into a tall, narrow glass. Let it stand until it settles. In a short tiirv tho courser sand will be in a ttfWtun at the bottom of the pia--. th- BfM r sand next, then t! o Iwfltfci etnj Mxi and lastly the loam. Thus aiuoan see at once the quality of these dements in the soil. And as simple .4 this lesson ia, this is the way it is done by the most learned uhemitff to feOive the question. Iowa Stute Heg.ster. easBftMs. jbbi Lafayette must yield the palm. She claimed to have a man who refused t pay a church subset iption because it was promised on Sunday. Mount Auburn, ()., furnishes an individual D lined Westwood who was worth r 3,000 when bis first wife died. Hor industry and economy had been, to a great extent, the cause of his prosperity, and he gratefully spent $1,400 :. putting a monument over her vave. He soon married again, and his second wife rapidly wasted his for : toe until nothing but the monument remained. Acceding to the new Mis. istwood's advice, he had it rernov- : to a marble yard, effaced the inrlption. aud offered it fur half its iigioal cost Mount Aubiuo swings -tie brsom. FL Wayne (Jazette.
Kitty (lover. K tty Clover is a pretty child, but she is always in a fret. Morning, noon and night you hear Kitty Clover crying. Her aunty said the other day that she thought she really should have to go abroad. She could not live another year in the same house with a girl who was forever in tears. The day beginB in this way with Kittie: Mamma says, "Come darling, it's time to get up. The first bell rang fiveminutes ago." "O, dear!" says Xittie, "I haven't had half enough sleep. I can't wake up yet!" "But, my love you have no time to lie still. Breakfast wili be ready, and you have your lessons to look over, and nine o'clock will soon be here." Very ungraciously Kitty rises. She pokes out first one foot and then the other, and she looks about to see what she can find as a cause of complaint. "Must I wear that hateful dress?'' she exclaims presently, "I want to wear my new one and ruflled apron." "That dress will do for this week, dear," mamma answers cheerfully, but it is no use. Kittle Clover cries. Between daylight and dark she sometimes cries sixteen times. Yet, strange to sny, it Is only at home that sho behaves so. In school, her teacher tells us, she Is a very good child. Nowhsro except where mamma la, is our little girl . so cross and fretful. What shall we do with Kitty? We are afraid that a pucker is growing on her pretty forehead, and that the tears will wash all of the brightness out of her blue eyes. Is there nothing that Kitty herself could do to help mend this dreadful state of affairs? Lucy Hilton, in Christian at Work.
Beeclier. Beecher is very happy now. His checks arc rosy, his eyes bright, aud the old mau looks as If ho was good for ten years of hard work. Yesterday Mr. Beecher was telling me about his experience in Indiana, where hi med to preach twenty-five or thirty years ago. "I was so poor once," he said, "I got such a small salary, that I used to have to spend the afternoon after preaching it fishing drift-wood out of
the Ohio river. Once," said he, "I staged aud stcamboated it through from Cincinnati to New York to visit my family in Connecticut. I was awfully poor when I got there. Why I wa3 so anxious to 'raise the wind' that I went down to the old Observer office to get some newspaper work to do. I went in and saw Mr. Prime, in troduced Biyaelf, and told him my name was Beecher, from Lawrencebur g, Ind. "What can I do for you, Mr. Beecher?" asked the editor. "Why, said I, you can let me write some letters for your newspaper. I'll write 'em cheap.' "How much will you charge us, Mr. Beecher?" asked the editor. "Well,' said I, "I'll write you fifteen newspaper letters from Lawrenceburg for $15." "Did you ever really write fifteen newspaper letters for $15, Mr. Beech er?" I asked. "No," said Mr. Beecher, laughingly, "I didn't write 'em. Mr. Prime looked at me very curiously a moment, and then said be didn't think they would be worth it. I wanted to write 'em, Prime wouldn't let me." Since then Mr. Beecher has been paid $100 per column by the Ledger. Eli Per kin' New York Letter to the Cincinnati Enquirer. Where it Sever Kslns. In Puru, South America, rain is unknown. The coast of Peru is within the region of perpetual south-east trado-winds, and though the Peruvian shores are on the verge of the great south-east boiler, yet it never rains there. The reason is plain. The south-east trade-winds in tho -Atlantio'ocran first strike he water on the coast of Africa. Trav. lint: to the
north-west they blow obliquely across tbe;ocean until thoy reach the coast of Brazil. By this timo they are. laden with vapor, which they continue to bear t-long across the continent, depobiting it as they go, and supplying with It the sources of the Rio de la Plata and the southern tributaries of the Amazon. Finally they reach the snow-capped Andes; here is wrung from them tho last particle of moisture that a very low temperature can attract. Rsachi g the summit of that range, they now tumble down as cool and dry winds on the Pacific slope boyond. Meeting with no evaporating surface and no temperature colder than that to which they were subjected on the mouutaio tops, they reach the ocpac. Thus we see bow the top9 of the Andes becomo the reservoir from which are supplied the rivers of Chili and Peru. Han Francisco Bulletin.
stir in neatsfoot oil, equal in bulk to the melted articles. The boots are warmed before a fire and this composition is rubbed into the leather, soles and uppers, by means of a rag. Two applications will make the leather quite water-proof. American Agriculturalist for February. Sleep sm a Medicine. A physiciau says the cry for rest has always been louder than the cry for food. Not that it is more important, but h is of?en harder to obtain. The best rest comes from sound sleep. Of two men and womm otherwise equal, the one who sleeps tho best will be the most moral, healthy, and efficient. Sleep will do much to cure irritabilijy of temper, peevishness and uneasiness. It will restore to vigor an overworked brain. It will build up and make strong a weary body. It will cure a headache. It will cure a broken tpirit. It will cure sorrow. Indeed, we might make a long list of nervous and other maladies that sleep will cure. The cure of sleeplessness lequires a clean, good bed, sufficient exercise to produco weariness, pleasant occupation, good air, and avoidance of stimulants and narcotics, For those who aro overworked, haggard, nevous, who pass sleepless nights, we commend the adoption of such habits as shall secure sleep, otherwise life will be short, and what thero is of it sadly imperfect. The experiment of raising Cashmere goats in thia country is proving successful. A few years ago, undeterred by all previous failure?, a certain Mr. Davis brought nine pure male and female groats to Columbia, South Carolina. They rapidly increased, and some of the offsprings were taken to Tennessee, and ulti
mately to California. Thence they
The Consumptive' Paradise. "Go to Colorado! It is a perfect Arcadia for Consumptives! Consumption cannot exist in that climate. People who go there even in the last stages of the disease, after a residence of only a few months, come away perfectly restored. I tell you a dose of Colorado is the best remedy for Consumption ever discovered." Such are some of the praises lavished upon Colorado as a resort for consumptives, and only prove how egregiousl ignorant these t-peakers and writers are of the real nature of the disease. If we were not peisonaily ac quaiuted with some of tnese pralsets and know them to be honest, wellmeauiug people, we should suspect that they had been "roped" into an advertising scheme, to augment the price and sale of Colorado lands, or were working in the interest of some Colorado hotel keeper. Persons suffering from a mere iiijiamation of the lung tisnue are douotless often completely restored by a brief residence in Colorado or Florida. But when S rofulous matter has begun to accumulate in the lungs, no climate, however healthful, can alone effect a cure. A thorough course of medical treatment is required, aided by sueh hygienic measures as the condition of the patient will permit. The scrofulous matter must be absorbed and expelled from the system by the use of efficient alteratives. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery is a powerful alterative, and, .dded by the Pleasant Purgative Pellets, is an invaluable agent of expelling scrofulous matter from the lungs and system. Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, at Buffalo, N. Y., offers special advantages to this class af patients. The best methods of medical aud hygienictreat mant are there pursued, be sides the locality is one of the few which enjoys special immunity from this disease.
THE GENUINE DR. C. McLANE'S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC OR VERMIFUGE.
CJO TO
J0BIG.U0I.UirS
For First-Class
The Fattest Man lu the World. The London Lancet announces as! the champion heavy weight, Mr. W. M Campbell, or New Castle on Tyne. j He weighs over 52 stones (728 lbs.); is six feet four inches high, measures round the shoulders t6 iuchea. round
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. fFHE countenance is pale and leadencolored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed sjxt on one or both cheeks; the eyes become dull; the pupils dilate; an azure semicircle runs along the lower cyc-lid ; the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds ; a swelling of the upper lip; occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach , occasional nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the abdomen ; bowels irregular, at times costive; stools slimy; not unfrequently tinged with blood; belly swollen and hard ; urine turbid ; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough ; cough sometimes dry and convulsive ; uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth ; temper variable, but generally irritable, &c. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOF.S NOT CONTAIN MERCURY in any form ; it is an innocent preparation, not cafxiblt of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant. The genuine Dr. Mc Lane's VerMiruct bears the signatures of C. McLane and Fleming Bros, on the wrapper. :o: DR. C. McLANE'S
FARM WAGONS,
AMD
Agricultural Implements
IU mann factum and keeps on baad all kind I Wagona, Baggies, Sulkies, ftc. Alao. Horse Shoeing ui Blacksaiihing
Promptly and Cheaply Kxecated
PLYMOUTH. IND.
marlStf
22 years old. It is with difficulty
that he keep1 his present low weight. ! sre not recommended as a remedy "for all
ttin , U- !.. .1... . ...I , .... I , I.
j lue noisi Oil lUVUCO, aUU IUUUU LI1U T TXT T J-S T y y -m- fm) have been carried to Nevada, where ealf of his le? 35 Inches. He In only j y X 1 1 .JL
u uas oecu rouna t nut tne large tracts of land called eage barrens, und hitherto supposed to be almost worthies?, nre peculiarly adapted to them, and a single herder near Carson city now has a flock of nearly 3,000. The demand for India shawls in this country Is large and Increasing. Last year $200,000 worth were imported at New York, and it is thought that with the material at hand Ameilcan ingenuity will rival that of tho cast in the manufacture of genuine India shawls. In any event the presence of sheep in large flocks on the sage barrens will ultimately reclaim the soil that has hitherto been a waste.
The Farmer and the Laboring Man's Friends.
N ussbaum ! Mayer
Wholesale and Retail Dealers In
GROCERIES
-A ISTXj
He was brought up n priuter, but his
size compelled him to discontinue all labor. Until recently corpulency has lii-en considered a natural condition, hut since, by tho use of Allan's AntiFat, a suro reduction of from two to five pounds a week is effected, it is believed to bo a disease. If Mr . Campbell would use the Anti-Fat, I which is a harmless vegtable remedy, i
tor twelve .numbs, be would be reduced to a respectable working w Ight. For purticularn.nsk your drugpint, or address Botanic Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
ui
Watt -r-Ii uof Boots. It is oot always desirable that boots should be absolutely water-proof, as whatever keeps water out will keep it in, aud whoever has worn Indiarubber boots for any length of time, knows that retaining the perspiration of the feet soon puts them in a very unploasant, half par-boiled ooodition that is not desirable. Still, waterproof boots are useful in an emergency, to be worn for a short time as in doing the chores in bad weather. A pair of good rubber boots will answer this purpose, or a pair of common cowhide boots may be made water-proof after the method of the New England fishermen. These people, exposed to all weathers, have for a century used the following cumpound: Tallow, i N.; rosin and beeswax, 1 oz. each ; melt together, thou
A good-natuied-looking youngmau of twenty -live, accompunied by a modest-appearing young lady of the same uge, evidently his wife and just mude so, culled upon a Griswold street insurance agent to see about insuring her life. After sotne ptiliininary conversation the ugeut iuquired whatsum they had in mind. 1 want her insured for at lea&t u million dollars," promptly replied the husband, as he reached over aud patted her on the head. The agent figured up the premium and stated the amount. The wife turned pule as death, aud the husband lost a uund of flesh in a minute. "But take a smaller sum, say rive or ten thousand dollars, "suggested the agent. "Not a cen less'n a million 1" exclaimed the butsbaiid. "If she han't worth a million, she ain't worth nothing, and as I uan'l chalk up Tor am:llion we'll go." Aud go they did, stopping neither fur argument nor good wishes. Detroit Free I't exs. George G, Vest, just elected to the United States Senate from Missouri, will enjoy ono distinction which is not shared by any other Senator, viz : that of having been cowhided by a woman. The way In which Mr. Vest won this distinction was as follows: He was serving in the Confederate Congress during its sitting in Richmond, and made some remark about the wife of Henry A. Pollard which offended her, and she accordingly sought him out and applied a cowbide to him in a very vigorous manner. Vest is an ultra States' rlirhts
man, and an ultra soft-money man
( believing the business of the country cau sufely float $1,000.1KX),000 greenbacks), and fuvors the immediate abolition of the National banks. He may be safely depended upon to hamper true progress, to set himself up as a bar to the spread of New England ideas, and to exalt Southern domination. Indianapolis Journal. Taking Cold, When a peison begins to shiver, the blood is receding from the surface, congestion, to a greater or less exteat has taken place, and tho patient has already taken cold, to be followed by fever, inflammation of the lungs, neuralgia, rheumatism, etc. All these evils can be avoided and the oold expelled by walking, or in some exercise that will produce a prompt and decided reaction in the system. The exercise should be sufficient to produce perspiration. If you are so situated that you can get a gloss of hot water to drink, it will materially aid the perspiration and in every way assist nature in her efforts to remove the oold. This course followed your cold is at an end, and whatever disease it would ultimate in is avoided; your sufferings are prevented and your doctor's bill saved. There is nothing like strong common sense. An Irish soldier went to his station with the order to report anything remarkable that happened during the night. A drunken fellow fell from the wall and brafe his neck and no report was made. When que8tioued about It, Pat replied : "Faith, and I obeyed orders. If the man bad fallen off the wall and not broken his neck I should certainly have reported it.
Orvllle n. Piatt, who received the Republican neuatorial nomination of Connecticut over so ablo a competitor as Gen. Hnwley, is a native of Litchfield county in that state and is at preseut stute nttorney in New Haven county. He is said to be an able lawyer, a man of unexceptional character, an old antlslavery Republican and bard money man. He is flftyone yeurs old. He mude his first apbearancein public life as secretary of state in 1857 58. In 1861-62 he was a state senator, and in 1H64 and again 180'J was speaker of the house in the legislature. This is the first time he whs ever heard of ou'tid uf the ß:nt'
Sick Headache
raMivty Cr.d by ta... Litlla Pills. Thr alao rallara PuireM from l)ywpala, Indigaalloa aud Too Maariy Katlnr A perfect romadjr fur Klar inaaa. Knill.
lrowsl TiMi. Uad Tasla In Iba Mwiitb, Coatl Tonr. Paia la Ilia
SI4a, Ae. Tbay rr lata lha Bowvla and praranl Consllpalioii
ma inn. ine tpim
Only oua pill a 1.
the ills that flesh b heir to," but in attentions
of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints. Dyspepsia ami Sick Headache, or dUcaes of that character, they sun. I wnhout a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preprratory to, or after uking (Quinine. As a simple purgative they are uncqualed. BKWABR or IMITATIOSO. The genuine are never sugar eoated. Each bos has a red wal seal on the lid with Ike impression Dr. Ill I.ANr.'s Ll er Pin v Each wrapper bears the aigtsatssnM uf C Mc t .am and FmiUtG Bros. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. IfO 1 .AN E j I.ISTSa llt4Ja prepared by Fleming llrus.. cf Pittsburgh, l'a.. the market being full of iuti'aiions of the name Mrl.ane, Spelled diflareutly but same prunaui iatiua.
E. W. HELM, Manufacturer of Light and Heavy HARNESS
PROVISIONS WOOD, WILbOW, CHINA & STONE WARE ! We are sHUnf t all times as cheap at an) hnnae In Northern Indiana. In oonneetioi with the above buafneaa. we par the hijfhst price in Cash fr.r all Kinds of Produce, and make aspeciaity la
Hides, Furs, Pelts, Wool
SEEDS, &c. CALL OH Ü8 at out Kew Store If you wist to purcha Qooda la oar Ua or hare aorthina to sell to ua. 13 Michigan St, Plymouth Ind.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
Q ' TIRRATOa'
FHE ORIGINAL ft ONLY GENUINE Vibrator" Threshers, wmt isrraovxn MOUNTED HORSE POWERS, Aud Steam Thresher Kncinti, Made only by NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.,
BATTLE CREEK, MICH.
THE nlatchlpM C.rnln-.Kaviiia-, Tli
I buti. .M l Mti-Svuic Ibrancr. ot M u. r mm 1 BaSaaaSMa r.onJ II Klralry tor BapM V .1 k, r.rfeci CImbIbc, ui lor barlnr Oraia ftaai Vuup.
RAIN IInlernsTlll set 8abmlt to the
. iMit inuu. m Mill MUr.lt. In r : ...rlc own. 1 tli. otL.r ni.ch.u. , aaaa ear. vh Iii. ... s.t.ur.
HE ENTIRE ThreRfclnc r.prs
Extr t . a -.t bAVAvil l itkase-J mprm 4 Mrtuteav.
HO Revolving Shafts Iaslan the ftrpnrm'.r. lnl.r. . lt.. Irm !. . rtrk.i.. I.. . .. r t m' .u. . ItUM-wMtlnf ..,.1 rral-vwll.r MtafM. ration, r.rf.. f. s I I. .11 Kln4..4 .hi ol ' -:m, vr.t er Urf, l...-; or bUo t, l-.t.i.., r U...0. OT on!r Vnatty RatwrUr fnr Vhcnt.
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ARVET.OUS for RlanpHHrr of Porta, I tint; !.:? as Mtsm.l Iwaslla ass A aa,a. too L : . i r 1 1 f B ai ftcslttriufa.
OUR Slj.ru of Srporarora Ufa, rn.c-
i:,.ir-r w IWCIt, Mini Mta,u4 I..BIm..I UtmmtmJ U.ri. rw.r o lM.lrk.
TEAM Tower Throahera a Bssorinlry.
r" "-r"..! u.M. .iprrMir ;or Hon I ..w.i.
I'll UnrWalel Stonm Thresher En-
...u.ki. itMprwvciu.i... ...I DollL.ti. .tum, r.r Sr;oi4 olhcr urt. L.-L
IN Thoroagh Workmanship, tl -not Mai. r.r r i... mf r.rti, C!U4. I. . ml K.,u.pui. at, -!.., .ur "Vim. Tu." TbwWr U.I&Ss mrm Incaparttte.
OR Partlcalara, cell on onr Dealer r writ, to m l.i lUa.ir.tM Cirrator, v.l. w. muM trmm.
NEW STYLES !
LOCAL DIRECTORY.
And Doalor In
CARTERS 9B.TTLE llVER Jhlls.
tot and aaalaat to us
0 la a vial. Parol Vagelali
DOlu BJ mil iir-UKKi.w,. CARTER MEDICINE CO., Fnp'n, EHa, Pi. yira Tula by gaS for ona dollar.
t'ollar an! Milkrr free to Agents. RatA. MstSj durable, chcrp. No ! Raosoa require' rsrelle all othrra. Katmcra want it. Outlant all otbara I Adjustable. Kits any horee. Our M I I K Kit. die heat umarth, (-uaiin- i ' . . Iran milk. Havea ita ca every week. Sella rapidly. ! St ilt by mail to au part u( Iba I . . Send stamp for puitl tilara. J. V. Guernacy. ;rnrral Art., 7H OurtUnd St., N. Y.
Saddles, BridlesXollars
Whips, &c.
Shop, cor. Laporte fc Michigan St , PLYMOUTH, INO. 1 1-2 in. Heavy Harness complete $27. 1 3-4 inch heavy $28. Single Buggy $12to$1 5 DoubleBuggy$25to30
CATARRH. A COUGH OF TWEHTT-nVB TEARS' STANDING CURED. C atakrii wits nsorriNS is jam TrnoAT.CAUsiNO Fiii.i.nui or Strano liru, Dizzi.NRsc, Pairs ir Side, and WlALNK&fl or KlDRETA IM MEDIATELY EEMRYktD, vTs: IU BRMINOI.T MAUB UVBB NRW BY I IK OB URB IioTTLE. M saaaa. LiTTLiriBi n & Co.: 1 liva id aiaaehaat?r b w, and hava lived over fifty rears in WuBatosro, about two milaa from bera 1 am TT yeara old. 1 bava bad ( atarrh for fifteen yearn, and a bad rougb for twenty -tre vcara, pxrially tprinf and fall. Uood deal of that tiraa I Lave bad diasiaeaa In tba hood. Dornt tht f ftaeo year tiave bad dropping froia from tbe bead ujkju tba lunra, tllfu ray throat with pbletni, caaains; tickling in lha throat, aud wheaaver f naa down with faver reatinr a feeling of auffoca'fng and atraugling. People bava tboogbt I had tba Couaumptiou. I waa dorlored for that. I bar cooaalted a great many pbyairiatia. bat never got mora tbaa tesnorarp relief. Abmit two montba ago I had a riixxy apall, fell dowu and was laaeaaibla for aoma time, and did not know my own folk for over aix boar. Mr brother lold ma of yonr C'tlilutioval i'alnrrh Kemrdy, and adviaed ma to bnyabotile. 11a had i'aiarrb aud took thia, and it I got a bot! la and ia ten day a it cured the Catarrh, removed the phlegm, tlekllng id tbethroat, aad 1 was able toaaw fonr cords of wood, working aix hours a day. I never aaw anything Ilka it. It aeemed to make ma all over new . I now have none of the old troutilea uuleaa 1 get cold, and then a
teapooiiful of tba Ccnidtutio al Catarrh ffine1 dp reinovea everything. I wonld uot be without It aa long aa I could get money to hoy it with. My j grand od aad bfa wile bars had Catarrh, aud thy . are trying it and And immediaie relief.
niTf nan iaunn iu in. amaii 01 my uacs. una weaknrwn of tba kidaeya for many rears, aud though I work hard daily, shoveling thia aeaaon of Q year, my kidney, bava found great relief, and toe palna have greatly diminiahed. JOEi'li UEOROC Mauehesier, R, II , April 2, 1870. ('apt. Joaepb Ueorga fan gat the teatlmony of avarr bank man aud city oiBcer to batik hlas as reliable aad hourat awtlandreda o( ca.es or a aimilar nature cured withiu the I a i year. SnuCa aad Uitioua give only temporary relief. The C'oaififuhoHAf f.'afi-7 Rtnitdy strike at tba root, builds up the onetitation. makeaTt uew, and drives away "ata-rh aud all dieeaeee of the mucooa meiubranea, aad tbeir attendant pains aud acbea, pertaiuiug to lha head, back, ahoalders, kidaeya and throat. Trice tl Pr Ud tie. A pamphlet of It uagea giving a treatiae on Catarrh, with innumerable eaaea of cures, sect free by addreaeiag the Proprio, tors. Littlbfibld Sj Co., Maacheeter, N. H. Sold by L Tanner, and Poa & Chapman, Plymouth, lud. dov 14 lit
JN EQUALED IN BAKING! WITH MORE IMPROVEMENTS, ALL THE CONVENIENCES ANI THE GREATEST DURABILITY. BETTER BEST!
CENTENNIAL
Dhotograph
GALLERY
Cold Weather is at Hand
SIMON BECKER
Every atylo of the art from a Crm or Photograph to tho fluent Iodia Ink picture, executed In the hicheat artistic aklll. Alao eopyng and fBlargiotc made a apecialty. We Lavs the boat of lictit. bo that picturea may bt tavketi in any hind of weathor. Picture frnn.e kept coDstantlr on band. With onr klndea regards for an alread) liberal patronage. w would beapeak a continuation of the sitme hoping to be able to render perfect aatlefae ior. foth In price and quality of work. Remember the place. Michigan street, aaai WhaHer'e Bank. Plymouth. Ind. Jas TT J. B. POBTMEB.
For Price and Icscrition of the BEST
BEER FAUCET
Manufactured, Write
WORSWICK M'PG CO,
ti3 CLEVELAND, OHIO.
WANTS ALL THE
MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN In Marshall and surrounding Counties to call and see him before making purchases for Fall and Winter, as he has a Large Stock of Eveything, and tho Goods will be sold. It does not make any difference how big the Blowing done by others, he will not be Undersold by any one.
All-Wool Blankets for $2.50 a Pair!
MANHOOD ; HOW LOST, HOW RESTORED !
Just published, a rrmr edition af Dr. I'iilcr.li'i t oli-lnatt-d I ... OD
tln radical ennt (without niediiine) ot Sperm atorrliua or Seminal Wt iikLfsa, Inoiuuarv Svminal lxaa, Iniajt. u. y Menta.1 aod riiyaical Imapacity, Irapod-
iinvnta to marriage, etc ; alao. t'onausiptioa, Rpllapty aad Flty, iuductd by arif-.ndDigence or ki oal astravagance, Ac. asrPrtca, in a iM-alrd envelope, only alz recta. Tac celebrated author, in thia admirable Ksaay. clearly (lecnonatratea, from a thirty ysis' SBeceaafnl practice, tha. tho alarming conaevjueu ea of aelf -abuse aua rdioally cured without thu knife; polnhug out a mode of cure at oi.ee in.pi-, rarlain and rffoctual, y means of which eery sutlrrer, uo matter wliat hia condttiou may be, may cure hiiuaelf rhaaply, privately, and raitctitlg. Ii" l bi Ltcture should be in the handa of every youth and ary man In the land. Sent audcr aeal, ist a plain envelope, to any sddrta. poat-ai'l, oa receipt of Six centa, or two postage tampa. Addreaa Hie Publisher, Aprlijl THC CUlVERsVELL MEDICAL CO.. 41 Auu Ht.. Merer York; F.O. Box, 45S0.
HOLIDAY PRESENTS !
err a- riinunif i-resra tor I'lcaaura i'jSn lrti Miitl liietriirttou.
Amatur t i ntioK ia a delightfat ami plsaaine pastime for the Hoya. I pivea Ii . Tu a sate and heucflrtal amusenieut; krrpe tb -in at home improvinr their time, learning to marl, el1 and puuctuAir corractly. Onfflt of I'raaa,
Tvpe, Holler, Ink, i-aar, carrla, etc. for 82. ?5. t'ttKnVKU, vi ANNKU et CO., IS and 174 C lark St., itsfcssajo, iu.
100 PAIRS OF PANTS AT $1.50.
Ltadcri and others rnrafed In tba formation of banda or orchestras should send for
our new uescripuvu ca-
aioRue, uevoted ax.
elualvelv in
Inroruialion oonoernlua Band aud Orehea.
tral requls' s. and con-
Inx of the lalesi aud most approved style of lasuumenu now iu nae. Hailed flee. Address & amJaSSVMt. mXmmmM Monroe Btfc.CLJcaco.
MARRIAGE
ocunc I o
rU 'I Keri.i. hol mcui Vm- , - A- MtUHl A. 61
A Book ff nearly SO SV a. in p a u fanxuairri
... lit irm- ii f. , r. ... aerrn mitMrh tha
i. med and Ihoa- cuatras-
r.:annf mamasneuiOinow
now wrun nn
Iv rairu I r aw
nr. t j auect.
CUUMTT OI'flCKKt,
Cierk Auditor". Sberi..., Tmaaurer Be4rder. Surwvor
School SuperinWndeat
Daniej MeDoaaaM
. a . w. 1 boa ,.L.C.
A. L.
. J. B KUAgsa. A C Vorth.
W.B. Baisse.
Co-am itaioarrt '.'.'..'. ! Dowaldiaabt I Jamas fihiaasa
. Rerular aeoaiona of the Vjonralaetonsra'
'oodsys la March, Jaae, Saptaabt aad Da
TVOICIAL orncKKs. Clrenlt Jr.lj Stdaay Eaita. Circuit I'niaecutor p. O. 'isn aeeeiooa of Has circuit Court, lei Monday Us March, Sd Monday in Mar, tb Monday la Setlesaber and Sd Moudty in Itoceutasr.
OITT (iuTKKMM KNT.
Tor Amaaa J
Clark David K Snvder 1 rea.urer .Jaaaea A. .Uasar
aap i rabllc Schools ssim A..C baaw City Council meeta second aad foatrtk Mondays ia ech month.
CHl'KCU 1I RR TORT CHRISTIAIf ( Hl HC H rreachlu MM a. aa. and at T:te p. m. Sunday acnooi at lt.li p. as. H. V Kecd, i'aator.
1RK?BYTSRlANCHt'RCB. rreewhlbs; every tsahbath at 100 a. m . and at 7 .sc p. as. Saab bath arhtiol at 12:11 p. m. 1' rayer asaetiaf, Wednaadaya at T p. as. Seata free ti. A. Little, reasor. MRTUC DISTSPliroVikL CHCSC1. Carsar Lai'orta and Center streets. Preaching every Sabbath et lo.so a. m . aad : 30 p. sa Bandar school at lt:t p. as. T. C. trlae-et , Paater. REFOKM1D CHUM H. aWrrraasi la taa Lata, rrsn Charcb tba arat aad third baadaye as each month at io:So a. aa.. and al Ua Jecety Cbarch at 1 p. aa. J. B. Paalor. THOMAS' Iptaeopal Cbtrch. Divtaa assv O icee every Sanday al 10. So a. aa.. u 1sa a. sa. aunday echool at :jo p. as. Seava tree, J J funds, Rector. CATHOLIC (St. Michaela) C BIRCH Plra aarvira, T JO a as. Secoad aarvfea at 1 a: as res, r at t p. m. U. Zorwaslaa. r sat or
MASOM1C.
ILTMOVTH COMMAS DBR, K T.
A
asonlb.
eorder.
MO. M.
Staiad cosxlarea tha aacoad Thaiad la sack Uh. J. W. Hoagbtoa, ft. C. V. ft. 1 aaa, Rav
I) LY MOUTH COUNCIL, MO. 1, R. A. . M. Stated rjir.mm atiftn. Iba aniul -- ' la
1. M.
each month.
J. r.
T.
P LT MOUTH, CHAKTRH, MO. 4, ft. A. M. btatad con vocations the ftrat aad th.rd Maasdayavneach saoatb. J M. Oonfer. M R. H. I. FLYMOUTM, LODOR; MO. lt; A. f A A. M. Sutad commuBicalioaa first and laird Fridays la each moata. A. L. Baava, W. M. J. BrvwaJec. KILVYIMMINO LODOft, HO 4ML A.IÄTlI. htsted commaaicstioaa tba trat aad third lueeday la eacb noils ft. . vsssae, W. M. C. S. Sutphen, Sac.
PLY Mol 1H CUAPTIR, SAITftftM uiaeu the arat Wadseacsf of aaca a Maeonic HaU. Mrs. C. O. Baallh, W. St A er, Sec
Tar ata at
r..
ODD riLLOWI. AMCRICUS LOUUR, MO. 1, I. O- O every Thuradar eaaiav st .:5a. p. n
aad visiting brsthrvu are cordially lavtied Va Mud, H O. I harer, M. ti. H. S. Baava, aa.
DLTMOI TU RNCAMf MENT, MO. lit.
A- meetiura aecond aad fourth Moadavs la a month. M. Speyer, C. t. J.A. ralasar. bcriba
FI KB CO VI PAN IKS. ADRIATIC K.N0IM CO. St at ad aecoud '1 oeaday ia each mouth. VV. U. U. culien, Sac. E K. BarahUl, Ra
'I'OKRKNT HOSI CO. Stated maaiiafs aaaaad X Taewday ia each asosith. J. W. Falaaaa, Raw aai
PBOi rcriON HOUÜ ANO L DORR CO. Sutssl saeetinrs ftrat 'I l esc ay iu each taoatb. Baary apever, Foraaasi. LOAM ASSOCIATIONS.
PLYMOUTH BU1LU1NO LOAN A SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, NO. 1. Board of Directors meet flrst Monday of each snoalh. D. ft. Arastronr. I'raa. L. K. Toaa. Sac. PLYMOUTH BU1LDINO, LOAN ft SAvlHaaS AOClA i ION, NO. S. Esasrd X Directors meet ftrat Monday in each month. V . B. Haaa, Prca. H. A. Brnvn. Sac riTTSBlUO, rOKT H AIMS A) CBUCAMV KAILWAT. Oa sad after Nov. nih. st. trains w!U ioava atatioaa dally, isxcapi Sunday. 1 as follows :
IMtuborifb !'.. cheater . A llauea... Orrvllla Mansfield . Creatlina .
ociKo win. So. i rüo. 1 1 1 Fo ralEi I so Ei S t ftx 111
u 4S.lu ocaw 11 Mam it lun a luana 11 1 1 u. :aa isspra ooam , 4 4"nn
ar t Nan i upo.
Craatllsa . Foraat Lima Ft. Wayna. Plymott'b.. CbiaaRQ ...
1
I soaro, 6 4i Lm tstpm s am ' J;; c. :i .am lasoam' oapm it Ssam 1 20rm 11 aopiu I t b. 3 6- I P. lilSE UmW lasnl sayatl TtSaai
GOISÜ IAHT.
No. 4 No. Mo s ; N't Ex F st I. At I. Is
Ohlcaajo Plymouth... K: Waysa . Lima , Forest
Creatlina. ar 11 searr
Crastlina . lv Manafleld .... On villa Allianoe Rocheator. ... PitebuiRh....
4 Soatr I
t lopm! saoaa.1 ltpm J am 11 4am S tpaa Mam llff m iilopir s Mani: 4 lot rc I sat
is loam t JopK t tiAm
SMpm
13 Willi
11 V
SSBBi
4 ot pm e ri,n.
" sopn
15pm 4 Spam T 44 cm s 'am I S SSrbi 1 lfaas 11 ispm oca es 1 30am ll Can infam 'I iSpsn
ssass Uaas I aas 11 Mas 1 Sty BS 1 sr. tm
Trains Nos. I and run daily. Train Vs. 1 Iravea PittsburRh dally eicept Satarday. Train Ho. 4 leaves Cbicaso dally except Bat urday. All others daily except Sunday. F. ft. M Y KUH Pan. Pass. And Ticket Ascst INDIANAPOLIS, PERT A (BlCAtaO.
On and after Mar ll. ISTS. iralaa will
on the road. Sundays excep'sd. aa follows:
OPINO MOBTH. Indianapolla . s ooym t is a Kokomo 1 um 111 Pern s Kipm is at Boo beater letApas 11 i" Walnut le 44m 11 w Argos uoopm 11 U Plymouth llsapax 1ST Truer '.i at pas 1 as Walkerton 13 Haas 1 Lsports ll u tit MiohisanClty l so ft as
OOIKO SOUTH.
Hie hiRan City
s
Laporte lo
WalkertOB 11 Trnsr 11 Plymouth 11
Arcos IS Walnut 11 Rochester 11 Peru l fLokomo t adianapolta ft
IS If 4T ftps 3
01 s te ttT ISM ii n it as ll I 111
1 '4 4 as
F. P. ftT ADI. Isen. Tfchr-t Aa rt
Baaaaaaea) -a
THE GUEAT ENGLISH REMEDY I GRAY S SPECIFIC FDICINE
THADft MARK Iseepcciallr rer TRAOf bJAIK.
omme.uded as sn an fail In cars for BSHasBAA TYasss im. Sraasia.
Torrbba, I uro. tshct, aad all
diaeaaee that fol
low as a cons
) r m i" . i
ABMSSMJ mi- ifUsr sl verrat Laaaitade Pain in the Back, Oisaneaa 4 TieIon, Prems tu re Old Are. and aaaay other dlae that lead to Ineauity, Copsamption and s Trews-
tnre trrave. all of which aa a rule are Bret eaaaed t deviatinc froau the lielh of nalare lad arar indel
Kenee. 1 he Npeciflr Medicine ia the reaall of a Ufa study and many years ot aiperieace iu treatiae these apet-tal diaeaaea. Pull particnlare in our pa au t leu. which wa dealt e to aeml free by mail to every one. The Spenflr Medicine ia sold by all crarfisu al 1 per parkaire. or aix packages or will be atat by mail on receipt of the mouev by addreaaira TUR OKAY MEllll'IMK CU, No. IS Mechanics' Block, Ketroit, Mich SSF-Sold in Plynoatb, Ind., by L Taster, ssd by all druggists everywhere apriiyl
A I aSH
Ml I I ISMMI
TlKBIO.I
,r..-a.e. ISwf.l- ! eiit.. AiSfiLa I St, Uui,"BSb j
pever and Ague I CURE.
IN LIQUID OR PIL 8. Positively cares tha worst forms of Clwrls, Fever. Dumb, Ague, Tbtrxl-daj Ag-.e, Fever without fhil a. Searalgla or gäcftj Header be. Cares Debility, Loss erf Appwtite, beBds Bp the system to overcome malaria-makes yr feel like . mi t'l and never falle l cab:. Hold by all Ifrugrieia in SI areha II coaaaty Agents wsnted wanted svrrysrVre. d
fln-ae I'hKMllSO A CO.. Msr.nfaeturer,
I . IS TT. ii-IS if rUrr-outh. Tnd.
I
