Rensselaer Union, Volume 3, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 August 1871 — Page 4

“JON ES”

A imi »«« norm woo want ion ulbd. «— is aarsiia'serak'KsL, Andhlahoc* moillottcornbresd doom, And lu had ’bant a thoaaaad acre* of land. Tbta maa— and Ms muds was alao Joaai Ha awore that tta'd laava than old red Mils and For ha Molten asks nothin' bat yoUowlali cotAndthat, for hla IMoaa arara rottea. And W llttl. cotton he had, that waa bougbten, AM ha couldn’t gat a Urine from the land. And the longer ha swore the madder be got, And ha roes and ha walked to the suble.ot. And ha hal oaad to Tom to come there and hitch, For to emigrate somewhere where the land waa And to quit ralalng cock-bnrs, thistle. and rich. And waatlng their time on barren land. Do Urn and Tom they hitched op their mu lea, Proteetlng that folks were mlgb y big fools That 'ad star In Georgia their lifetime out, ’ dust scratching a living, when all of them “ought Get places In Tens where cotton would apront liy the time you could plant it In the land. And be drove by n home where a man named Brown Waa l'rl -D not Par from the edge of the town.

And be hentered Brown for to buy hla place, And said that seeing as money was skace. And seeing aa aherifle were hard to face, Two dollars an acre would get the land. • They closed at a dollar and fifty cent a. And Jonee he honght him a wagon and tents.

And loaded hla corn, and hla woman and track, * Ana moved to Texas, which It took Hla entire pile with the best of luck. To get there and get him a little land. Bnt Brown moved ont on the old Jones farm. And be rolled a? his breeches and bared his arm, And he picked all the rods from off’n the ground, And be rooted It up and plowed it down. And aowed his corn and wheat In the land. Five yearn glide by, and Brown one day, (Who got so fat that he wo"ldn’t weigh) was sitting down sorer lazily. To the pleasantest dinner von ever see. When one of the children jumped on his knee And says, “ Ton’s Jones which you bought his land." T V

And there was Jones standing oat &t the fence, And he hadn’t no wagons, nor males, nor tents. For be had left Texas a-foot and come To see If he couldn’t get some Employment, and he was looking as hnmv> Ble as If he had never owned any land. Bat Brown he asked him in, and he sot Him down to his victuals smoking hot, And when be had filled himself and the floor. Brown looked athim sharp, and rove and swore That “whether men's land was rich or poor, There was more in the man than there was in the land.” —Macon (Ga.) Telegraph.

PE NN SYL V ANIA.

Address of the Republican State Central Committee. The Pennsylvania Republican State Central Committee, in a recent address to the people of the State, after referring to the past achievements of the Republican party, proceeds as follows : Among the necessities growing out of the rebellion, the national government found itself compelled to submit to the States, for their ratification, three amendments to the Constitution—one (known as the Thirteenth) abolishing slavery; another (the Fourteenth) securing the rights of citizens to the enfranchised slaves, and prohibiting the repudiation of any part of the national debt, or the payment of any part of the rebel debt; and another (the Fifteenth) prohibiting the States from excluding anyone from the right of suffrage on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. These amendments, having all been duly ratified in the method pointed obt by the Constitution, are now a component part of that instrument. Their adoption stands as the grandest peaceful achievement of ancient or modem times. No party ever before undertook so great a task; and its accomplishment, in so shorts space of time, is a work in which the Republican party may well feel proud. To secure the complete protection of these emancipated and enfranchised people is now one of the unquestioned duties of the nation; and no party is so fit to be intrusted with that duty as the party which has done the preliminary work. The party which has hitherto continuously resisted the policy thus established, is not the one, now, to cany it out During the war for suppressing the rebellion, and in carrying out the great measures which have necessarily flowed from it, the Democratic party has continuously been in the opposition. It opposed the adoption of stringent measures to put down the rebellion ; the levying of troops to suppress U| the borrowing of money to pay the cost of the war; the emancipation proclamation of President Lincoln; the adoption of all the amendments to the Constitution ; the reconstruction measures,by which the revolted States were brought tack into the Union; and,generally,every measure neoeaaary to the auoceasful prosecution of the war, or to the successful res-

to ration of peace. At present, too, it ie opposed to the means necessary for raising revenue to pay the interest on the pub lie debt and secure its steady redaction; is in favor of a semi repudiation of that debt by paying it in a depreciated currency, if paid at all; is watching for an opportunity to annul the new amendments to the Conslilion, and is generally committed to any line of policy which will remit the country to its condition prior to 1860. It may be urged here that the Democratic party of this State, in the ninth resolution of the platform adopted by Its late Slate Convention, has acquiesced in the adoption of the amendments of the Constitution we have referred to, and cannot now bo charged with hostility to them. We answer that the acquiescence expressed in that resolution has~not itself been acquiesced in by the rank and file of the party. Over onethird of the convention voted strenuously against it, and tho action of the convention has since been repudiated by many leading men and journ&Js of the party. Besides, whatever acquiescence has been given, has been given sullenly and not heartily—as a matter of policy, springing from party necessity, and not from a conviction of its propriety. Wherever a vote has been honestly given, or voice sincerely raised for this “ new departure, ’’ it may very properly be regarded as an extorted confession that the Republican party has all aloug been right in what the Democratic parly has steadily opposed; and this confessed, what need is there, or can there be, for the further existence of tho Democratic party ? When Gen. Grant came into office, in 1869, he announced his determination to secure the honest and faithful collection of the revenue, the steady reduction of the public debt, and such abatement in taxation as was consistent wtyh this policy. In the space of little over two years this determination, faithfully adhered to, has resulted in paying off $230,000,000 of the public debt, and in the abolition of nearly all the taxes imposed under the previous laws. In addition to this, he has, by his wise and firm foreign policy, succeeded in settling all our outstanding difficulties with Great Britain, in a manner alike honorable and advantageous to us as a people. The treaty lately ratified by both nations,which removes all causes of quarrel, and establishes peace and amity between them, has commanded the admiration of the civilized world, and placed the United States in the foremost rank of the nations of the earth. The result is one of which every American may justly feel proud. To continue the Republican party in power is to continue the policy begun both in State and Nation, of maintaining the public credit, paymg off our debt, reducing taxation, settling international difficulties without bloodshed, and sustaining the great principles involved in the measures necessarily growing out of war. To restore the Democratic party to power is to destroy the public debt, pave the way for repudiation, bring in the bid tide of corruption, mismanagement and extravagance, and open up anew all the questions involved in the reconstruction of the Southern States, now settled upon an honorable basis. For present proof of this we refer to the consequences flowing from the accidental majority of the Democrats in the State Senate last winter. To that fact we owe a session prolonged to the middle of May, at an extra cost of $100,000; the re establishment of the forsaken policy ot employing extra (and useless) officers in the legislative bodies and granting them extra pay; an appropriation bill increased bevond all former bounds to the extent of half a million; the defeat of all measures h for calling a constitutional convention at an early day to put an end to that curse of our State—special legislation; and, as if determined to show that this curse should not be removed by their aid, the enactment of the enormous number of 1,800 local bills. And this is but a tithe of what we should have had to endure had they had both houses and the Governor on their side.

A still further proof of the unfitness of that party to be intrusted with power is to be found in the melancholy history of the late riots in New York. In that city the Democrats have undisputed sway, and through it, in the State. They had the power in their hands to prevent this riot and bloodshed, but they would not use it either at the right time or ip the right way. Why t Because the party is possessed of no principle which can lead it to respect the rights of man, be they civil or religious. Its sole idea of rights is derived from the maxim that ought makes right. This was clearly evinced on the Fifteenth Amendment, in which the Democratic leader in the State.scouted the claim that there were any such things as human rights. The idea, he said, was a myth and a humbug. And this sentiment of the Democratic leader in Pennsylvania has been carried out to the letter m New York. A few thousand men, in the exercise of their constitutional right to assemble together, inform the authorities of their purpose to parade the streets on a certain day. Another body of men, who

always vote the Democratic ticket, and numbering many more thousands, notify the authorities that this parade must not be permitted, and that if it is they will attack it and disperse it, no matter at what cost of life or limb to the party attacked. The Democratic rulers of New York at once decline to defend the few-against the many in the exercise of their constitutional right; deny that there is any such right; yield to the defiance of the mob because it has might on its side, and, at the demand of that mob, forbid the peaceable and law-abiding citizens to assemble together, as the constitution permits, or to exercise the rights which the law allows. It is true that at the last hour, when the public indignation had been aroused at this base abandonment of the civil rights of the people, the State authorities stepped in and permitted what the city authorities had previously forbidden; but the mob bad already triumphed too far to yield peacefully to this sudden change, and the slaughter which followed is attributable solely to the official cowardice which first yielded to a mob it was afterward unable to control. It is plain, moreover, that the first act of prohibiting the parade was the legi imate outgrowth of the principles controlling the Democratic party, that men have no inherent rights, and that might alone gives right It brought into view the ferocious claws which, though afterward withdrawn, the furred foot could not wholly conceal. It was a clear indication of what we may expect throughout the country should the Democratic party ever return to power. If our civil and religious rights are to be preserved in this country against the attacks of turbulent mobs, and the demands of a wild fanaticism, they can be preserved only by the party based immovably on a deep regard for human rights and constitutional guarantees; and in the light of these facts we appeal to the people of Pennsylvania to rally to the support of their imperiled constitutional franchises, and by the defeat of the Democratic party, which has proven itself alike unwilling and unable to uphold them, teach itthat the people will bear no yielding to mob violence nor tampering with their constitutional rights, and will never permit the surrender of the citadel they have erected at a bloody cost, sacred now and forever, to civil and religious liberty.^ A. novel suggestion, proceeding from some humanitarian, is to stretch galvanized iron wires across Niagara Falls, suspended about a foot above the water, for the convenience of persons on their way over the cataract The author thinks that reluctant tourists on that route would be able to grasp the wires and tow themselves ashore.

The Weeds.

" Tins Is the aeedlng time of the weeds. InstiDCtively, as It were, they seem to have exercised choice in the selection of time of ripening their seed, placing it when the fanner is crowded with the labor of the harvest, and grudges every moment devoted to other work. But the weeds mustbe combated, or they will overwhelm us. They must not be allowed to ripen and scatter their seed to render their eradication tenfold tnore troublesome. Boipe weeds can be extirpated by timely and paralstent outlay just wheu the seed is marly formed. The dock and Canada thistle are among this class of perennials. All annuals can be eradicated by being prevented from seeding. Thistles cut when the blossoms first begin to open will disappear after a lew years, if the practice is folldwed. Weeds should be cut in pastures and fence corners, and on the road sides. We have noticed that the eider has increased a good deal hereabouts within a few years. It has the good sense, however, never to step out into the fields, but contents itself with fence corners and byplaces. We arc half inclined to think that it is because the June blossoms of the elder are so pretty, and its masses of bright berries so showy in the autumn, and it is so modest in its claims on territory, that the farmers suffer its clumps to hide many an ugly fence corner and rough stone heap. —American Rural Home.

Position of Farm Buildings.

There is far too much attention given to the points of the compass in placing of farm buildings. If the roads run north and south every building on the place is very likely to be placed facing due east or west without regard to the formation of the land or surroundings. In fact most of our country homes have a stiffness or monotonous appearance which might be avoided if due care was given to the proper arrangement of out-buildings. It is very much like making curves in walks when there is no reason for deviating from a straight line, which should never be done. If there is no obstacle in the way which we seemingly avoid in making a curve, one should be created, and the same principle should be carried out in the placement of farm buildings. Avoid all stiff formality, and if the position of the ground or convenience affords an opportunity for placing different buildings at different angles to the road, by all means avail yourself of it, and thereby give a varied and picturesque appearance to the place. If the grounds are level, without an undulating surface, then trees may be introduced as seeming obstacles against putting every building at the same a ngle. A little study and forethought in these matters will enable the most casual observer to so arrange and place his buildings that the monotonous appearance will be entirely Avoided. —Rural New Yorker. -

Summer Fallowing.

Among really first-class farmers—those who thoroughly cultivate their soil, and carry out a well ( balanced system of rotation by which every acre on the farm is kept progressing in improvement—there is seldom any necessity for losing a year’s use of land by devoting it to a summer fallow. But there are yet a great many farms on which such a course of procedure becomes absolutely necesary in order to properly prepare the soil of some fields to enter into a course of rotation. Very many of the old farms have been for years in the hands of men who, having but little real knowledge of the nature of the soil, and the value of the elements of plant food locked up within them yet out of the reach of plants, never went beyond a mere superficial surface culture in the way of preparation. This carried on from year to year resulted in the soil becoming worn out, as it is called, near the surface, and thus incapable of producing profitable crops of any kind. Such farms can generally be had cheap from their present owners, and to a man of science and energy can be at a small cost rendered again productive, and become almost a mine of wealth. This is especially the case on clayey or stony soils, which, from the constant working of the plow to uniform depth, become case hardened, as it were, i. e., an impervious coat is formed between the upper crust of cultivated soil and the lower stratum of soil on which the sole of the plow runs. It is here that the value of a summer fallow is shown. The plow must be run below the crust, and some of that soil yet unused, thrown up to the surface and exposed for a while to atmospheric influences. The next plowing should go a little and the next after may be so managed by the help of a three-horse cultivator as to thoroughly mix this new soil with that already worked by cultivation. This new soil brought up to the surface requires exposure and manipulation to render it productive, and jn no other way can this be so well done as by summer fallowing, which, in addition to preparing the soil, also admits of the growth of the seeds of weeds lying dormant in the ground, so as to be afterward killed out when the plants are young.— Cor. Country Gentlemen.

An Eastern stingy man, who, by the way, counts his thousands by tens, recently bought a piece of wire at a hardware store, for which he paid two cents, but as he only used half of it, he carried back the remnant, said he had no use for it, and begged the merchant to take it and return him his penny. A well Was recently dug to the depth of six feet at Newmanville, Pa. "While the digger was at his dinner, a stream, about six feet in diameter, burst through the bottom, filling the well and soon overflowing the adjoining field. It still continues to flow, and there is now quite a large run formed where before was dry Don’t despair because you have a weak Constitution. —The vitalizing principle embodied in Dr. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters will assuredly strengthen it. In every drop of that combination of vegetable curatives there is a stimulating, a regenerating, a regulating power unequaled in the whole range of proprietary and officinal remedies. It is to the inert physique what steam and oil are to the locomotive engine. Yet it contains no fiery excitant, nothing but the juices of rare medicinal herbs and roots, intended by the Great Physician for “the healing ol the Nations.” -1 ,r It takes eleven experienced men to do the buying for the great house of J. V. Farwell & Co., Chicago, Whose resident agents at all the principal cities in Europe and this country supply this house with all the new things as soon as produced. .... A want has been felt and expressed by physicians, for a safe and reliable purgative; such awant is now supplied in Pareon't Purgative -* ■ » Market Kefobts from all the cities in Europe and this country continue to show an upward tendency, but the house of J. V .Farwell &. Co., Chicago, have largely anticipated this advance and undersell agents. - ■ T ~© S/ J. V. Farwell A Co., Chicago, now have their foreign goods brought through the Bt. Lawrence River and the lakes, direct to the Custom-House in Chicago, where, after settling with Uncle Bam for custom duties, they are placed in their immense store, and sold to 1 jobbers and retailers. ■■■ • J- V. Farwell & Co., Chicago, sell everything. Their stock of dry goods, woolens, dress goods, notions, hosiery, etc.,isacknowledged by all who know about sneb matters, to be the largest and best ever put together In one place. —i I

Henry K, Bond, of Jefferson, Maine, was cured of spitting blood, soreness and weakneaa of tbe stomach, by the use of Johneon’i Anodyne Liniment.

COUNTERFEITS.

I) la an easy matter to distinguish the genuine Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy from the apurioua Imitations In the market, the genuine having printed upon the outside wrapper the words "R. V. Pierce, M. D., Sole Proprietor, Buffalo, N. Y.” Also has upon wrapper the Doctor’s,private U. 8. Government stamp, bearing upon It his portrait, naroo and address, which of Itself is a perfect guarantee of genuineneet. 576 Wood’s Household Alaoazine for Auguet continues to demonstrate tho wonderful success which has attended this periodical during the past four years. Its motto seems to be "flow Much for Bow little;" for there Is no other Magazine In tho world, which gives so much for so lit. tic money. James Parton, Ptue4» Cary, Dr Dio Lewis, Uov. Thomas K. Beecher, Dr W. W. Hall and Gall Hamilton are regular contributors. Among Its occasional contributors arc Harriet Beecher Htofce, Horace Greeley, Brick Pomeroy, Mary Clemmer Ames, Joel T. Headley and John G. Baie. The publishers, fl. 8. Wood A Co., Newburgh, N . Y., will mall three months’ numbers of the magazine free to every person who will furnish them with hla address. *

Tns Phrenological Journal for August Is richly laden with good reading. John Tyndall, the eminent Chemist; Under the Surface, or the Workings of Universal Law; Spiritual Presence; The Beggar and the Banker; Mias Kate Stanton; Dirty Children; The Nervous and the Paralyzed; Street Sights in China, with original “Celestial” Designs; The German School System —what It la? The Chinese Labor Question, or a new Guessing of an old Puzzle; Conversation and Its Uses; Are we Trqp to Ourselves f Oar next President; A Good Wife; Hotel Life In California; Tbe Judgment of Satan; A Picture in Two Lights; The Beautiful Sunshine, a new poem after the style of ,iJ ßeautiful Snow.” Pfice, 30 cents $3 a year. Address, 8. K. Well?, Publisher, 889 Broadway, New York. * Pibry Davib’ Paih Killer la an excellent regulator of the stomach and bowels, and should always be kept on hand, especially at this season of the year, when ao many suffer from bowel complaints. There la nothing so quick to relieve In attaSks of Cholera. - Sold at only S 5 cents a bottle, by merchants generally. '

Science Advances.

As book as an article purporting to be of utility has been tested, and Its merits endorsed by public opinion, nnprinc pled part ee endeavor to replenish their depleted pnrses by counterfeiting, and substituting a spurious for tbe gennine article. Some time since, mercury, in the disguise of pills, powders, etc., waa given for all diseases of the stomach and liver, while qnlnlne was freely administered for the chills. At length Hostetter's Stomach Bitters made its advent, and an entire new system of healing was Inaugurated. The beneficial effects 0’ this valuable preparation were at once acknowledge, and mineral poisons suffered to sins into that obscurity to which an enligbted age has consigned them. There have t een many spurious hitters palmed upon the community, which, after trial, have been found perfectly worthless, while Hostetter’s has proved a blessing to thousands, who owe to It their restoration to' health. For many years we have watched the steady progress of Hostetter s Stomach Bltte's in public estimation, and its benifleent effects as a cure for all complaints arieUg from the stomach of a morbid nature, and wo are tree to say that It can be relied npon as a certain relief and remedy. Its proprieto s have made the above preparation, after years of careful study and sitting, and are now reaping the reward claimed by this valuable specific, and which they so richly merit. It Is the only preparation of the kind that is reliable in all cases, and it therefore demands the attention of the afflicted. To Country Merchants and Strangers.— Wolfe’s Schiedam aromatic Schnapps.—Among the complaints for which the “Schnapps” has been declared a specific by the eminent physicians who have corresponded with the proprietor, are —dropsy, dyspepsia debility consequent upon long-con inued sickness and old age, epilepsy, asthma, gravel, colic, affections of the kidneys, and all chronic diseases. For these, ai d many other disorders, it Is now prescribed, with great snccess, by more than three thousand medical practitioners in various parts of the United States.

THE MARKETS.

HEW YORK, Angost 4,1811. BEEF CATTLE—Fair to Prime.slo.so ©511.50 HOGS—Live. 5.25 © 5.87 Dressed 600 © 6.75 SHEEP—Live.» 4.50 © 6.00 30TTON—Middling lHfc© A'i% FLOUR—Extra 6.20 © 6.10 , WHEAT—Spring, No 2 1.21 © 130 CORN—Western Mixed 63 © .65 • OATS—Western 60 © .61 PORK-Mess 13 62 © 13.87 LARD 9-4© .1054 WOOL-Extra 61 © .62 Pnlled 45 © .48 Unwashed 88 © .40 Tub....’. 71 © .72 - CHICAGO. BEEVES—Choice SS.CO O fS 25 Good 4.50 © 4.75 Fair Grades 4.25 © 4.10 Medium 8.00 © 4.25 STOCK CATTLE—Common ... 8.00 © 3.75 Inferior.... 2.00 © 2.50 HOGS-Live 3.80 © 450 SHEEP—Live —Good to Choice 8.75 © 425 BUTTER—Choice 16 © .18 EGGS—Fresh -12 © .3354 FLOUR—White Winter Extra.. 5.75 © 8.25 Spring Extra 5.00 © 6 .75 GRAIN—Com—No. 1 43 © .4354 . Barley—No. *..., t 8 © .69 Oats—No. 9 30 © .3054 Rye—No. 2 53 © .5354 Wheat—Spring, No. 1 1.084© 1.01 No. • I.CI © 1.0154 LARD 0954© .09:54 PORK-Mess 13.00 © 18.25 WOOL—Fleece 48 © .59 Unwashed 85 © .47 Tab 65 A .79 CINCINNATI. FLOUR—Family,new 15.80 © $5.55 WHEAT—Red 1.08 ©.1.10 CORN .51 © .52 OATS .30 © .40 RYB-New 65 © .67” BARLEY—FaII 80 © .90 LARD 0954© .09« PORK-Mess 12.60 © 12.75 BEEF CATTLE 2.00 © 4.75 HOGS-Live 4.40 © 4.55 ST. LOUIS. BEEF CATTLE—Choice $4.60 © $5.00 Good to Prime.. 8.00 © 4.00 HOGS-Live 4.(0 ©P 4.70 FLOUR-XX 5.00 © 5.50 WHEAT-No. * Red I*o © 1.21 CORN—Mixed, inhnlk 39 © .40 OATS—Mixed in balk. 82 © .33 RYE 66 © .67 BARLEY—Winter 80 © .95 PORK-Mess 14.(0 © 14.25 LARD C9MO -10 MILWAUKEE. FLOUR-Spring Kxtra $5.(2 © $5.75 WHEAT—Bpring, No. 1 1.18 © 1.14 No. 1.10 © 1.1054 CORN-No. 2. 43 © .44 OATS-No. $..... (.30 © .81 RYE-NO. 1 54 © .55 BARLEY-No. 2 M © .66 CLai v kiAHp. FLOUB-XX Spring $6.15 © $5 75 WHEAT-No. 1 Red Winter.... 1.18 © 1.10 CORN—Mixed 58 © .54 OiTB-New - .40 O *4l DETROIT. WHEAT-NO. 1 White $1.22 tt $1.23 COHN 52 O .63 OATS—Mixed 40 © .41

sani m social

By an eminent Physician and Professor In one of obr large Medical Colleges. It deals fearlessly bat chastely WHO evils from which spring physical ana moral degradation, and domestic Infelicity. It is being reviewed—praised or criticised, by all the leading religions and secular papers and Magazines In the United States, and the verdict of the mst and most discriminating Is, that it is a remnrkable book) that it Is timely {that it Is needed; that it will make its mark ; and do good. . ““.of yital Importance to ever}' man and woman in theland, and is haring a wonderful sale. Agents will find this a rare opportunity to make money. Circulars, giving frill particulars, with numerous notices of the Press, sent free. Address J. S. GOODMAN & CO., Publishers, 5 Custom House Place, Chicago, HL PT Say where you saw this advertisement BTvNTFD— AGENTS, 4nv) te sell the celebrated HOME SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE. Haa the under feat, makes the “ lor* MircA" (alike on both el.les.Vani Is fully I Ihmsed. The best and cheapest ianrilv Sewing ' Machine in the market. Address JOHN ON, CLARK * CO., Boston, Mass., Pltsbuigl, Pa., Chicago, 111., or St. Louis, “St» | \ : "

1840. q 4 m * q q 1871. f t >4 TIME TESTS THE MERITS OF ALL THINGS. DAVIS’ PUN KILIM This celebrated medicine hna won a deservedly high reputation n* nn .alleviator of naln and n preserver ol health. If has become a lioum hold remedy. from tin* fnri that It elves Immediate and |x'rmunent relief. It ia a purely vegetable preparation, fund* from the bn«t and nomt niaferUls, ana* to keep and to use In every family. It la recoinmended hy phyaldana and persons of alt claSHes, and todav, After A pwblirtrlal of thirty year*—the average life of man—lt stands unrivalled and unexcelled, spreading Hh naetulMM over tiro whltt wood. Its lame ami increasing bale affords positive uvulcuccoT Us cuduflujs Aiuu. A Cure for Colic in Horses. Extract from a letter from T. A. Rood, published In th: Cincinnati dinette, April 28th, 1871. Ft. Itn nkk, Ini>., April 17.—1’1l give a remedy for colic in I torsos: (live two tablospoonfUla of Perry Davis’ Pain Killer in u pint of warm sweet milk, or wahn sage tea, sweetened. This Is sufficient lor a common attack. In crease or diminish according to tl»e severity of the sane, and repeat tn twenty to thirty minutes If the horse Is not relieved. Drench, but not In the nostril, as “ Old Farmsr, ofOdarvllle, Ohio, says, This Is the most absurd manner of giving a drench that I ever heard of. Every House-keeper should keep It At hand to apply It on the first attack of any pain. It w ill give satlslactory relief, and save hour* of suffering. Do .not trifle with yourselves by testing untried remedies. lie sure you call, and get the genuine PAIN KILLER, as many worthless nostrums arc attempted to Ik* sold on tin; great reputation ol this valuuble medicine. ry-Directions accompany each bottle. Price 33 ct»., 50 cts., and 81 per bottlo. J.N. HARRIS & CO., Cincinnati, 0. Proprietors for the Sonthem and Western States. Ur POP. BALE BY ALL MEDICINE DHALMMB. R< R, R« Radway’s Ready Relief CUKES THE WORST PAINS In from One to Twenty Minute*. NOT ONE HOUR alter reading this advertisement need any one BUFFER WITH PAIN. RADWAY’S READY RF.UEP IS A CURE FOR EVERY PAIN. It was the first and la THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY that instantly stops the most excruciating pains, allays Inflammations, and cures Congestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels, or other glands or organa, by one application, IN FROM ONE TO TWENTY MINUTES, no matter how violent or excruciating the pain the RHEUMATIIC, Bed-ridden. Infirm, Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic, or prostrated with disease may suffer, Radnay’s Ready Belief will Afford Instant Aid. Inflammation of the Kidney*, Inflammation of the Bladder, Inflammation of the Bowels , Congestion of the Lungs, Sore Throat, Difficult Breathing, Palpitation of the Heart, Hysterics, Croup, Diphtheria, Catarrh , Influenza, Headache and Toothache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Cold Chills and Ague Chills. The application of the Ready Relief to the part or parts where the pain or difficulty exists will afford case and comfort. Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will. In a few moments, cure CHAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOMACH, HEARTBURN. SICK HEADACHE, DIARRHEA, DYSENTERY. COLIC. WIND IN THE BOWELS, and all INTERNAL PAINS. a Yavelerashould always carry a bottle of Radway’n prevent sickness or pains from change of water. It Is better than French Brandy or Bitters as a stimulant. FEVER AND AGUE. FKV KK AND AGUE juredfor fifty cents. There is not a remedial agent in this world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious, Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow, and other Fevers (aided by RAI)WAY’S PILLS) so quick aa RADWAY’S READY RELIEF. Fitly cents per bottle. DR. RADWAY’S SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT, The Great Blood Purifier. Er*ry drop of the SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT communicates through the Blood, Sweat, Urine, and othei fluids and Juices of the system, the rigor of life, for it repairs the wastes of the body with hew and sound material Scrofula, Syphilis , Consumption, Glandular disease, Ul cers in the throat and mouth'. Tumors , Nodes tn the Gland • and otlcer parts of the system. Sore Eyes , Strumorous dis Charges from the Ears, andthe worst forms of Skin dis- . eases, L ruptioity, Fever Sores, Scald Head, Ring Worm Salt Rheum, Erysipelas , A cne, Black Spots, Worms in tht Flesh, Tumors, Cancers in the Womb, and all weakening aivl pains ul discharges, -Nigh t Sweats, Loss of Sperm ana all wastes of the life principle, are within the curattvt range of this wonder of Modem Chemistry, and a feu days' use will prove to any person using it for either 01 these forms of disease it s poten tpcncei' to cure them. If the patient, daily becoming reduced by the wastes and decomposition that is continually progressing, succeeds in arresting these wastes, aud repairs the same with new material made from good healthy blood—and this the SARSAPARILLIAN will and docs secure—a cure is certain for, when once this remedy commences Its work of purirt cation, and succeeds! n diminishing the loss of wastes, it* repairs will be rapid,and every day the patient will feel himself growing better and stronger, the food digesting better, appetite improving, and flesh and weight Increasing. Not only does the Sarsaparillian Rkrol vent excel all known remedial agents lu the cure of Chronic, Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin diseases; but it la the only positive cure lor Kidney and Bladder Complaints* Urinary and Womb discuses. Gravel, Dialietea, Dropsy, Stoppage of Water. Incontinence of Urine, Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all cases where there are brick-dust deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mixed with suitstances like the white of an egg, or threads like white silk, or there is a morbid, dark, bilious appearance, and white bone-dust deposits, and when there is a pricking burning sensation when passing water, and pain in the Small of the Back and along the Lotus. Tumor of Twelve Years’ Growth Cured by Badway’s Resolvent. Bkvkrly, Mass., July 18,1869. Dn. Radway:—l have had Ovarian Tumor in the ovaries and bowels. All the doctors said “there was no cure for it.” I tried everything that was recommended; but nothing helped me. I saw your Resolvent, and thought I would try it; but had no faith in it because I had suffered for twelve years. I took six bottles of the Resolvent, and one box of Radway’s Pills, and two bottles of your Ready Relief: and there is not ft sign of tumor to* be seen or felt, and I feel better, smarter, and happier than I have lor twelve years. The worst tumor was in the lelt Side of the bowels, over the groin. I write this to you for the benelit of others. You can publish itif you choose. lIANNAH P. KNAPP. AN IMPORTANT LETTER from a prominent gentleman and resident of Cincinnati, Ohio, for the past lorty years well known to the book pul> Ushers throughout the United States: Nkw York, Oct. 11th, 1870. Dr. Radway— Dear Sir l am induced by a sense pi duty to the suffering to make a brief statenien t of ibe work ing of your medicine ou myself. For several years I had been affected with some trouble in the bladder and urinary organs, which some -twelve months ago culminated hi a most terribly affecting disease, which the physicians all said was a prostntic stricture in the uretha, as also inflammation of the kidneys and bladder, and gave it as their opinion that my age- -73 years—would prevent my ever getting radically cured. I had tried a nuSmber of physicians, and had taken a large quantity of medicine, both allopathic and homtuopathlc, out had got no relief. Iliad read of astonishing cures having been made by your remedies ; ami some four months ago! read a notice in the Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post of a cure having been effected on a person who hau long been suffering as I had been. I went right off and got some of each—your Sarsaparillian Resolvent, Ready Relief, and Regulating Pills—and commenced taking them.. In,throe days I was greatly relieved, aud now feel as well as ever. C. W. JAMES, Cincinnati, Ohio. DR. RADWAY’S PERFECT PURGATIVE PILLS, perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse and strengthen. Kadway’s Pills, for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Headache, Constipation, Costivencss, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Bilious Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Plies, and all Derangements of the Internal Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. Observe the following symptoms resulting from Disorders of the Digestive Organs: Constipation, Inward Piles,' Fullness of the Blood in the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullnes3or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Head, Hurried and Difficult Fluttering at the Heart, Choking, or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the bight. Fever and Dull Pain in. the Head. A few doses of II AD WAY’3 PILLS will free the Ryetem from all the above-named disorders. Price, 25 cents tier box. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. 1 READ “FALSE AND TRUE.” Send one letter-stamp to RAD WAY & CO., No. 87 Maiden Lane, New York. Information worth thousands will be sent yon. m thea-nectar BLACK TEA S&B with the Qrten Tea Flavor. W a Yea#* ranted to suit all tauten. For tale everuichtre. And lor sale wholtsale only by the GreiTt Atlan- . ttt tic and Unci fit- Tea Co.. 8 kXI j Church St, New York. P. (>. Box S* Circular ” ead S ° T Tbea ' N * ot " ]) IF MBS, HIIOT.GUNs! REVOLVERS lit Gun Material, A-c., of every kind at the lowest prices. Write lor a Price List to GREAT WESTERN XIUN WORKS, Pittsburgh, Fa. Array Guns, Revolver* Ac., taken in exchange. : AT THE LAST DAY WHAT “ A BIG BLACK CATaloprue of cruelties to children many a parent will have to Cice. Permitting flies and mosquitoes to torment helpless little children when you cannrevent it Is cbi-*l. Fly Canopies will protect them. They are sent liy mall post paid, on receipt of price. One, Txl Three to one address, 12. 800 different newspapers publish tills advertisemeat. Address, A. R. HOUGHTON, Jefferson, Ohio. $2.50 A LINE For an ADVERTISEMENT In 270 NEWSPAPERS. This List comprises A large Proportion of the Beit Western Country Papers, Superior in Character, Circulation and Influence to those of any other list. WHERE CUTS ARE USED, ONLY THREE REQUIRED ! FOR THE WHOLE LIST. ' For ilsts, estimates and further particulars, addrera A. 3ST. I&LLOGG, 110 and 118 Madison Street. Chleaao. '

THE Railroad Gazette. A WEEKLY JOUEMAL OF Transportation, Engineering and Railroad News. The attention of Railroad Men Is called to this Journal, a*. which U believed to be at tills time THY MOST COMPRIHEHSIVE RAILROAD JOURNAL • v f IN TOR WORLD! Treating os It does of all branches of the Complicated business of Transportation, and especially of the Operation of Railroads, Railroad Engineering, the Construction of Locomotives and Cars. The conductors of tills Journal give Special Prominence to Railroad News. And there will be found in Its columns accounts of the Organization of all New Companies, the Projection and Location of New Linos, the Progress of Railroad Construction, the Improvement of Old Lines, the Business ol Different Roads, the Combinations aud Business Arrangements of Companies, Annual Reports, Elections nnd Appointments of Directors and Officers, Decision of Courts Relating to Railroads, and, in short, whatever Is Interesting or Yaluable to $ Railroad Man, Be he President, Director, Stockholder, Snperinlcndent, Engineer, Master Mechanic, Agent, Conductor, Locomotive Engineer, or in any way connected with or interested In railroads or railroad business. Articles by Practical Railroad Men Form a dlrtlngnlihlnß fcatnro of the Journal. Leading 1 Engineering Works and valuable improvements In Italbruud | Machinery are Illustrated by Fine Engravings ! la its columns. Engineers, Master Mechanics and Manufacturers find these illustrated descriptions of the greatest TltfTfi r PropeFattention Is given to the l *« - * Relation of Railroads to the Community and Railroad Legislation. I And also to the . • e Relations of Companies to their Employes , and their , Several Bights and Duties. This paper Is prepared hy a corps of Editors of spsclaJ qualifications, and every pains is taken to make it ind ispensable to every Railroad Man. It is altogether Independent, l avoids all undue puffing of men or corporations, gives news fully and impartially, alms especially to give praciiy cal information which will directly aid its readers in the prosecution of their business. Business men find In the Railroad Gazette the earliest information of the opening of new stations roads in course of construction, and are thus enabled to establish relations with such towns from the beginning of their existence. • ENGINEERING, ' The leading engineering Journal of England, for which 1 American subscribers have usually paid* 15 per year, will be aent, together with the Railroad Gazktts, for sl2 per year. Terms of Subscription: 1 Single copy, per annum W.OO Ten copies, per annum ... 35.00 Single copies.... - 10 n Letter, concerning subscriptions and advertising should be addressed to A. N. KELLOGG, 110 and 113 Madison Street, Chicago. QO’Clooli Pranvllle, Ohio, CoIle«o-3Stli year opens ' - September 7th. t auv t)i<i.-ri; :h :ind extended, $2.00 a y ear. Address W. P. KERR. Prhteiuul. — _ A "It fa- PRUSSING’SCIDER VINEGAR. JTI Celebrated tor its Purity, Strength and Puiutableness. Warranted to keep pickles. First Premium awarded at tiie United States Fair, Illinois State Fair and Clilcagojt'lty Fair. Largest works ol the kind In tire United States. Established 18(8. Orders and rornsnondmee promptly attended to. CHAS. G. E. PRESSING, 839nndS41 Slate St_ Chicago. Also superb WHITE WINE VINEGAR. Cr* f The only medicine In existence . vi V. 1 that never jlails to cure plies ol any age or variety. *3.00 by mall. Liberal discount to the trade. DR. ROSE. Box 83, Chicago. Msnufaciurei, of THRESHING MACHINES With Pitts* Climax and Mounted Horae Powers, Tread rowers. Wood Sawing Machines and Portable Engines. Send for descriptive circulars: sent free by mall. The Largest Manufactory of THRESHERS Jenning’s Seminary, At Aurora, HI., offers best of advantages In English* Classics, Book keeping and Music. Send lor circulars. * WHITNEY S lIEATB FOOT HARMESsIoApT (STEAM REFINED.) m IMEwPg Dlls, Blacks, Polishes and Soaps at the g tim*. For sale by Harness Makers, ► Grocers and Druggists everywhere. .Manuy. pictured hy G. F. WHITNEY & CO., Lexr Ington, Mass. AGENTS! READ THIS! wvroiifiLfa3SAa&fei commission, to sell our new wondcrlbl Inventions. Addr”»- M. WAQNKB A CO„ Marshall, Mich STEAM ENGINES FOR SALE. OWE RUDDICK STEAM ENGINE, ’ 1 ftf horsepower, Governor, *490. p^-frcUi new and warranua. , Will be sold for Four Utmdret dollars, cash. Also, one SECOND-HAND HORIZONTAL ENGINE, (Made by E. J. Good & Co., Chicago.! 8-horse-power, In excellent order and warranted. Price, with Jud»o,*< Governor, *4OO. Cost new, »6M. Address Immediately l

ymiKN WRITING TO AItVKRTIHHUI . . f" “ f y,u »*« -dvertiMme* In (lit, paper. All—R X. V GREAT MEDICAL DNtOVERT MILLIONS Bear Te.tlas.ay th ., r Wonder!.l Curative DR. W A LIC KB’S CALU«i R|A W They are not a vile FANCY DRINK, Madoof Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirit, and Refti.c Liquor, doctored, spiced and sweetonedto please the taste, called “Tonics,” “AppeU* era," “Restorers," Ac., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, bnt are a true Medicine, mad. from the Native Roots and Herbs of California, free from nil Alcoholic Stimulants. They are th. GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER and A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Renovator and Invlgorutor of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition. No person can take these Bitters according to directions and remain long unwell, providw xnelr bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other meanSy and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of r*. pair. They area Gentle Portative as well ass Tonic, possessing also, the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent In relieving Congestion or inflammation of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs. FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, whether in young or-old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood or at the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters havs m eenal. 4 For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism und Gout, Dyspepsia or ludigestiop, Billons, Remittent and Intermittent fpvers* Diseases of the Blood, Liver, and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful, Sack Diseases are caused by Vitiated Bloods which is generally produced by derangement Of tbg Digestive Organs. DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGBSfION, Hes 4 ache, Fain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of tbg Chest, Dizziness. Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Ibid tasto lu the Mouth. Bilious Attacks, Palpltatloi or the Heart. Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain In th« regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other palnftil symptoms, are the offsprings oi Dyspepsia. They invigorate the Stomach and stimnlate the tor* pid ltver d bowels, which render them of unequalled efficacy in-cleansing the blood of all Impurities, ana imparting new life and vigor to the whole system. FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions,Tetter, Salt Rheum, Blotches Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Bolls, Can buncles, King-Worms, Scald-Head, Sore KyesJEryslp. elas, Itch, Scurfs, Digcolorations of the Skin, Humort and Diseases of the Qrin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug upland carried out of the system 1n $ short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottlo in such ctt«e» will convince the most incredulous of their - curative effect. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find iti Imparities bursting through the skin In Pimples, Eruptions or.Son;B, cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul, and your feelings will tell yon when. Keep the blood pura and the health of the system will follow. PIN, TAPE, and other WORMS, lurking In tht system of so many thousands, are effectually destroy* ed and removed. For full directions, read carefully the circular around each hottle. printed in four languages—English, German, Frencn and Spanish. T. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. MCDONALD A Druggists and Gen. Agents, San Francisco, Cal., and 88 and Commerce Street New York. LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALER*, STANDARD f ABM MACHINERY! BUCKEYE THRESHER, Four Horse Sweep. Fully Warranted. Has been fhlly tested; will thresh and clean 150 to 200 bushels of wheat—Soo to 400 bushels oats per day. Frioa icithtn reach of every thriving farmer. Victor Cane Mill, Cook Evaporator, Victor Tread Power, Cross-cut and Circular Wood Sawing Machines, Agricultural Boilers, Corn and Cob 4 rushers, Farm, School, and Church Bella. Circulars and prices sent on application. BLYMYEB. FEARING & CO., Corner Beach and Scbor sts., Chicago, 111. BLYM YER, NORTON & CO.. Cincinnati, O. T7OR SALE.—H R. P. Portable Engine and set well boding -T tools used 90 days, J. O. BUKKUSS, Carrollton, 111. jrber QEETftC I Samples of 8 New Varieties of rifkL OkbllV 4lmported Seed Wheat sent free on receipt of skimp by N. P. BOYER & CO a Parkersburg, Pa .m.Ttnv, IK. ~ ,1 it-.i;.: Tl.c ZTNC COLL Alt PAD Is gttgrmrtcea to cure tbo worst ease of raw and inflamed sore neck in ton (lavs, and work the how every day, or the money refunded. For «Ue by all saddlery hardware establishments. Send for eh'julars. ZINC COLLAR PAD CO., Buchanan, Michigan. RtIFTTOB Relieved nnd cured by Dr. Sherman’s Patent AppHnnco and Compound. Office (>97 Broadway, N. Y. M ini 10«\ for book with photogniplde likenesses of cases lxffore and after curawith Henry Waixl Beeclier’s case, letters -nil portrait. Beware of traveling imp«.>stors. wiio pretend to liave been assistants of Dr. feiucjoLyy. The flrent Equivalent —Tlie world may be sdlk> ly challenged to produce so perfect a simulation of any •lUng in nature,* as ‘ 'f nrrant’s.Reltzer Aperient is of Its original, the Seltzer Spring of Germany. Th* %'orient, based on a correct analysis of the Seltzer Water, is even superior to th,» manulacture • f Nature herself, hce.auHo it contains all the active medical properties ol the spring, unalloytxl hy any of the Inert and useless particles •ound in all ndneraf |i>untains. *i ho genuine artlelo being Hoeurcd, you lmvo tliefr'cltzer Water of F.urope, PUi'jtled'and perfected, and probably the best, the most and mitlblliqiiis preparation on the sacs o! SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. UIA MTCn AGENTS, evervwhmTTo cnnviuw for ILU our ttrentboiXAß PRpor. A flue *2.00 Btrel Knsravinjr given lo tvery eubwa'iijcr. Kxlraorulnary iuiluoeinunts. Address, li. XI. RUSSELL, Boston, Mara. REDUCTION OF PRICES To conform to REDUCTION OF DUTIES. Great Having to Comnmers by getting up Clubs. XT Send for onr New Price Llstund . Club Jam win W-company it nmlnlnlng full alreetlon.,maluuJtOTt trying'to consumer, und remunerative to club organizers, TIIE CHEAT AMERICAN TEA CO.. P O. Box 50(3. St snd ,*ia Vmrar Bt„ Now York OUT THIS OUT And send twenty-live cent* lor a ticket, «ud get n Watch, Sewing Machine, Piano, voice. SxMJcgJJjr ft 00 .M Nun*.. , Address Cincinnati, Ohio. [SEND