Plymouth Weekly Democrat, Volume 14, Number 36, Plymouth, Marshall County, 13 May 1869 — Page 4
Restive Radicals.
The rats are beginning to leave the sinking ship, as rich vermin are certain lo Co as soon as the., perceive the least sign of approaching disaster. Not only the poliiieian?, dflt ninte.1 applicants for offices, and persons -who have not been consulted as frequently as they suppose they should have been, who might naturally be expected to manifest some irritation and bitterness1, but many f the &trongest supporters of the present Executive, until within a few weeks past, and a portion of the m st influential of the Radical j mrnl9 of the country, are expressing their i!iapintnient and dis gu-t it the vacillating and corrupt policj of the government, as manifested during the past two mouths. A portion of them are crying out tor a change iu the Cabinet, forgetting that the difficulty originates at the fountain head, and that the several br.ui hes of the government but reflect the opinions and infirmity of pur poM s conspicuous in the Executive him self. Having been defeated an subjugated by the designing politicians of lis own party, our military President at present enter tains no fixed opinions of his own n any subject connected with the science of gov eminent ; but is being irresistibly borne along bv the current of the m tnv and divert op Dions which are constantly being thr it ujK)n him. N definite policy K ing ei rtaineil by the Chief Magistrate himself, but, on the contrary, his opinions on every subject, being manufactured for him, it is useless to expect that the best Cabinet ever formed would be able to pil .t. the 8hip (f State out Of the whirlpool of imbecility and corruption into which it is being" drawn by the incompetency of i:a Captain. The President being a mere puppet in tbe hands of the many Radical manipulators, wh are each pulling the string! in a contrary direction, tue affairs 1 the country, not fiver brightly appearing at present, are likely to go on from bad to wecse. Too many cooks ure most certainly spoiling the Executive broth, and it is small wonder that the better portion ot the Radical party are beginning to cry out against the flivor of the rr.H8s. They have made their bed, vtver, and they mint lie up-m it; bin iu their efforts to shut their eyes to the glarir g incompetency and mismanagement, and to sleep quietly throjgh the disasters of the next tour years, we need feel no manner of surprise if we discover much .vteping, wading, and gnashing of teeth. The prospect truly is not a cheerful one ! Albany Argun, th. Nullifying the Popular Will. As klei tku, the HflW of Represent. i-tives-d tue Fortieth Congress stood 1't Ra-iieal la 52 IKm-'cr&tic members, or 2l tv r the two-thirds for the Radicals, that rs ?ult being a?ained by the pretence of 30 Cirpet b.g li; prescntanves and '31 bogus i' preseniitives from Misoun, Nebraska, X vada. Weht Virginia and Tennessee. With the election of November last it was evidently the popular desire to reform this nutter, and fltHB the thirty-one States then voting the members elect stood Radicals 189, Dm era's 71, or three less than two third for the Radicals. At tnis 'here was at the same time some considerable popu1 ir congratulation, and it was noticed as a - 'ii Of the existing disapprobation ol Congress that the Republican Congressional vo-e fell M far behind the vote fo1Uran' We di D A ourselves share in the general felicitation, feeling pretty well assured tint Radicalism, to be Radicalism, would resort to any shifts, however discreditable, ra'her than lose its two thirds ; and such is now seen to be the fact It has been asserted by Hon. James Brooks from his seat in the House that the Demo crats elect have been reduced " below fifty at m t," and, while our information does not go entirely to that extent, it is f-tdi seffi lent to thow that the will of the people havj beeu so shamelessly disregarded s to give the Radical tactionaries of the House six vo'es over the two-thirds. As -- ven of the Southern States now wholl or in p irt uiirepreb-uted wi1 only be allowed to present or c 'mpio their dekga-ti.-uo on the condition of 1 i m 1c' Rwii call appearing, it will be seen that, desp.te the Vwice of the people, Radical chicane I putt the House iu the Fart) -first Con gress just wheie it stood in the Fortieth Congress, and that is with a llaiiical vote of some twenty over the rtqui-ite twothirds. If this be not the old South Carolina doctrine of nullification, what is? Mm York World. Impeitdnig Imperialem. Wk have already commented upon the startling fact that in this vear of grace .-'?, in the Republic of te Ünited States, and in the metropolis of thüt Republic, an organ is now established1 .vidch boldly advocates a change of our iorm of gov erament from republicanism to imperialism. Such a popof is published, not only without m leatat:oQ, but almost without remonstrance. It is ciTtiu that no remonatraece comes from the journals whieli are the peculiar advocates ofwhlt passes for political u Kipublicaoism" now. On the eoritrary, leading journals ot this character have trladiy seized the offered "pporiuni'y, under cover of presenting Um plattorun of tbi new imperial organ, to ventilate their ,wn iews as to the assumed netesuv of at least some sort of a m ore centralized ond stronger form of government for the na'ion. Moreover.it is boldiy asserted by a respectable newspaper in New Jersey, that the avowed advocate of impt ria'ism is "coiled uuder the auspue and at the ccst of the Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Adolph Boric," aLd sill! further," that "Grant himslf lends eountma: ce to the scheme by aidng with m i. y and means its c.rculation among h;s trie; d-.M The streng' h of this statement lies in the fact that it is not denied, and further, in the fac' that its eager repetition bv Radical j mania tkmogkout the country m" I i h no remong:raii.e or rebuke. Tbia is a', the more starilirg when we refleottbol Aihin a very brief ptr'xn! for exjprefatnjg opinions up'n what was aslumed to Ijv 'thesovern'ce'd," but which really m 'umir more than an arbitrary pa-ty usurping unwarrantable power j .urii.il have been summarily suppressed arid eititors have been imprisoned, and tint, too, without even the oreb nee of warrat t fet -uch proscrip. ...n and p;oeecdingm. With this positive h'ittory eat. in mind, to put it in the mildest manner, it is ceitainly singvdar that brasei , r posit ma to not merely change, but to violently otwthfOty our constitutional f-n.i of ir'verp;nent, sh-.uld not ouly be permitted cut actually be encouraged by t'i. who hold high office at the people's ' liIm. It is all verj a d to sav that thse open expre8ioni of views in favor of imperialism in tii ig country are mere ephemeral x halations of so much vapor. Rut when a i iiirnal like the Hound 'I able gravely ''.fcclarts that we are " drifting into impe rialinm, " and when a repreMOtativC Repub!i(An par like the Cincinnati Commercial talks about the coming centralization which is to absorb and govern the whole continent, an 1 mke this city " what London is to Qieat Britain, od St. Petersr? to an cmpi-eonly less extensive than ours," we may well wake up to what seems near at hand. Absurdest of all things is it to say, in the very face of facts, that a change In t he pre-ent form, or even a sudden and violent overthrow of our present form of goverment, is im possible. It hoA ben done already. The government which Radicalism, wPhin a very brief period, ha fastened upon the
nation, is no more the government founded by our fathers and written in the Constitution, than military despotism is mild republicanism. With no lurther warrant, no claimed warrant even,
than party force, or party necessity, States have been overturned ; millions of people have been rolded of their right of representation ; the national Constitution "has been torn to piece-and then pasttd together with party patches, so that the fundamental law should be made to follow a party, and not the people ma le tn conform to the law. Our space would fail to admit f even the leading details of the past , Ighl years' history, which eo to show how utterly Imwless, how regardless of all writ'en law, the sworn administrators of the law have been. The Radical party leaders, like the hea the- , have oDly been a law unto themselves. They have ruled the land with a rod of iron. The country has suffered all the terrors of a despotism, without the protection which even despotisms in other nations are compelled to extend The Constitution has been utterly disregarded ; the highest courts ban been com pelled to conform their decisions to par;y edicts; the Executive has been restrained from the exercise of its legitimate functions ; the people have been cruelly plun dered to sustain a more than imperial extravagance in administering the Government; a black dispotism has been set up in ten sovereign States and Congress, which by the Constitution is declared to bold but a third pact in the administra tion of the national affiirs, ha- boldly assumed the supreme control, not only i f State sovereignties, but of the superior co-ordinate branches of the Government as established by our fundamental law. All this time, behind Congress, we have seen the drawn BWOftL To sustain, certainly to continue such extraordinary nsurpa' ion, the selection of a military leader, ss the nominal head of the new Government, was not only natural, but imperative. From such an assumed despotism actual impeiialism is an easy step. It is idle to attempt to disguise the danger that now lies at the very lo r, or to ignore the impending shock which may shatter the very last of our liberties Nor will it do to turn up our noses in dis dain at the presumed weakness and incompetency of "The Men ou Horseback.1 Up to the very hour of the 6mtp dt it half the world and aH Fraree thought Louis Napoleon a fool. In the past eight years the people of this country have been unwittingly, but steadily, preparing them selves for imperial rule. Prop after prop has been knocked from under the broad republican platform on which our whole rights rest, and when the final fall coescs, the staging has been so weakened, aud ti e neonle have so gradually sank, th it the Shock will be slight. The Radical party has exhausted the means which placid it in power. The issues which male the party have passed away. To continue that power some desperate resort is necoi sary. What will that resort be ! The newAdministration started with the cry ot " Let us have peace," and now, af er I I months, the order goes forth for an extensive enüsnj'-nt tor a standing army Wrliat does this mean f It is necesstry to prop peace with more be oneta ? Military men believe that all ttteastUI I must be conducted by military means. And the alarmin? feature oi the entire situation is the utter apathy of the people as to what may impend, or v bat may come. It is to be feared that the mass of us are like the great mtdd'e class ot Frar.ee, who do nor care what particular form of G vernment SO long as they artpermitted to make money and are let alone. Our own quiet submission to a gradual but persistent usurpation of what we once considered sacred rights ; the erovinjj love for luxurv and extravagance so puvalent throughout the country; the forced feeling every where that republicanism, at least as Radicalism has administered it and construed iL, ia a failure ; and that fatal facility we have lor change, u d the ready acceptance of change, without considering whether it is a change for tlx better these are the dangers of to-day. It becomes the people to arouse thrnMtvej to a true sense of the adual situation, and t see how they, their instit utiom and their rights and liberties stand and are threatened DOW. Neu York Citizm, May 1st. Robert Anderson. The hero of Fort turned out, in his old Sumter has been age, like a w .rnout none, to die on the commons. Eta baa served his country long and weil. He I itbeen compelled by hi m ce-sn i s to sell his librnry, and go and live in Europe. Is there no list of subscribers for a house for him ? Why does the intensely n Bpectable H'-rie, the charitable Sfe A itrt, the friendly Washburne, and all the rest ol the patriots whoru8hedto Grant's call for a bouse, not respond ! Becanse there is no money in the hero of Fort Boater. Sc has no offices to give. If he were President, or General of the army, he would be over whelmed with presents of bonsai and money by the Stewart, Li"ri's, and other political present-makers. It evidently don't pay to be the hero of a mere tort Exchange. üratifyiiig Betest. The local elections in Indiana -ffd Ohio indicate a general increase of the D, mo cratic strength The Gtd is gratifying, and the more so because it is very unu.-u al, in the beginning of a new national administration, for the minority party to show increasing numbers. But there is now a pedal reason for this unusual state Oi things, and that reason is that the country is disappointed, and at the point of beint disgusted, with Mr. Grant. Grant's otfi? cial appointments constitute a very disgusting dose for citizens of average intelli gence to swallow. One effect of that nauseous dose is -ecn in Hie return of sober, thinking men to the parly which con tains, and has alwas contained, the i si hrains of the nation. GklmQO Time Man Wi. The Imperialist. The New York Krprc announced, several weeks ago, ihe report that a Federal officer was deeply Interested in the publi cation known as the Jmptrialit ; bat did BOS mention names. The Newark Daily Journal subsequently made the astounding statement that the Imperialist is edifc d tin der the auspices and at tfie tal of tie St & relary of the Navy, Mr. Ad.Jph 7,vr,and alleged that Grant hiinselt had been distributing copies to his friends. Signs cf the Tihkh The FTjlfJI a Rniirtnul Cnzett sayn: In walking about Chicago, the attentive observer may be anuiKert hy ine very noticeable Urn. whic h, whatever lky my have been Intended to announce, proclaim very plainly that tbe schoolmaster ia abroad. r waa when the painters of these signs shonld have eot their hook 'arnin'." There is. or waa HMly. on Lake street, something abont "Singar's eintr machine." A handsome gilt nin on Washington street annunnces that te.-th tfs ' x tatted." witbout pain, and on a flno building on M .-M-on street i a notice that " MoSdata " are there made, but we have seen nothing (piito so had as thh, which may be tin ou West Randolph street, near the bridge: Kash Pa De Fur Ola Bras Ko per Mr. Luce, in the Hural Nie Yorker recommends gathering fine road dust in summer, and storiug it for winter, to scatter fver lousy animals, to rid the m of lice. It must be well rubbed in'o the hair. The surest way to nts your healih is to keep drinking other people's
An Effective Lesson.
The following narrative of a practical joke is t Id by Grace Greenwood, of a certain D ctor Elliot, a noted chara ter, ot a noted old Connecticut town. Late one dark night, being summoned to j a paneni in a neiguooring pau.su ur. .tdliot went for his horse to his barn, which was at some distance Irom the pamonge. Just as he was about to enter, he heard some one coming out, and immediately eoucealed himself behind a large bush in the lane, hiding his lantern under his .. . 1 1 T"V Tl cloak. Presently the wide barn-door I swung open, and a man appeared, oeuuing beneath an immense load of hay bound together by a rope. Through loops of thii rope he had thrust his arms, and he carried the huge mass like a peddler's pack. The Doctor suffered this thieving A.ÜM to pass him ; then, taking the candle from his lantern, he crept softly forward and set tire to the hay, then again concealed himself. In a moment that moving hay cock was one great, crackling blaze, and the thief, with wild cries, was frantically tli'ieimr it from h;s head and back. I lo succeeded in extricating himself without hel:, and then ran as though pursued by ti ends across the snowy fields. Snme months after this there came to the Doctor's study a pale, thin, melancholy-looking man; who, after much painful hesitation, expressed a desire to make a confession of sin. With a serious and sympathetic manner, yet with, I sua pe t, a sly twinkle in his eye, the minister set himself to listen. M I've had a dreadful load on my conscience, Doctor, f r a COsfcTble spell ; and ' it does seem as ef 'twould kill me. IV e-?ny most aeao now. "Ah! is it possible? Win' c in you have done? You are a respectable n and a churchmember," replied the Doctor, in seeming surprise. " l es, I jined the church thirty ear ago. rep1 led the old farmer ; then, sinking hi? voice to an awsome confidential tone, he continued: " But I'm a dreadful sinner, tor all that. Doctor: and, beiu' a churehtnember, my sin, you see, was of too much account to be winked at, and judgment hollered close arter it. 0 dear, O !" " Pray tell me your trouble, brother." M Well, Doctor, it consarr.9 "Indeed !" M Yes. One time last winter, I got a hatle short of fodder, and I thought tf myself as how you had more'n enough for your critters ; and so one night the Devil teaspaed me to go over to your barn, and tu-0 dear, 0!" ' l o help yourneil to a little ot my stir plus hay ; eh V" "Yes, Doctor, jes so! But I never home with that are hay. The Lord would- j n't let me du it. I had a load on my back, ' and was a carry in' it away when all tu once it burst into a blaze about my cars!" ' " Struck by lightning tn " No, Doctor, it was a clear night. I've jest made up my mmd that lire dropped down from Haven and kindled that ure hay. 'Twas a judgment an' a warnin', ; an' I'm afeared a sort of foreruuin r of the flames of hell. I haint hd no pea e ol mind sence, nor feb, like satin a good meal of vittals. At last I thought I mipht feel a j i etie netter et i d jest own up to you, an aäk your pardon au' your prayers." To the astonishment of the poor penitent, the minister laughed out right merrily. Then he said: "Be comforted, neighbor ; your little thieving operation w is hardly of such const quenre to Heaven as all that. It was I who caught you at it, ;ind set fire to the hay from my lantern ; and I must say you yelled lustily ar.d ran briskly, for a man of your years. Vh didn't you tell me if you wanted hay Now go home in peace, get well, and steal no more." " You, Doctor ? You Be ynu sartin sure you sot fire to that arc bundle of hay ? " "Yes, quite sure; that was my own little bonfire I hope it didn't scorch you mach, I noticed, when y u came to nuelieg the next Sunday, that your hair arm little singed. As for the flames ol bell, neighbor that's your own lookout. I trust there is time to escape them yet." " So, so ! 'twas you did it all ! The Lor 1 be praised I n exclaimed the farmer, fervently. "It raly is an amaz n, relief, an' my old woman wasriht; for she says: 1 Go to the miuisteran' confess,' tays she, 'an' that'll lift the bigpest heft of the sip off your ronsience, an' be better than ;v tor stuff' says she. A' so you did it ! Well, iolks say you're a master man for a j ke ; but this 'ere one was more solemn than a sermon to me, an' more ctlectooal, Doctor, I do believe." o saying, the farmer departed in pea S ; am! the parson kept the secret of his name, even in his own family, always, I think. A Living Skeleton. A nKMARKAnr.K instance of human cma ciat ion exists iu the family of a German laborer nnmed Charles Schrier, who resides on Talbot stree', three doors from the northeast c rner of PoUarton. It is tin: of a irl aged ten years, who is entirt-lv without flesh, and who has existed in condition from earliest infancy. Tbe unfortunate child presents a spectacle to move the deepest sympathy. Without the power to aid herself in any way, or to signify her wants except by fret fulness, she sits propped in a chair all day long, attended constantly by the other members of the family. Her face gives her tin' ap pearance of an ordinary invalid, waste by disease, but the body and limbs disclose an almost total absence of flesh, the frame exhibiting its ghastly outlines through the skin. Though without tbe gift of speech, her intellect betrays much acuteness ; when pleased, she smiles composedly, and remains perfectly tranquil and happy when rocked in the chair. She is also pleased with the notice of strangers. When unhappy, she strngglea for utterance, the only effect of winch is a faint cry. Her hearing, however, Is said to be perfect, ö'ie cannot be moved from one position without considerable paiu, and, as all such subjects do, suflVr from perpetual cold. Medical men v ' have examined her expres8the opin: that her emaciation has been product- ' i rom pre natal causes. London (Ontario) Fne Prem. Thekk ia found on the coast of British Columbia, Russian America, and Van eouver's Island a little flsh, not larger than a smelt, clad in glittering amii r, which is fat almost beyond conception. Its scientific name Salmon Paeificua popularly is called the candle fish. It is BCXt to impossible to broil or fry them, for they melt completely into oil. They are so marvelously f;it that the natives use them for lighting their lodges. For this pur pose the urie4 fish are perforated vom head to tail by a piece of rush pith by means of a long needle made of hard wood. The wick ia then lighted, and ihe fish burns steadily, with sufficiently good light to read by. Alexander Dunn, of Maine, rec w tly sued the Grand Trunk Railway Company or damages on acenunt of iniuri - r nind when thrown from the track in a car at melted to the freight train, and gained Ja verdict of $1,800. The company's d fence was, that their rules forbade a pajaengei to ride on the freight train save at his own rik, but Judge Ooddard instructed the jury that the fact that the conductor received from the passenger the regular fare, rendered the company liable despite their regulations. -Tint aggregate of appropriations from the New York state Treasury to railroad corporations is $4,815,000.
JFarm anb fjouscliolb.
Sweet -Potato Culture. It is now about twenty years since a Mr. Uavenprt planted sweet potatoes at Long Neck, Staten Island. This was the earliest attempt to raise this esculent in the vicinity of New York, or in the Northern States. Ot coarse, neighbors were incredulous, and Mr. Davenport himself seems to havemet with such moderate success as led soon to discontinuance of the attempt. Rut a .nr. tiancoca went on with tue experiments, and at lat he established the fact that the sweet potato could be grown with advantage in the colder climate and of a quality rivaliing the crops of Virginia or the Carolinas. He sold plants quite extensively, and the increasing demand induced others, both on the Island and in Monmouth and other counties in New Jers y, to embark in the same enterprise. Now thousands of bushels are raised each season for the Metropolitan market, and the business is ext nding its proportions. The method of culture is simple. The crop is raised from slips pulled from the potato, the potato having ben first placed in a hot be t one month before. The manner if crowing them in a hot-bed is as follows : M k? the hot-bed the same as you would to raise tomatoes or egg plants, with the exception that one inch of dirt is a sufficient covering for the manure. Over this place the sweet potatoes (email ones are preferable) so they ewer just one hilf the so ice : or. in other wonjs one harre should be placed in a bed six feet wide by seventeen and one half feet lone (five .hes, six by three and one half feet); then cover the potatoes one inch deep. In about two weeks the sprouts will begin to show through the ground, then cover a?ain with one inch of soil till thty show tiiMiu- lves airain, when the covenne mav . p.. repeated the s inie as before three inches of soil, which will cent. As to watering, great c betöre, making be sutliare should
v..,-. l .. i ,i , , , , lm'ui ii min im uifii itt tui ( ;tui am, ZThnr Si .round should not be- nd aft R mimitf J J wiU fit Z i Vh yt ' 1? Si S S ! serve for a supper relish. would rot the potatoes. Neither should it nLJ '. . .. nr become so dry that they will not sprout. ! TnE, Philadelphia Weekly Pren Here practice only can tell the true ctr,rK!y commends charring as the best amount ot water to be used. The tern- ! Preservative of wood in the ground perature is of the utmost Importance, as I fence posts, etc. It says trie best way to many of the old growers will tell you, do tbe charring is t have a u-i tire, put sod the heat should never be allowed to m the posts singly, and Jak them out p t higher than 90. One hour of hot sun !!h,en one; n1 l Nevada County, Will entirely rot and ruin them. In one C(tl Placet abou eighty fence posts in Instance, I remember, by the carelessness "ne pile and et fire to the ends; they of help, I ha I eight barrels cooked to a burned po f,erc1cl" ihxi VOiiTy al! ot ,hem peeling . ndition, and had to replace were consumed. them by other potatoes, at a coat of eight A Useful Cement. The Railway dollars per "Pan el. The soil is an essen- Time says that a useful cement f-r dosing ti il part for (be hot-bed, and should be of "P cracks ia stove ptates, BtoTe-doMS, etc , a sandy nature. Heavier loll bakes and ! iä prepared by mixing finely ptflverijd retards the sprouting. After ihe sprouts ! iron. snch as can be secured at the drugare sufficiently large, remove the sashes, j K'sts, with liquid water glass, to a thick and they will be HifUciently hardened in j pas, and then coating the cracks with it. t hree dal t bear transnlantint? in the The hotter the firethen becomes, the more
I. Aik r the removal, the sash mav be r placed and a second crop ol plants produced. After the potato sprouts, plenty of water shuld be given to make a ispid growth. For the nut few years some f the larger growers are giving up hotbeds in the alteration i f such plants, and are r dsitit; th m in houses heated by hot Water. Th;s practice is preferable, becanse more certain and much less expensive than buying manure, and also ou acc 'tint of the ficiiities fr controlling the h(at, which cannot be ( btained in a hotbed. The ground in which the plants are to be set shuid be plowed very shallow (not. more tiian four inches) as soon as the toil is in suitable condition the earlier the better. Then leave il tili time of planting (which is from loth of May to 15th of June), then strike the farrows with a corn plow, iu;. king farrows three and a half feet apart; alter which place the manure iu the farrows, iprending it along to even thickness ; the manure may be the same as that used for oorn OB Irish potatoes; a compost ot horse-manure with barnyard and bog manure I find best. Then take a I vv h ie plow Si d cover the furrow from t ach side, throwing the soil directly over the in. mure as high as practicable, 't hen smooth the ridge with a hoe, and set tbe plants sixteen inches apart, either way, n before or just after i shower, or on an overcast day. The attention required is the same as that of common potatoes, except when the vines begin lo run they uihs' be kept from rooting in the rows, us this takes av.ay the suotance from the hill. The a" ve la adapted only to loamy soil; those Who have a sndy soil mu-t not give the same treatment. 1 have und Ifen! it pays ell to put sand in tbe i:K v. ':. re the ground is a little heavy. Hearth and Uome. Compost Heaps It ia often recommended that when manure is thrown Into heaps in the field, it ghoul : be con red with a layer of earth to pn vert ihS eaoape of the ammonia. The experiments of Dr. Voeleker, at the R nal ncttltnral College at Cirencester, in gland, have established the fact that the evaporation of ammonia from large heapi i I manure, goes on but slightly ; for the reason t.ia during the decomposition of the manure, certain organic acids are f nrmed at the same time the ammonia is evolved, and then immediately unite with the ammonia, forming non-volatile Oom pounds. There is an active escap- f unmi dm from the interior of Isran hasps, where the heat li too great for the chetnieal changes above referred to ; bat, a.- it approsehes the exterior parts of the heap, where thl heat is very much less, the ammonia i completely taken up by the organic i i la and retained. There will be but a trifling escape of ammonia while there is sufficient moisture to retain it, for Waft r absorbs and retains many hundred times til bulk of ammonia gas at ordinary temperatures; These non-volatile compounds, from being highly soluble in Water, are liable to be washeel away by ' very rain storm, giving the well-known brown color to tbe dfaininga of manure heaps. American Agriculturist. Laming Horses. The horse d one i f the most powerful, ambitions and s- usible of domestic antm i s, andyet, in ace rtain sense, is far from being a hardy one. Iu this respect the hone h DOl iqtUÜ to the rough and tumble usHge which the male or even the ox can bear without exhibiting marked signs of the sefjpre discipline to which they have been subject d. In reviewing the many horses daily thronging the atieOH of the larger towns and cities, the number of defective ones can scarcely fail of belog n marked. Some are ailing in the urr limbs, others in tbe hind ones) ami not a few in both. This is not neeoasarUy the result of age, defective blocxi, nor ol special hard worit, though in some in-tances it may be so, but much oflener is the consequence of careless handiinir or positive rueity on the part of j those to whom they are entrusted As has bean already intimated, the horse, in a certain sense, is a delicate animal, and it n unced upon in a passion while ( 'lie umbered with harness, and possibly with a load ton heavy for easy movement, the ohaam s are that efforts to es cape punishment will ronlt in such an over-tension of the muscles as to produce permanent lameness E?ety one conversant with the rough and tumble work of the farm, tbe lumber forests, stone quarr ien, the docks and the like, will have encountered many difncul-
ties in which teams and teamsters hare
their tempers and powers of endurance eeverely tried Both become excited and fractious, and w hate v r the fault, if fault there be, the horse is likely to receive pretty severe treatment it not permanent damage. Not a few b uses are lamed under such circumstances, while others are injured by want of proper coneideration on the fart of those having them in charge not from positive ill-treatment, but by carelessness in placing the animals in such situations as to cause unwonted exertions to escape from an apprehended danger. Rough, boorish men are not sailed to the care of an animal having the spirit, tenderness and usceptil i ity pertaining to the horse, and were sonfa hssi frequently entrusted with the management ot stable stock, there would be fewer limpinir and comparativelv valueless horses in our public thoroughfares than there are at present. The greatest care, Jt is true, cannot prevent accidents to horses, in all cases, but with proper athntion the number of the halting ones would constitute the exception, and not. the rule, as ;s now too olten the case. Turf, Field and Firm. USEFUL KEOIl'KS, ETC. BtJPSRIOB CKMKNT fr any purp but especially for substances that i posed to moisture, may be m s dissolving common gum she" t . -i s, i X py and applying it like glue. To cure a d g of sheep killing, let him see the sheep he ha1 kiüd : in his pres ence take oil the pelt rasten it tightly around him, and make him wear it from one to three days. Tttk Rural X t Yorker fells a N n York correspondent that it will pay him to pay ten dollars a ton haul it fifteen m;,es to seedeel sandy loam soil. for plaster and apply to newly To CeOK CURE8H. Cot a quarter of a pound of cheese into small slice and boil it a minute-in a leacnpfiil of water; best one egg and one tsbh Bnoonral of tl ur toiritVwr Hrlinn rrr.H not r rn. rk'nt f rv.i'ib- ; . '1 M ' .Y. doea the cemeut melt and combine with its metal Ingredients, and tbe more com pletely will the crack become closed. Excellent ProniNo. Three tablespoonfuis of tapioca soaked in cold water till it is swelled enough, then ad 1 one quart of milk and pn' in a double kett'e, or in a pitcher, a:t set into boiling water, and when the tapioca is sufficiently tender, add the yolks of three egirs, a small teacup of sugar, a little salt; stir this into the boiling milk, season with vanilla, thei pour half in a dish, add the Whites of the eggs beaten, to a-froth, then pour the re mainder ou the top. You can make it in the morning, as It is to be eaten cold, and is very nice. Exchange. The Herald of Health t - lis us that sleep ing after dinner is a bad practice, and that ten minutes before dinner is worth more iban an hour after. It rests and refreshes and prepares the system for vigorous di gestion. If sleep is taken after dinner it should be in the sitting poftara, the horizontal position is unfavorable to healthful digestion. Let those who uecd rest and sleep dining the day take it be fore dinner Instead of after, and they will soon find that they will feel better, and that their digestion will be improved thereby. Weak Eyes in HoWSEÄ. Make up a wash of alum ami watet which reduce to blood beat, aud with a quill, bhw the liquid into the eve. After trying the above preparation t ree limes, take a piece of abim, as lurire as the end of tine's finger, and burning it in the tire reduce it to powder, and blow it tstoutiy by the same process Into the eye. We have tried burnt ahtra on a numfter of horses that have had sore eyi s, an 1 always foond it a valuable remedy. It will remove al! enm and restore clearness to the ryus. American Stork ,ovrtal. Multiplying Seedlings. A corres pondent of the Canad Firmer proposes to multiply Beedliaga after the following manner : " Take cuttings from raeh seed lings as may be considered worth testing, and uralt or tmd them upon the previous year's wood, or a healthy grown tree. Iu this way an Immense number of dons could be put on one tree, aud searlyevery orchard has occ or more suitable trees whirh do but little in the way of bearing fruit. lam of the opinion that the wood of a young plant grafted Into s tree of a mature growth, would b.-ar as soon as a section from the old tree." To Boil Conned Beef. Wash it thoroughly and put it Into a pot lhat will hold plenty )f water. The water should he hot; the same care is necessary ia skimming it a for fresh meat It is not too much to allow half an hour for every pound of meat aiier it h as begun to boil. The goodn ssof corned beef depends much on its being boiled gently and long. If it is to be eaten cold, lay it. when boiled, into a coarse, earthen dih or pan, and over it a piece of board ttie lias of the meat. Upon this put a clean stone, or a couple of flat-irons, or some other be ivy weight. 'Halt meat is very much improved by being pressed Fx banffA 14 Tnclk Jack" in the Soulhern Cultivator, gives the following recipe for potato pudding: Take good sound potatoes, wash them clean, scrape off the outside skin thin, grate them; to five heaping table .-poontuls add one quart of tioilinif milk, and five eggs, beal Dp with five spoonfuls of sugar, a lump of battel about the size' of au egg, a tea spoon of salt; davor with nutmeg or other spice or spices, to suit the taste; stir all will together. Perhaps, -f you have it, a little Eau de Kose, wine or brandy, would im frove the taste ; Sad Sosoe Would perhepi ike it better with less, some with moft sugar. Now for the cooking . Don't put it in S crest, but iu a cleau oven; stir a few times at the tart, to prevent sticking, and bake until surely done. Read the advertisement of the Ma-on A Hamlin Organ Company in another column, and send for t he d seriptive circulars which they oiler to send Without charge to any one. As the demand f r the celebrated orgaus has steadily increased, coining from almost every country on the globe, the company have added new machinery ami feci titles for manufacture which enable litem I poultice the best instnimen'R they l ave yt-r made, at reduced cost. It H tlc ir fixed policy to sell always at the miailest remunerative profit, and they have accordingly recently reduced their prices, and arc said to be now selling son e Btvles of orgaus at considerably lefs than the actual cost of manutacture of imilar instruments, to makers not having such facilities. Another pe culiarity in the mode of doing business adopted bv this company is, they print in their circulars 1 heir IQWSSt pri00S which are invariable, and alike to ail,
Soap Snds.
A cistern or tank, of from two to four hogsheads, should be constructed in the vicinity of the sink or laundry of every farm house, and a system of conductors so arranged as to lead the auds and slops into it as they are made. This liquid matter is a powerful fertiliz! r, containing the fjod of plants in a state of solution, and cons quently in a condition to be readily taken up and absorbed by vegetables as soon as applied. Irrigating gardens with soapsuds, after the liquid has become stale, is a powerful means of promoting vegetable growth, especially in dry weather. Some have considered suds to be equal to that of the same weight of manure. This, however, is probably an exaggerated estimate ; yet we want no additional corroboration to satisfy us of its intrinsic worth, as a vegetable stimulant. Great care should be observed that the decaying matter and suds do not taint the air about the dwelling, as in the process of fermentation and decomposition sulphuretted hydrogen gas is thrown off. This is an active poison. When inhaled it acts directly upon the blood, thickening and turning it black. A single gallon of it, mixed with 1,200 of air, will render it poisonous to birds, and one gdlon in 100 will kill a dog N. E. Farmer. Not Assuring. A Breton peasant en hit wiy to Parin, stopped at a barber's shop in Kambonillet. While the barber was etrapulne tii raaoi tne peasant noticed a dog Mtung near hi chair and Btarinij at him fixedly. What is the matter with ihat dog," paid the peasant. that he stare? so at me!" The barber answered with an unconcerned air : "That dog is always there. You see when I cnt oft a pbcj of &n ear " " Well ;"' " Well ; he eate It." IIalnks' Tkkatisbfok Justices of thr Peae, Police M:iri irato. Constable, etc. A convenient hand-book of the law for every public nfli -er und bttstlieae man, contains the law applicable to every day business transactions with practical boatneaa form. Sent by mall or ex ire-! on receipt of price. Price $7.50. Published 1 K. B. Myers. Law 1 lokseller, No. S7 Washington street, Chicago. 111. Common Sense Kules the mas of the people, whatever the miennmed and misanthropic philosophers may say to the contrary. Show them a good thin?, !et its merit be clearly demonstrated, and they will not hesitate to give it their most cordial patronage. The masses have already ratified the judgment o! a physician concerning the virtues of IIOSTETTEÜ S BITTEKS, as may be een in the immense quantities of this medicine that are annually sold in every section of the land. It is now recognized as greatly superior to all other remedies yet devised for diseases of the digestive organs, nch as diatr!ioa. dysentery, dyspepsia, and for the various t.'vi" that arise from derangement of those portions of the system. Hostetter's name is rapidIv becoming household word from Maine to Tex is, from the shores of the Atlantic to the Ps cific. The-e celebrated STOMACH BlPTEHs have doubtless created as much seusation in the community for their remarkable cures as any oilier med'Cine extant. It is a fact that in the minds of many persona a prejudice exists against waai are called pa teat medicines ; but why should t hi - pr ! vent you resortiug to an article that has a oca an array of testimony to support it as HOS TBTmra STOMACH BITTEKS. Phs1cians prescribe it ; why should you discard it ! Judges, usually considered men of talent, have and do use it in their families; why should you reject it! Let not your prejudice nsnrp your reason, to the ev nasting n juryot vonr health, it is the onlv preparation of the kind that is reliable in ail ca s, and it ts therefore wortnv ot tne consid'-r atiuu of ihe afflicted. The BI TTEHS are pleai-ant to the taste, agreeable in their effects, and alto ether valuable as a tonic or remedy for indiges tion. To Enj y Life's Blessings We Must Have Health. It is a stubborn fact that every human being ie more or less predisposed to disease, and in the S;iiug the exciting cnuses of disease are numerous and active, and sickness Is exceedingly prevalent. Now, to counteract the baneful influence? which sometimes tell with fearful effect upon onr system at this period of the year, a certain and agreeable remedy Is furnished by Mssrs. Dr. 8. B. Hartman & Co., of Liuc asfer and Pittsburgh. Pa. It Is that noted and efflcacions invigorant and tonic, MI-sHLER S HERB BITTERS a life giving preparation and in universal nse. It is the liest blood purifier now before the public, it invigorates, renovates and cleanses the life cur rent within us ; corrects all the 1rrjrulriti' ' the system; imparts fresh vigor and srengh to the constitution, and produces perfect health and uiiespiribi where now is general debility ami in if I OliaillWI Everybody ougnt to nse it in the spring aud Summer, as it will be found a reliable otectlon against disease and a promoter of hap piueas. A Sure Cure for a Felon. When the soreness first commences, or even when far advai ced, it can be relieved and entirely cured by holding the flnirer or part afflicted in Perry Davis' Pain Killer For half an hour. It has been thoroughly tested, and proves a never-failing remedy. A felon is a troublesome thing, and we would advise all so troubled to test the remedy. Sold by medicine dealers generally. RriLRKRs and others contemplating bnildlne can stive time and money by consulting the practlcal Books published by A.J. Bicknell &Cd.. Springfield, III. Descriptive catalogue sent tree to anv adSraaa. A S5.00 CREENBACK Of full value "nt frte to any Bwk.AjeM. AGENTS WANTED FOR Matthew Hale Smith's New Book, Uni AXD SH1D0 Hl KKW YORK." A Work tlevlete wi h Anecdote and Incident of MsZMTM IX TUE GREA.T METROPOLIS, SVftaf n MOtBOM of WWW YdlK jkfitdm thr SKCREfs OK THE (JREATCITY. QM A'jfta WflSO ia on Ony, another m'd uirt IWIrn . .v.'7 la 15 iiix. another 3M in "dnji. Nobookever puhlhed that sells no rapidly. mm . "iic IF You wiati to know how fortunes ar made and l st In a day ; how Shrewd Men arruined la Wall Street; how "Coontrymeu" are swindled by Saaroers; Htw Mln1t-ri. a-id Merch tnt are Blackmailed ; hjw Dance Halls and l concert Saloons are manased; how Oamhllng hou-es and Ixitteriesare conducted; how Stock Con panles Oilg'nate and how the Bubbles Burst, Ac read thla wort. It b-lls yon abont the mysteries New York, and contains spicy H e sketches oi Its noted millionaires nv-rchauis, c. A hnoe Ortm Volums-, T'Ä )rftfj, Hneiy IlluanUfd. The largestcom ni-aton given. Our Si-page circular and a reetihack sent lre on appllcati- n. i or lull paitic ular.- and terms address the ole publishers, J. H. BI RK A- CO.. Hartfaril, Cewn. EARLY ROSE POTATO. ONK ft. KARI.Y ROfK aent by mail, post-paid, fl. 1 . KARLY RAR, aent by mail, post-paid, $3 00. Best Spring Wheat in the world; the earliest and most productive Corn; wondenul yielding L Oat white and WacE weigh- . Ing 4ä pounds to the bushel; Spring Barley: Grass Beeda; Fowls. Krfgs; Hogs; the great Feed Cutter. Send fot Din KXt'KRIMKNTAL, FARM JOll RN AL mn4 vul wible M ! izni' ixxned in thts country iniy $1.50 per year. Subscribe, if you want to make your Farm pay Addrea QSX). A. DKITZ. Chamlwrsbnrr. Px. K.iOOOa HA I.ARY. Addre U. 8. Piasto Co.. N . Y W AN TED--GEIITS--!5T;?. , m ill', t ititr.Wi' th OF NT INK I Ml'ROX KI CUM MOK HFNSE FAMILY SF.WIMl MACHINE. Tbl Btachi . ill (Steh, In hi. tell, t in k, quilt, rid, rtind. hmiil ti.il rm1 ler in a inct fiiieriir nianin r. P-ji-e "'.l 1n. Kulh : t.T tiM- er. We will T- $l i t i inn jni i:i th-it wiIIm a tnniirrr, mnir t :Mitifiil. or nir' rlnCl,- m-miii Cvtaoui. It MM Ihe "Kl.intic l.m k Stitrli. Eii'v m . . fd rtitrh rum 1' rut, uml Ktill the rl 'th cannot he nulled .i lugit. Ve pj Afirnt-ifrniii t.'it-; S.im iVr ui.ulh 1 . pi iir-i, or a riniinltoiir-. m whirh twico thnt mti.'iit rin liv inaUo. .VJdrCM bt-i. l.MII t O-, I'l T x UL'KUH, Ta. I'"- I 'N, M .'! St. I .oris. Mo. CAI n fVo li"t he laipnsed unon bv othr nartie j . 11 . rthlrut-ir.n inarhinr. undr'i tl.i-vm numr . i ntherwl . Our. i (ba only tceuuinr and rmV.y ptaqbi-ai 'ih'hm iii.li liiuc iiianuiflcTuirtf. ro tdb s mr si no Class I am now prepared I c rurnish all classes with constant employment at theli homes, the whole of the time, or for the spare mo anuria. Rustnoas new, Ilfht and profitahle. Ktit) ertiU to $5 pr even ng, la easily ear 'erl by persons ot either sex, and the boys and flris earn nearly as murd a- men. (Ireat Inducements are ottered those whe will df vote their whole time to the tiuatni-s ; ami, that very prraon who - thla notice, may send Die their sMress and test the bnslneaa for themselves, I makt the following unparalleled offer: To all who are not well satisfied wirb the huslneas, I wiS aend $1 to pa fir th txtinttln of wrltlni: me. Full nartlcnlara. direr Hon. Ac . -erit tree Sample xent ly mall tor l(icnta A ndres K. C. ALI.KN Anrna'a M. Chicago Steam Dye Works. COOK A McLAIN HMI tyMta ( lark Mi., nnd N"i Itonrborn Mi., Chlmco. The Largest Dye tVorte IN TUB WKST. LAItlKS SILK AND WOOLKH PRKKSKa AND SHAWLS Dyed aaJ Cleaned tn a superior manner. In beaj tlfnl colors and shaiea. . OKNT8' Ct)AT8, VKBT8 ANT? PANTS, Dyed and CWned. Rend hy aXPRFSS with rl1reet1rs. I v t.,,i li.,,hs nnd .Am ni" Addrasa A . J HH aI i.i a O , rub'ra, Troy, N. or Spria. HI.
THE ADVANCE I
Wide Awake! Aimreaaive ! Every borne inon'rt l v::t'd iree-clv by an bl andsonnd, yet reataWe and cheerful reHjriou Journal. Such a J iunial i the Autancr. a ftfty-nlx column paper, p.iplihei in Chicago t -.50 per year. It Is nnaecurlan. 01 broad views, and treat learleaaly and honestly the living questions of the hoar, relirloas. moral and political. T .ere U no brer tamtly and reliKiou Journal In the country. Its in of premiums for new su crUi rs Is a most tempting oi.e, and a canvasser' ranted in every neigh borhoud. SENT FREE TO ALL! This favorite Religions and family Journal will be tent flree for one month to all who would like to see It toi themselves an 1 will rr a.- Um r-.juent by lerter. Among tbe premiums offered by the Adtasci ia a Snndav School Library casting Vi. for every twentyfive new subscribers. SleaeaS aat organs tar Sabbath Schoo'1, ftc. Send for samp. copy aod pr ml urn lit. Address, THE ADV.ncK (OII'WV, 25 Lombard RIok, Chleaso, III. n LOVERINE ÜA Nbw and Aoibxarle SÜBSTITITE F0K IEHZHIEI Without Ita Unpleasant Odor, INSTANTLY FICMOVKS Grease Spots, Paint, hirt, Kc9 From All A etk lm nr Clotbtn, And CLKANS the Most Dellcat" MLKS. KIBBOVS, olovkb, lack. &c., wiTiiot r inmpry to the CtlLOR OR FABRIC Every lnmlly ned lt. Fo: sale by ail Druggists, in small bot'les II SM . ASTI A: CO., (ieneral icrari. 1S.1 Wairr St.. Chleniro. EVERY BODY' TAKE IT. We n- r ce hne bitter h tve tKeti tn pre mum at lie l.ou'lana Slate Fair in Anrtl. 1SH9. Thijls verv Uatterine wh-n It U conwiflervd ther-were ma'.y rompetitors with dlCurent Kiuaa fit Dltter- on eintomoü. It is tlmretore no wonder that everybody takes it. They a sornrlor in-dcIiiHl prenaration iKas"4.1nx the mot wonderful curvKe pr -pi' rlea. If vou want health adv vaeitv ol te' inr tat" I'.kaot'h "Bittfrs. Ft iysfepsia, chrome riyaeite y. t-"uale weakness. and 'or t e Itver and Kduevs It hasnoeital Kald tobe 'he best invleor-.titiii ton'elnth w 'ld. Prenilnr salsotakt'n in 1 .! tthi' Sta' Fair of Kentucky, Indiana, Missouri. A la Sam. &c. Forsalei vry where. o vim :s l : r ORGANS. I. Quality Beat, J. I'rices Isotrcst. 1 That Die nnlltr -f the MW' HAVI.H ORGANS is the YKK V B ST M not questioned ly unprehldiced and well-'.nt'.Tin.'d ;'i-ni. These organs h tve uniformly be-n awarded r.r ht-Tbet premluma at Indistrlal xlnbtUona to the Lumber of 8' ventyfive. Including tv- FlüriT CL - MEDAL at the PARtK KXP'iSITION. Thy . r-eommendM as the statidard o: exi-.;.'eo". Uw U.--I ly several hundred of Hie uio" luliafnt JClehitM la America and In Knro. wh'H" t I m n; 'a :ri ted. an'l will be nt to any o&"dvi i 'irC- Tire in tl Dical anaHi-irongh examinaM us and comparisons ot t neae orjjans are al- ;, s lin lt-d, an l will make their superiority evident to a-:y competent Jud;e. 2. It is the fixed po';cy o' the MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN COMIWNY baell ther organs alwvat the leaat remnnerativc profit. As eot of ptodactlfm is diminished, prices are reluce I. The juality of their wo'k aDd pursuit of hl pol cy h ive brotnrht Increased demand for their orcata, nmi! tld company are now very much the laret luauit.t'iurers : the e menta In the world. W;th Increase of SaaftssSJ they have been aMe to mate corresnond'nir increase an-t improvement in machinery and I act Ü ties for manufactn e, by whieli tliey are aaaMad to produce yet more perfect work than erer r.'fjre, and this at Increased ec onomy in cost. Accor Hag y. they are now selling the bet-t organs they have ever mtd" at prices which ar ai low, or even lees, tit i would be the cost of mannfactnre of Interi r instruments without the advantage of uch lacill'ies. In ver sation of thla stitement they ask attention to thcr r daced prices, of which lha loliowlng are examples : Foi'i Octav.iOrhav1'. fSOra'-li. F.vk Or-rwo Onoahh. In fsoLil Walmt a-k oriMiueiifeil w th K.VKK SWRLUflW. FiTSJ-OoTaV I Hot Bl K-UkKD Rhaxs, wlih Fiv Stops. TarMfwr and Hkk Swaxju Solid Wain a. c"-e. ornavaaeaed $iJ5. Th -imp, Six Htnp'. m it' addition of one octavo of Snh Baa, connecad w th dhsataaaala, !"" rhe same, seven stops, with Snb-ßas . ! o tnv Coupler (each key command four S"parae -. da, civny thla style nerly twice lh power ui h ii'iili'e-re, it .rn. with mu-h reit-r variety), $l7r I Oetavo Dsabla Keed Cabinet Orga-;. wiih Five Antoinette Swell, and improved Vox Hal ana, soul a'aSaal i ae. Carved and Panellei, '.in &Ht In runtemt f f time which fin br tmide. 17.. Mwiv nth r : ie- av mn portionate nricea, up to esch. Loe-t puce printed and aliKn to all. Terms Cat a. The Mason A Hvm'.IN Impkovko Vox Iiis, in ro tucel thla aean. m . vri-s e h nralljr Irom ev-ry other attachment ot thla cl t-, pn.lu'-lna. : i .. ietion al h the AUToaai io Bwbu .a variety ' s'irpasinjj'y beautiful e''e t-, a .d fie entire. y free irom lati llty to -et out of o'der. The M AH. t. Co. min lffic'-r' riRT oi A On aAM0aiTi sadsreiy iusirume.it made by theui bean iheir name, and i fnily wa.Ta- ted. Circulars wltn lull partlemiri a to style, prieea, pCTUlarlMe ot eon.-'.rnctlon. Ac. enr. tree to every app iean' . Address IHE ASON ft HV4I.IX ORttAS CO., im imm mm, hum, Or ,. RKOUMi AV. FW TKK. SWEET . w ke r tt" 1 N ' a. i" u "rTtinffd equal -iiose for dose to the su'ptiate (bitter) (jniniue. with trt; Isaportasal kJvanlate of br:iig waat lr,?ea i ol hitter. StaWI v. isopua IVkifiid of iis s'ekeiiine and polsonotu QUININE Svapnia) iroiertli. u Is i ne 'mui tA'ii'l .SB aim s i n - vPATK yil discovSoM by I'ruirc'.atA. prearrited hy the best Phvlcina. Mine uni oy Fredertek Hfesrns. tiend-f. UetioH Mich. --ÄGE8TS-- !. I 111 AMl.KIVIT l !K(i I .il ! -t K i-':. -i z ;l(.j ; - (Tl IU til. I ii. W KMTnivi . Vr- f ii aehiMCm icvi nhsi. , , LiherSli-Mltiren i ' fti TIN: MACniNT. ro.. 1 M i ELASTIC ,IOIT Iron Roofing taa be applied by any one. M A"VF Ai.TL'KS U BY SHOENBERGER & CO. I.t Vuhlie l.nndiiia. i'inctnnati. IflBiriADI '' u Grocat tcr 'r. siwa'a IrlklSAnl Cuam VixawAC. a- ndia artlefe. Warranted pure a ". ' i preserve pickle. FIR. T PRKM 1 11 s- the - . 1 .r. I L Sta e Ks r, and Chicago C!t Fair. La-rest -ksof 'h kind IB I'.S. Kstahl she 4 1 -tat. St .Ctncaeo. THE OBEAT VdWj REMEDY. mil an rnoar aollcted wn: Conchs oi (Vnaampt1oa read the lollowins. au.i learti the fwue ol A I U n s Lfinu: Italsaiu. WHAT THE DOtTOK SM t Amos Woolly, M. I., of Koc1usco county. Ind.. ays: " For ttiree years paid l liav- Ai ; rs - 1 . ns Kaisim eitrnilvi'lv - I I a.m atleCnl there la no better medicine lor lune Maaaaai in aae. Itaac H Doran. M. 1). ef lxsra? eonnty. O.. saya: "Ai.LKN's Lt'su UaIam Bot only seil raptd y. hut (Tivea perlert na: 1lac' lot. In rv ry rase within rr.y knowletre. Havtnc c.nnilenee In IV anil kn wing that It posaeaset. valuable n Heina' nro pert lea, I freely use it in my daily pra - 1 aaboun'.ed sncceaa. Aa an expectora Ultimi t - n v iar ahead ol any prearatioii I have ever yet kn'iwn. hathanlel Bar lis, M- U.. .i Uldd i bury, Yt says: "I hare no 1outt It will .vn te.-o;u ac'asaleal remedial ml tor the canal all aiaeaaoa of taa Throat. Bronchial Tubes, an.l the Lur jr." Dr. Lloyd, oi Ohio, surweon 1r the ar.ry during tba war, from exp mire conu acted constii.iption He ays: I have no hevitancy In saytnirtiiat It was hy the use of your Lung i'-alsam hat 1 ant now ailsr and enjoying health." Dr. Fleteher.of Missouri, says ! 1 reer mmend yoar Kalsam tn preierence to any other medicine lor t'ouftha, and it frlves satiiacti.n " Aii.wv's Linea SaUam U the remedy to cure all Lung and Throat dlffli tntles. It shonld thoroughly teaied betöre ualnjt an) ot'ier Halsain It will care when all others fall. D loa acc-mpay ech botUe. J. N. Harris & Co., Sole Proprietor orrvv ri. onto. 8.1I, s ' Saw - I tTKT. Miiiiii A o.. I rs Sx-lrniiSe America a. J? 'rk Uow N.a Vork Twentythree ears' esiw rn .-... -. AtlKUM A and II ll(ll'H l'AOT-. OprniorT.. no cl.aru"- A nanipM-l. H P""n1f, '"w and iniormation free. Address as above 1 U Liiyi tn rvety I 1 "7 I V ' . lerial ! I . haya at fln-i igln : ACi'iitr maktiig fortunes: Illustrated C . rr ular Tree ; Artdivs Al'feX h. M ... -.S llroadaay . 1 iiJlUtlUliL 1 .L rom iianotwhrfm. "' or wrey nair a v'Zv ti - illilii li Slack vr urowa. . .p- r mail cm receipt ol St iS Adure W M i " ' ta. i,-a Oii'nert la weaa.Neve..Ä
