Rensselaer Union, Volume 5, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 March 1873 — Page 4

Indiana's Temperance Law.

-Ika following U the full text of the lev Hhaapweme lew of Indiene u pewed recently by the State Legislature: hto!72?L ®* t»y the General Assent W « O'* Stele of Indiana, that it Mull be unlaw Jr'S *y Person orparsons,byhimself or agent. "."■‘j Oeter, o* give away for any purpose of • .**/ P«ww> whomsoever. any intoxicating liquors to be drank in, upon orabont the bntldlng promisee where the liquor la aold, bartered, or bvsks »r trait the board of commissioner* of tbe county Where he realdes. aa hereinafter provided. . *• Any person desiring a permit to sell intesjeattag liquors to b* drank on the premises, •ell Nib tbs office of the auditor of the proper County, not less than 10 days before the drat day of the term of any regular session of the board of commissioners of soch county, a petition in wrlt- *”*• stating therein the bniidlng, or number, street, card, ertownship wherein the permission Is ask•Atohegranted,.praying for such permit and carHfying that the applicant is a resident voter of each county and a cftixen of the State of Indiana, Ud that he is a proper person to have and receive anch permit, which petition shall be signed by the •PCHcanV, and also a majority of the legal voters resident In the ward, if It be in a" city or town, if loan incorporated town, or township where the appttcant proposes to eell intoxicating liquors. “°?h petition ahall be kept on file by the auditor Utfl the next owning regular seeaion of the board Cf commissioners, when it shall be presented to Jhs board for their action. The board shall examlne anch petition, and if satisfied that the same la in proper farm, and that it has been signed aa heretofore required, shall direct a permit to be Issnsdnadsr the hand and seal of said auditor, •M delivered to tits person named in such permit. Upon his complying with the provisions of this act, ■cc paying the costs of filing and recording said .petition, and coats of tuning said permit. tafcl. Before the granting of a permit by the comd of commissioners, the applicant shall caase *• be exocuted and properly acknowledged before an officer authorized to take an acknowledgment deeds, a bond payable to the State of Indiana, ia the sum of three thousand dollars, with good freehold security thereon of not less than two psnnos, to be approved by the board of commie•loners, and conditioned for the payment of any bed all fines, penalties and forfeitures incurred by reason of tke violation of any of the provisions of this act, and conditioned farther that the principal and sureties therein named shall be jointly and severally liable, and shall pay to any person or persons sny and all damages which shall in any manner be suffered by or inflicted upon sny such person or persons, either in person or property, or mesne of support, by reason of any sale or sales of intoxicating liquors to any person, by the person receiving such permit, or by any of his agents or employee. Separate suits may be brought on said bond by the person or persons injured, but the aggregate amount recovered thereon shall not exceed the said sum of s>,ooo, and in case tbe amount or ■aid bond ahall be exhausted by recoveries thereon, a new bond In the same penalty and with like •reties shall be filed within ten days, and in default thereof said permit shall be deemed to he revoked. Such bond, after its approval by the board of commissioners, ahall be filed in the office of the auditor of the county, and ahall be recorded by not auditor forthwith In a book prepared for that panrnae, and shall there remain for the use of the State of Indiana, and for the use of any person or Persona suffering as hereinbefore set forth. Such bond may be sued and recovered upon in any court having civil juriAiction In the cennty, except jnstices’ courts, bt or for the use of any person or Persona or their legal representatives who may be Injured or damaged by reason of any sale or sales of Intoxicating liquors byxhe person receiving thiß Permit or by any of his agents or employes. The record of the bond or a copy thereof, duly certified by such auditor, shag be admissible In evidence in any salt on such bond, and shall have the same Mtce and effect as the original bond would have if offered in evidence. ..fap- 4. The whole number of votes cast for can- ““■*«• for Congress st the last preceding Congressional election in the township, and the whole number of votes for councilman or trustee in any ward or town at tbe lastfpreceding mnnicipal election* in any city or town in which the applicant permit desires to sell said intoxicating lfq uors, ahall be deemed to be the whole number of legal ▼otmatrf aach ward, district or township, a majority *■ whose names shall be signed to the petition Of mtch applicant And It is farther provided that any person not a legal voter In said ward, district or township, who snail sign said petition, or any person who signs the name of any person other man himself without the permission previously obmlned of said person to so sign his name, shall be fined not less'than sso,nor more than SIOO, for each signature so made. too. 6. No permit as. herein provided for shall he granted for a longer or shorter period than one yeer. It shall be the duty of the auditor of the eonnty to tarnish to the persons to whom such perfitit is granted, a copy of the order of the commissioners granting the permit, which copy shall show in conspicuous letters the date of tbe commenceaentof such permit, and of its expiration. And it tt farther provided, that such copy of the order of tts commissioners, certified by the auditor, shall ■sibung up in s conspicuous place in the room where such Uqnor is sold, where the same may at all times be seen and read by any person desiring to do so,. Should any person holding a permit b« convicted of violating any of the provisions of this act, anch conviction shall work “forfeiture on his permit -

. Mo.?• K shfill be unlawful for any person, by ■lmeelf or agent, to sell, barter, or give intoxicating liquor to any minor, or to persons intoxicated, ortojmreona who are in the habit of getting intox too. 7. AH places where intoxicating liquor is •odd in violation of this act shall be taken, held and declared to be common nuisances; ad rooms, taverns, eating-houses, bazars, restaurants, drug stores, groceries, coffse houses, cellars, or other P*aos« of public resort where intoxicating liquors are sold in violation of this act, shall be shut np and abated as public nuisances upon conviction of the keepers thereof, who shall be punished as hereinafter provided. Sic. 8. Any p«reon or perrons who ih&]l, by the Mle of intoxicating liquor, with or without per- . ™s can*® the intoxication. In whole or in part, of * n 7 other person, shall be liable for and be compelled to pay a reasonable compensation to any penon who may take charge of and provide for sncn intoxicated person tor every day he or she is careafcr, which sum may be recovered in any acJW ™ _®®®t before any court having competent jurisdiction. too. >. It shall be unlawful for any person to E* iutoocated. Any person found in a state of ““““tion shall, upon conviction thereof.be fined In the sum of $5; any person convicted of intoxication shall be required, upon trial, to desthe person or persons from whom the liquor “ ht part, was obtained. In default of sodesignating such person, he or Bhe shall, in addition to the line above mentioned, and as a part of nis or her punishment for the offense, be imprisoned in the county jail not less than one day, nor more than ten days, at the discretion of the conzt. toe. 10. A permit granted under this act shall not authorize the person so receiving it to sell intoxicating liquors on Bonday, nor upon the day of aay state, county, township, or municipal election In we township, town, or city where the same may be holden, nor upon Christinas day, nor upon the Fourth at July, nor upon any Thanksgiving day, nor np<m any public holiday, nor between 9 o 'clock P.M. and 6 o'clock A.M.; and any or all sales made on any such day, or after 9 o'clock on any evening, are hereby declared to be unlawful, and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not less than X 5, nor more than >l6 for each and every sale made In violation of this section. Sic. 11. The bartering or giving away of intoSicatlng liquors, or other shift or device to evade the provisions of this act by any person or persons kemang liquor for sale, or by nis agent or employe at the place where the same are kept for sale, shall Mdeemed and held to be an unlawful selling or VUfou ggiffi* 8 pilrlK> ® e of 64111 withiH the proSic. it. In addition to the remedy and right of action provided for in section 8 of this act, every husband, wife, child, parent, guardian, employer, or other peison who shall be injured In person, or property, or means of support, by any intoxicated person, or in consequence of intoxication, habitual or otherwise, of any person, Wall have a right of action in his own or her name, severally or jointly, against any person or persons who shall, by selling, bartering, or giving away intoxicating liquors, have caused the intoxication, in whole err in part, of such person; and any person or persons owning, renting lining, or permitting the occupation" of any building or premises, and having knowledge that intoxicating liquor is to be sola thereiir, or, having leased the same for other purposes, shall knowingly permit therein the sale of intoxicating liquor, or who, having been informed that intoxicating ilqnor is sold therein, that has caused, in whole or in part, toe intoxication of any person, who shall not, immediately after being so informed, toke legal steps to dispossess said tenant or lessee, ahaU be liable, jointly with toe person selling, bartering, or giving away intoxicating liquors at aforesaid, to any penon or persons injured, so. aU damages, and for exemplary damages. Provid •d, however, that execution on any such judgment ■bail first be levied on toe property Of the person swing, bartering or giving awey each liquor. And In the event at a failure or insufficiency of such property to Mttafy the judgment thereof, then el the other defendants. A married woman shall have the same right to bring suit and to control the •sms, and the amount recovered as s femme sole. AndaU damages recovered by a minor under this Mt Wail be paid either to atush minor or to hie or Mr Barest, guardian or next friend, as toe coart ■MU direct. The anlawfnl sale or giving awey of intoxicating liquor ahail work a forfeiture of all righto of toe teesoe or tenant, under any leas* or contract of rent. upon toe premises where inch unlawful sate, or bartering or giving away shall take paoa. All mite for damages under this act may r? “7 * n 7 appropriate action in any of the courts Of tola State haring competent Jurisdiction. AU Judgments recovered under the provisions of this act may be enforced without any relief, etc. Me. U. In all eases where husband, wife, parent, cr child, or goudUa, shall have a right of ■•Mil as provided In section 12 of this set, and ahali fall or refuse to prosecute the same, and in fill cases where such intoxicated person has neither nsfiMatowUe, parent, child, or guardian, the townehiptruatoe, or otter officer having charge of toe poor of the township where eueh Intoxicated penon resides, stall have a right of action, as provided In said faction it; and it la hereby made the dnty of each officer to prosecute all such actions in tho news of such township. Ali money coiJ*2*d upon euchJudgmentojVter deducting therefrom all costs and charges against such township, P®®*** o " B ® toersbr, shall be paid by toe township M"OfOtMrofficer Into the treasury of the ooufy, lw the benefit of the poor of such county.

providing that the hum of any husband, wife, parent, child, or guardian, upon proper petition therefor before final judgment, may be substituted for the name of tbe township; bnt anch persons so substitated shall Have no power to dismiss such action or compromise the same in any manner, except by permission of the court- : —W Sec, 14. For every violation of the provisions of tbe first and sixth sections of this act. the person so offending shall forfeit end pay a fine of not less than $lO nor mors than SSO, or bo imprisoned In the jail of the county not less than ten nor more than thirty day* For every violation of the provisions of the seventh section of this act, any person convicted a* tbe keeper of any of the places therein declared to be nuisances, shall forfeit and pay a fine of not leu than S3O nor more than SSO, and anch place or places so kept by snch person convicted, ahall be shat up and abaspl as a common nnleanee, by the order of the court before which snch conviction may be had; as a further punishment, and such order shall be a part of the Judgment of conviction. B*c. 18. The penalty and provisions mentioned in the thirteenth section of this act may h* enforced by indictment in any court of record having criminal Jurisdiction, and all pecuniary Inn or penal tie* provided for in sny of th* sections Of Dltl act (except th* eighth and twelfth) maybe enforced and prosecuted for before any Jnstice of tbe peace of the proper county, in action of debt, in the name of the State of Indiana as plaintiff, and in case of conviction, the offender shall stand committed to the Jail of the county until the Judgment and costs are fnlly paid, and tbe magistrate or court in which the conviction is had shall issue a writ of capias ad satisfaciendum therefor. Justices of the peace shall have lurisdiction of all actione arising under the eighth and twelfth sections of this act. when the amount In controversy does not exceed twohnndred dollars, such actions to be prosecuted in the name of the party injured or entitled to the debt or damagea provided for In said eighth and twelfth sections. B*c. 16. It shall be unlawful for any person to bny for or furnish to any person who is at the time intoxicated, or in the mbit of getting intoxicated, or to buy for or fnmish to any minor,.to be drunk by such minor, any intoxicating Uqnor. Any person or persons violating this section shall be fined not less than $5 nor more than SSO. B*c. 17. In all prosecutions under this act, by Indictment or-otherwlse, it shall not be necessary to state the kind of Uqnor sold, or to describe the place where sold, and it shall not be necessary to state the name of the person to whom sold. In all cases, the person or persons to whom Intoxicating liqaors shall be sold In violation of this act. shall be competent witnesses to prove such facts, or any other tending thereto. Sac. 18. The following form of complaint shall be suflioient In criminal proceedings before justices of tbe peace or mayors, under this act, when applicable, but may be varied to suit the nature or tjie case, namely: State of Indiana, county, bs. Before me, AB (a jnstice of the peace of aaid county, or mayor of, etc., as the case may be), personally came CD, who being duly sworn according to law, depojeth and salth that on or about the day of —, in the year , at the county of aforesaid, E F did sell Intoxicating liquors to one G H, to bb drank in the place where sold (or to GH, a minor, etcor to a person intoxicated, or in the habit of getting intoxicated, as the case may be), where {ntoxteating liquors are sold In violation of the law, and further saith not. (Signed) CD. Sworn to and subscribed before me, this day of A. D. - B*c. 19. All laws and parts of laws conflicting with this act,or with any provisions of this act,shall be and the same are hereby repealed, but nothing in this act shall be so construed as to prohibit the common councils of cities and the hoards of trustees of incorporated towns from demanding and enforcing a fee for permits from all keepers of coffee houses, saloons, or other places where intoxicating liquor is sold and drank, within the limits of thetr respective corporations. ——— ~ Sac. 20. It is hereby declared that an emergency exists for the immediate taking effect of this aot; it shall therefore be in force from and after it| passage, except in so far as relates to those who hold a license under the existing laws of the State; thia act shall apply to snch as now hold license immediately after the expiration thereof.

CURRENT ITEMS.

At a church fair in Brooklyn, N. Y„ a man paid sllß for a pen wiper. The seven paupers on the Marshall County, lowa, poor farm last year cost the county $7,587. A little girl at Dubuque amended the Lord’s prayer by asking for her daily gingerbread. A man named Faust has sued the city of Cleveland for $5,000 for catching the small-pox. A flock of 200 quails were found frozen to death in Delaware county, lowa, just after a heavy snow storm. A young Irish girl at Jacksonville, 111., has hair that reaches to the floor, and has refused SIOO for it. GKANDFA'CIiUders, oi Cass County, lowa, aged recently married a sweet lump of a girl of only fifteen summers. The Governor of lowa has appointed Mrs. E. M. Wright, of Des Moines, matron of the Soldiers’ Orphan Home at Cedar Falls. 1 A. M. Simpsqn picked up a piece of gold in Wyman’s Ravine, Butte County, Cal., weighing 30 ounces. Glenwogd, lowa, has a sensation in the shape of a human skeleton found by a wood-chopper on cutting down a hdllow tree. The trustees of Yassar College have interdicted the wearing of collars and cuffs by the fair convicts confined in that voluntary penitentiary. An invoice of Wisconsin tobacco of the crop of 1872 sold in New York City recently for twelve cents per pound, which shows it to be of a superior quality. A petition has been sent to Congress asking that body to offer SIO,OOO reward to the person who finds a sure cure for smallpox. A Philadelphia boy has shown the world the valueof picking up small things. He has stolen over 300 door-mats since November. The recent accident on the Allegheny Valley Railroad has called forth general condemnation of the practice of mixing passenger coaches with oil cars. Mischievous boys in Fredericktown,' Mo., daub the front-door knobs with tar on Sunday evenings for the benefit of the beaux calling upon their sisters. Rev. Silas White, of Page county, lowa, was arrested for using obscene language in-a prayer at a revival meeting and was fined $5 and costs. Basswood shoes, hollowed and fashioned from the primitive tree, are much worn by Eastern mechanics at their shop work. They are imported from Michigan. Ninety- six of the doctors of Montreal signed a paper designed to “undeceive the publio mind of the mischievous error that alcoholic liquors are beneficial.”The Boston Advertiser says there are 2,768 places in Boston where intoxicating liquors are sold in defiance of the prohibitory laws of that State. The lowa Press excursion this year will be to Niagara Falls, by way of Chicago and Detroit. The Association meets at Cedar Rapids on the 10th of June. The people of New York will vote, next November, whether Judges shall hereafter be appointed by the Governor, or elected according to the present system. Fishing upon Green Bjy is said to have been better the past winter than for many winters previous. The catch was very large, and the quality of fish caught very fine. crA boy at Jackson, Mich., named Clancey, who is only 13 years of age, recently dead-headed it to California and back again. That boy will he a newspaper man some day.

Mra. Jake Bolton, of Rowe, Mass., 93 last May, braids seven palm-leaf hats for bes usual day’s work, besides doing some chores about the house. She learned the art when about 70 years old. An inmate of the Hartford (Conn.) Insane Asylum has just been discovered to be a woman,slafter having passed herself off as a man for many years before she became afflicted with mania. The Louisville Courier-Jourruil says: “An English naturalist tells us there are 54 distinct species of fleas. The last time we slept in a Cincinnati hotel we could have sworn there were 54,000.” Petitions are circulating in California, asking Congress to appoint a commission to examine and report od the practicability of turning the Colorado River into the Colorado desert. * 7 , The Boston Herald says that Boston has more bar-rooms than Chicago, a fact which attests the efficiency of the .pro-

hlbltory liquor law and the industry .and incorruptibility of the State constabulary.' CftBAB Rapids, lowa, has a hog that hibernated for thirty si* days beneath five feet of Bnow, and came out all right With the exception of being frozen a little about the hams and somewhat thin in flesh. Rio Janeiro mail advices say the ravages of the yellow fever are carrying off a hundred persons daily. Very few Americans are taken with the disease, it being conflned mostly to the Portugese ana Italians. The newspapers down East have discovered a family in Oldtown, Maine, in there are fourteen children, all boys, the oldest of whom are but seven years of age. There are four sets of twins and two of triplets. This is the way they keep up the balance of power in Kentucky: “To the wife of James Bradley, of Fayette County, a son—Jeff. Davis. To the wife of Robert Ritchie, of Fayette County, a son -U. 8. Grant.” Among the curiosities of a Paris pawnshop is an umbrella which has been in pledge for forty-seven years, the original mortgagor or his descendants having regularly paid the interest on the loan during that-time.

How a Fainting was Sold.

A GEKMAN artist who had recently arrived, in this country, found himself financially in a very straitened condition. His cash had almost given out, and he had no resources beyond a beautiful landscape painting, whieh he considered one of his finest efforts. In this condition he was directed to apply to Mr. Corcoran, who was then collecting the great art gallery which has made his name known all over the land, and the artist made his way to Washington. His cash balance was just sufficient to take him there, and with trembling steps he made his appearance before the banker and asked him to examine the painting. Mr. Corcoran looked at it critically through 1 a gold eye-glass. “What do you want for it?” he asked. The artist reflected. It was his masterpiece: he was in a strange city, without friends or money.- and finally answered “$300.” “Three hundred dollars!” exclaimed the banker; “three hundred dollars! I won’t give it.” “Two hundred dollars, then.” “ Two hundred dollars. I wouldn’t take it at any price.” The artist made his way out of the house, and sorrowfully and with much difficulty returned to New York, where lie laid the result of his visit before his friends. The merits of the picture having reached the ears of some connoisseurs, they examined it, and pronounced upon it in the highest terms. “What shall I do?” asked the artist of them, one of whom gave him a piece of advice, upon which he acted. The picture was placed in a large art-hall. Notice was given that the beautiful landscape, by the celebrated German artist , valued at $lO,000, was on exhibition at the art-gallery." It was examined by connoisseurs, and critics, and descriptions of its beauty appeared in the principal New York papers. Particular care was taken that the criticisms should come under the eye of Mr. Corcoran who immediately sent on his picture purveyor to New York, and the picture was purchased at its valuation. : St. Louis Democrat. • “

How to Save Money in Farming.

While the snow covers the ground and the evenings are long it is a good time to make up plans for the summer campaign. Take a look at the stock in the barn, and see if there are not some animals which could be disposed of with profit. Are the cows first-rate in every particular, and do they pay a good profit upon their cost and keep, or do they scarcely pay for the food they eat, leaving nothing over ? We think that full one-half of all the cows kept by farmers do namore than pay for the food consumed during the year; consequently the owners are actually losing money, because the animals depreciate in value as they grow old. Now, the way to save money in keeping stock is to have no animal that- is not either increasing-in value in proportion to the amount of food consumed and the labor expended in taking care of it, or returning an equivalent in labor performed, as with work horses, or in milk as with eows.^ The only true way of ascertaining this fact is by keeping an account of expenditures and receipts, which we fear is seldom practiced with those who fail to save money in farming. Merchants and other tradesmen usually take an account of stock at least once a year, and know to a cent how they stand in the world financially, and their future operations are planned in accordance with past experience, and if there is need of cutting off any particular branch of trade, or economizing in any way, it is done; but the farmer alone seems to he the victim of luck, seldom knowing whether he is prosperous or otherwise until it is too late. It is also well to draw up a plan of farm operations for the coming season, and it is far better to have them a little too restricted than too comprehensive, because bad weather sometimes intervenes and puts one behindhand, especially in the spring. Better put in one acreofpota toes and do it so well that the yield will be four hundred bushels per acre, than to go over four or five acres for the same quantity. ‘ Practice the same system with all farm crops, and you will be Surprised to see how easy it is to Save labor as well as money by farming. We are quite certain that if our farmers would give this condensing system of farming a thorough trial, we should hear less of disastrous seasons and the unprofitableness of farming. They would not stop at good crops, but their horses, cows, sheep and hogs would soon have to be of the best breeds. No cows would be kept from the milk of which two to three hundred pounds of butter or its equivalent in cheese could not be made in a season. It costs no more to feed or care for one of our best cows than the very poorest, and the same is true with all other kinds of stock, and as a rule the most worthless are the most expensive to keep.

A farmer would think he was badly swindled if he had to pay twenty-five dollars more than his proportion of taxes ;, still there are thousands of animals kept by these same farmers, each of which costs fully twenty-five dollars per annum more than it yields the owner or advances in value. This is but one of the mahy leaks in fanning which would not be tolerated in any other kind of busineas. If’ a field is so poor that it will not pay a good profit on the cost of cultivating, let it alone or put it in a proper condition for producing a good crop. A man ought to know better than to waste his time in working soil that yields no return for the labor expended upon it. But there are scores of men doing this every year, and they wonder why fanning is such an unprofitable business. The very idea of a man going over an acre of land a half dozen times with various implements jnst for the sake of obtaining ten bushels of corn or any other grain, is sad enough. Still there are thousands who do this and think at the same time that they are the victims of bad luck. Jfow let every one try the coming season to economize by raising a large amount on a small space, and dispose of all stock that does not pay a profit, and see it money cannot be saved by this system.—-AW York Sun, —Cars run from Joppa to Jerusalem in two hours. 1

FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.

—Cream for Coffee.—Beat well one egg with one spoonful of sugar; pour a pint of scalding hot milk over this, stirring it briskly. Make it the night previous. —The three reasons given by those Dot in ffivor of live posts are: It is difficult to grow a row of trees near enough in line; the wind swaying the trees will break the nails; and lastly, the growth of the trees would surely push off the boards that old Boreas spared. —lt is said that the disagreeable clicking noise caused by overreaching in horses will he prevented if the blacksmith in shoeing cuts off the toe or crust of the shell of the hoofs on the fore feet instead of on the hind feet, as is the frequent practice. —For mixed pickles, prepare any vegetables you like by cutting them in pieces and let them lie in salt and water for two or three days , then make the pickle in the following manner: Boil the quantity of vinegar required with peppercorns, mustard seed, a small quantity of mace, a few cayenne pods and ginger, and half a Sound of flour of mustard mixed smoothly i a basin, to be put in while boiling; put all together in a large stone jar. —A suggestion which may be of use to everybody who keeps house and owns a garden, a grape-vine, or a pear-tree, is made herein: Out of two bushels of bones saved from time to time during the year, a bushel and a half of ashes, a peck of lime and three pails of water, boiled together and mixed with muck in equal the writer has made a barrel of phosphate equal to the best in the market, sad at the cost of less than a dollar. He applies it to his grape-vines and dwarf pear-trees with magical effect. —Of all our domestic animals there are none that require more systematic care than the horse. A horse should be fed regularly, and in moderate quantities and worked judiciously. A horse kept in this way may De kept at a moderate cost, will be more healthy and perform more labor than if fed highly, or as many we know of are in the habit of feeding their horses. They will surely eat enough to injure them if they can get it—When hay is kept constantly before them, horses are apt to spend their time In throwing it around topsy-turvy in the rack; they soon become dissatisfied with their food, and lose their keen relish for it. The general practice should be to feed regularly three times a day. Many persons say that they have tried almost every remedy that has been recommended for humors, and they are no better now than when they commenced them, and they have no confidence in anything that is advertised to enre Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, and all similar humors. We wonld say to these that there is now a remedy that as yet has never failed of curing those diseases. It acts upon an entirely different principle from anything ever offered for them; it throws humor out of the blood through the skin, which is the only channel through which the system can be entirely freed from them. If you will try it, yon will not say of this as you have by the others, for it will cure you. We refer to Dr. Weaver’s Salt Rheum 'Syrup. —~ For sale by all Druggists.

Medical Guesswork. —The professional treatment of disease is in a great measure experimental. If one medicine fails another is tried, and sometimes this hit-or-miss practice is pursued until the resources of the faculty is exhausted. This, in the truest sense of the word, is empiricism. But when the physician has made a valuable discovery, he is called by his professionai brethren an Empiric because he advertises the result of his labor and research. When Dr. Walker, of California, introduced his celebrated Vinegar Bitters as a remedy for all blood diseases, he struck a tremendous blow at the empirical system , as applied in our hospitals, and in private practice. It was soon apparent that his medicine was not a mere palliative or alleviative that only modified the symptoms of a disorder; but that it reached the very source of the malady in the blood and the secretion?, and literally rooted it out. The process of renovation and disinfection went on together, vigor was imparted to the organs from which the virus of disease had been expelled. That such is the effect of this popular vegetable remedy, no one who has had opportunities of observing its operation in cases of liver complaint, indigestion, affections of the bowels, gout, rheumatism, and pulmonary disorders, can possibly doubt. We understand that the whooping-cough is quite prevalent in the towns around us; but that no cases have proved fatal. Some families use nothing bnt Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. Our Doctor, however, says a little ipecac, to produce vomiting, would be an advantage. As Quick AS a Flash os Liohtnino does Cristadoko’b ExcxqsioK Hair Dyk act upon the hair, whiskers and moustaches ; no chameleon tints, but the purest Raven or the most exquisito Browns will be evolved. In One to Five Minutes, Headache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lame Back, Diarrhoea, Croups, Sprains, and all similar complaints, are relieved by f uauu'B Instant Relief, or money refunded. , There is no excuse for poor Biscuits, Rolls, Bread, Griddle Cakes, Muffins, Waffles, etc., when Dooley’s Yeast Powder is used. Grocers sell it.

THE WEEKLY SUN. Only $1 a Year. 8 Page*. The Best Family Paper.— The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Agricultural Paper.—The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Political Paper.— The Weekly N. Y. Snn. Independent and Faithful. Against Public Plunder. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Newspaper.— The Weekly New York Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. Has All the News .—The tifeekly New York Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send yhur Dollar. The Best Story Paper.— The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Fashion Reports in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Market Reports in the Weekly N. Y Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Cattle Reports in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. SeDd Jhur Dollar. The Best Paper In Every Respect.—The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar, Address THE SUN, New York City.

The Judgment of the Public. Doctors disagree. Each school of medicine has its own theories, and as these theories differ widely, it Is clear that few, if any of them, can be right. But if medical men cannot agree upon any theory or system of practice, the public find no.difflculty in agreeing as to notorious matters of fact. For Instance, they hate observed for many years that Hostetter'a Stomach Bitters uniformly cure dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, biliousness, nervous debility, and many other diseases which the prescriptions of the pharma, co peels do not and cannot cure; and they know therefore that there can be no mistake abont it. On this point they are firm and positive. They take their stand on Incontrovertible facts, and they state to one another verbally, and sometimes by letter, what they know about relieving and preventing sickness with the standard vegetable tonic and alterative of America. Here, then, the Invalid has a guarantee of value that can be relied npon, viz.: the sober judgment of the 'public. After twepty years of observation and reSection, the American people pronounce Hostetter'a Bitters the best invigorating and regulating medicine at their command, and give evidence of the faith that is In them by purchasing more of it than of any other advertised medicine manufactured on this continent. A large number of physicians, too, however much they may differ on other point* in therapeutic*, admit the extraordinary merit* of the Bitters as a tonic and flteratlve, and rl'commend it as a preventive of malarious diseases, and a* a remedy In Intermittent and remittent fevers. 1 —— , ■' -»v»Ask yourgrocer for Pmssine’s Celebrated Cider Vinegar, warranted pure. Preserves Pickles.

Tfcsitx are more than one thousand differ* ent kinds of pills In the United States. Some of them are worthless and injurious, others are good and beneficial. Old Dr. Parsons invented the beat anti-bilious pill "sre ever saw or heard of. They are now sold under the name of Parsons' Purgative Pills. Fob, Bronchial, Asthmatic and Pulmonary Complaints “ Brown's Bronchial Troche s” manifest remarkable curative properties. Thi Lungs ark Stralnkd and Hackkd by a persistent Cough, the general strength wasted, and an incurable complaint established thereby Dr. Jayne’s Kxpectorant is an effective remedy for Coughs and Colds, and exerts a beneficial effect on the Pulmonary and Bronchial Organs.

THE MARKETS.

NSW YORK February SB. 1878. BBBF CATTLK ( 8.50 ®*12.25 HOGS—Live... 550 A 6.00 BILBBP-Llve... ...-. nart a 7 vs COTTON—Middling SO ® BOJ4 FLOUR—Good to Choice 7.60 ® 8.25 WHEAT—No. S Spring 1.58 ® 1.63 CORN—Western Mixed 65 ® 66 OATS—Western, New 51 ® .58 RYE—Western 90 ® .95 PORK—Mess . 14.50 0 15.00 LARD ...I. .08140 .08)4 WOOL—Domestic Fleece 60 ® .65 Tubbed 45 A .60 Unwashed, 85 ® -40 mnninn BEEVES—Choice .'... (6.00 A (6.50 Good 5,25 A 5.75 Medium 4.25 A 6.00 Butchers’ Stock 8.50 ® 4.25 HOGS—"Live 4.25 ® 4.85 SHEEP—Good to Choice 3.50 A 5.50 BUTTBR—Choice 27 ® .80 EGGS—Fresh 24 & .25 FLOUR—White Winter Extra... 8.50 ® 10.75 Spring Extra. 6.50 ® 7.25 GRAlN—Wheat-Spring, No. 2.. 1.18 ® 1.20 Com—No. -4..... ..T... —.81 ® .32 Oats 25)4® .26 ——— Rye—No. 9 .68 ® .64 Barley—No. 2, New 70 ® .73 PORK—Mess 13.20 ® 18 30 LARD.... 07)4® -08 WOOL—Tub-washed 68 ® .63 Fleece, washed 44 ® .54 “ unwashed. .28 ® .88 Pulled.... 44 ® .48 OINCINNATL -■■■' FLOUR—Family, New (7.50 Q (B.lt WHEAT—Red 1.70 ® 1.75 CORN.... 39 ® .40 OATS 80 ® .38 RYE... 80 0 .82 PORK—Mess 18.25 ® 13.7.5 LARD 07)4® .1 8 HOGS—Live 4.80 ® 6.25 ST. LOUIS. BEEF CATTLE—Choice (4.50 ® (6.00 HOGS—Live ...... .....A,, 4/25 Q L 75 FLOUR—FaII XX 6.75 ® 7.75 WHEAT—No 3 Red Winter 1.78 ® 1.80 CORN—No. 2 Mixed .80 ® .82 OATS—No. 2, .27 ® .28 RYE—No. 2 65 ® .67 PORK—New Mess 13.50 ® 13.75 LARD 07 ® .07)4 MILW AUKEE* a - FLOUR—Spring XX (6.25 ® (6.87 WHEAT—Spring, No. 1 1.25 ® 1.30 “ No. 2 1.20 ® 1.22 CORN—No. 2.........1.......... .82 ® .34 OATS—No. 2..., 26 ® .27 RYE—No. 1 .66 ® .68 BARLEY-No. 2 .72 ® .74 CLEVELAND. WHEAT-No. 2 Red (1.64 ® (1.65 CORN 45 ® .46 OATS—No. 1 .39 ® .41 DETROIT. WHEAT—No. 1. /. (1.85 ®(1.87 Amber... 1.68 ® 1.70* CORN—No, 1 42 ® .43 OATS 36 ® .38 TOLEDO. WHEAT—Amber Mich. (1.64 ® (1,66 * No. 2 Red I.W ® 1.66 CORN—Mixed. 38 ® .40 OATS—No. 2 35 ® .36

VXTHEN WHITING TO ADVERTISERS, VV plenee say you eaw the advertisement In this DaDer. A CHALLENGE Is extended to the World To place before the public a better Cough or Lung Remedy than ALLEN’S LUNG BALSAM. It is warranted to break np the most troublesome Cough in an incredibly short time. There is no remedy that can show more evidence of real merit than this BALSAM for curiiig Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup, etc. It Acts on the Kidneys! It Acts on the Lltoit! 23?“ Which makes it more than a Cough Remedy. LATEST EVIDENCE. What well known Druggists of Tennessee say about Allen’s Lung Balsam. Springfield Tenn., Sept. 13,1872. Gentlemen : Please ship us six doz. AlleriSj Lung Balsam. We have not a Dottle in the store. It has more reputation than any Cough Medicine we have ever sold. Have been in the drug business V 7 years. We mean just what we say. Verjlrul| What the Doctors Say. Drs. Wilson & Ward, Physicians and Druggists, write from Centreville, Tenn.: .. * l We purchased Allen's LUng Balsam, and it sells rapidly. We are practicing physicians, as well as druggists, and take pleasure in recommending a great remedy, such as we know this to be.” . Physicians do not recommend a medicine which has no merit; what they say about ALLEN’S LUNG BALSAM Can be taken as a fact. Let all afflicted test it at once and be convinced of its real-merits* Itis-h armless to the mopt delicate child. It Contains no Opium in Any Form. CAUTION. Be not deceived. Call for ALLEN’S LUNG BALSAM, and take no other. \W Directions accompany each bottle. J. N. HARRIS & CO., Cincinnati, 0., PROPRIETORS. jar Sold by all Medicine Dealers. DENISON [TEXAS] BUSINESS DIEECTOEY. IRST NATIONAL BANK. OF DEIfISON. capital SIOO,OOO. Cor. Main and Rusk Streets. B. 8. Stephens, President. L. W. Suefhkep, Vice. President. _ B. Pkbby, Cashier. ~ ENISON CITY BANK. Griffith k Co. Transacts a geneial Banking business. Con Skiddy and Austin Streets. FAKMKKS’ AND MECHANICS’ BANK. W L. Hull. Does a general hanking business. Bouth side Main street. XfELSCfoi HOUSE, Denlaon, Texas. Xm Lkonahp & Rush, Proprietors. HC. WILSON k 00., Wholesale dealers in Groceries, Liquors, • Ac., cor. Main and Bin-nett Streets. Ip MULLER, Wholesale and Retail dealer in Family Groceries. 1 » South side Main street. ELAND A BACON, Wholesale dealers in Flour, Grain and General Produce. Wocdard street, bet. Austin and Rusk. DENISON NEWS. B. C. Murjuy, Editor Best local paper. Terms, |ISU er annum, RUFFNEB A VERNON, 1 Native Lumber Dealem, J. B. LALONDB,. f Crawford street. OSS, PINTO A JENNINGS, cor. of Owlngs and Austin streets, White Pine Lumber of all kinds. WATERMAN, WEIL A STAB, Wholesale and Retail dealers In Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes and General Outfitting Goods. . LS. OWINGB, Livery Stable and General Commission Mer- • chant. ri'EXAS LAND AGENCY. W. H. Day. Large quantities of A fine land for sale In all parts of the State. Main street. B. MUNSON .id JNO. G. iIcF.LVANKY, Attorney, at L»w • and ResTEstste Agents. Special attention given lo th®, purchase and sale of City Property. Office, north side Main st reet, east of National Bank. TEXAS LANDS. Shkphkod a Nklbon, Land Agents. Im formation furnished free. L. W. Shepherd, Vice Preslden First National Bank. Chas. W. Nklbon, Secretary Town Company. VERILL'S CHEMICAL PAINT. Tomk A Co., Genh Agents for Northern Texas. JW. PURCELL, Bridge Builder ani Contractor. Special at- • teutlon given to Countxy Bridging. CLARK A TALLANT, General dealers in Groceries, Provisions, Queenßware, Flour and Grain, No. 78 Main street. 7%/TASON, CAMPBELL A MONTGOMERY, Attorneys at Law. XVL Office, Main street, between Austin and Rusk. [IAS. W. NtCLBON * JOSBPfi PtitEY, Attorneys at Law* Denison, Texas. M. COOK, Agent for ” " Duma's Addition to DknibAn. 9 Office south side Woodsrd street. JK. MILLER offers for kMa-A large quantity of Desirabl® • Residence Property West of the business portion of the city, In quantities to suit the purchaser. TOSEPH LAtNJS, Weat end Main street, is now prepared to O sell, on reaitinable terms, property In his Addition, from Main fctreel. South. H. WILSOK, “ ' • ATToaincv at Law. C. CROWELL A CO., Commission Merchants and Dealers in ■ Cotton, Hides, Wool, Ac., con Skiddy pnd Austin streete. DINSMORE HOUSE.' T. P. Din smoke. Proprietor. Cor. Main and Burnett streets. Flrst-ciassestabllng. '/ ■ " ' \\T ARKEN A BBIDDKLL, Real Estate Brokers. Spoil*] at tern TT tlon given to Town Lota and Lands in this viclntte:.'~7r T)ui I ding Felt («o tar), for outside work, and roX> sideiustead of plaster. Fe^tcarpetings, drc. Send 3 •tamjw for circ. & samples. Cv J. Fat, Camden, N. J, free by mall. Two new articles,salable a* flour. Address H. N. WHITE, Newark, N.J. Employment; SIOO per week; agents & others to sell a ne w article; indispensable to merchants & Hi’hf’rs. Ad* dress, with stamp, E .B.Smith ft Co.,96Liberty St n N.Yf iHi each week-agUntb" wanted. 0 I Zi.VA/ Bail nous legitimate.. Particulars (ree. J. WORTH. St. Louis, Mo. Box 2481. GREATEST CURIOSITYSfIaRSvfiSS sellingweekly. Priceisocents. No humbug. Address ' ' GEORGE A HEART) & CO., Boston, Mass.'' FBFF Sample worth (10 lor 10 eta., or circular tor rn C E a fortufie free. Box 71 Kewark, N. J.

M [Established 1830.1 WELCH ft GRIFFITHS, „ Manufacture™ of Basra. SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS. EVERY BAW WARRANTED. SRiles. Belting and Machinery. . . tVLIBERAL DISCOUNTS.^! IV Price 11ata and Circulars free. <0 WELCH A BRIFFITHS, a Beagag Maw,, and Detroit, Mich. USE the Keislnger Sash Lock and Support to FASTEN YOUR WINDOWS! No spring to break, no cutting of aaßh; cheap, durable, very eaeilv spoiled; holds sash at any place dotired, and a self-faatener when the eaah Is down. Send itamp for circular. Cllbular and six copper-bronzed locks sent to any address In the U. 8., postpaid, on receipt of 50c. Liberal Inducements' to the trade. Agenta wanted. Address—Relslnger Baa., Lock Co., No. 418 Market Btreet, Harrisburg, Pa. _[For lllußtratlon of this cheapest and best lock, see Wood’s Household Magazine, A. Y. Independent,& c. ,&c HEALTH-WEALTH ' / With good homes, In good society, may be found in the national Colony by industrious, temperate people. No others need apply. For the Colony Journal. with full particulars, send stamp to MILLER, HUMIBTON 4 Ca, Toledo, Ohio.

MOTHERS!!! Don’t fail to procure MRS. WINS. LOW’S BOOTHING SYRUP FOR_ _ chYldren TEETHING. This valuable preparation has been used with NEV-ER-FAILING SUCCESS IN THOUSANDS OF CaSES It not only relieves the child from pain, but invigorates the stomach and bowels, corrects acidity, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. It will also instantly relieve Griping in the Sowels and Wind Colic. 3Ve believe It the BEST and SI’P.ERT REMEDY IN TIIE WORLD, in all cases of D YSENTERY AN II IHARRHOiA IN CHILDREN, whether arising, from teething or any other cause. Depend upon it, mothers, it w r ill give rest to youi» selves, and Belief and Health, to Your Infants. 7'FTe sure and call for 7' “MBR WTlTfiT.nW’g RftftTTTTNft RVPTTP b “ n4 * W * " *V-» BVWAiIiUU OiftUA, - Having the fac-sltnile of “CURTIS & PEEK INS” on the outside wrapper* PT-Sold by druggists throughout the world. The January No. ■ PrTFDQ ■ and Piano Piecos, V I L- ■ I—no B pages). I MISOIPAI i or^So^itr. I IYIW O I Ull I, Efl Two hack numbers, ■ ■ our own selection, | MONTHLY I -SS- « m J. ! Jf PETERS, .V>9 Broadway, N. Y. WEALTH & Of the TTfEST.Hon.W.E. OHDEKS Boundless W EBB, Author ’ Our new plan (3 magnificent Chromos FREE) vmV/amgtxrmamwfni: *lO capital enough , & no rink*. APCNTC UM NTCn tor This Great Illustrated AllUn I w WAII I til Book. Send for confidential terms, etc. E.liannaford & Co.*Cincinnati & Chicago. THEA-NECTAR BLACK TEA, with the Green Tea flavor. Warranted to suit all tastes. For sale everywhere. And for sale wholesale only by the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 191 Fulton St. and 2& 4 Church St., N. Y. P. O. Box 5506. Send forThea-Nectar circular REWARD ‘ I For any case of Blind. . I Bleeding. Itching or Ulce B rated Piles that Dk Bi ng V ■ Pi LK Kkmkdy fui Is to ■ cure. It is prepared ex- _ fl pressly to cun* the Piles, i t h h# and nothing else. Sold bv J all Druggists. Price 11.00. HUNTER’S .»i TRAPPER’S ILLUSTRATED PRACTICAL GUIDE, r jCSZ Notwitbßtanding Its low -** v price this book baa become a itandard, and sale, in- p crease each year. It must * be seen to be properly appreciated. It sells to those Who see It Nearly every boy wants one. It gives Just the information wanted abont care and nse of arms, making JKM and using traps, snares and nets, « baits and baiting, poisons, bird lime, preserving stretching,dress- Ing, tanning ftn< dyeingskinsand I fnrs, fißblng, &o, SO engravings- Pries 20 oents. Sent by »iall, posfage paid, bn receipt of price by J. HANEY A Co., 119 Nassau St, Ntw York.

QIVEI^AWAY— i Cromo—Blze, 9 by 12 inches, worth $lO, every purchaser of Dr. Foote's wonderful “PLAIN HOME TALK.’ No competition—the most taking Combination ever offered. Agents are meeting with unparalleled success. Books and Croraos ready and delivered toguther. Send $2,00 for Prospectus and Cromo framed—a complete outfit, Send early to secure territory. Full table of Contents and Tcrma sent on application. Address The UNION PUBLISHING Chicago. Every Cromo completely mounted. NORTHWEST MISBOURIw-Rlch sol], mildLi climate, fine fruit, quiet population and cheap lands. For description ana prices, address, with stamp, C. G. COMSTOCK, Albany. Gentry Co., Mo. lowa and Kansas lands to trade for N. W. Mo. lands. Z CIaAIMS IN EUROPE Promptly collected by J. F. FEUEAUFF, Attorney at Law, Columbia, Pa. “AMERICAN SAWS.” BEST IN THE WORLD. MOVABLE-TOOTHED CIRCULARS, PERFORATED CROSS CUTS. Send for Pamphlet to AMERICAN SAW CO., NEW YORK. Write for Large Illustrated Descriptive Price List to Double single. Muzzle dud Breech-Loading Rl6eS, Shot Guns,Revolvers, Pistols,&c.,of every kind, for men or bOy*at Very low prlees.Gunß,*3 to *300; Pistols,*! to*2s

JTZ ‘ n has L

S. SIMONS & CO., v MANUFACTURERS OF PRINTERS’ FURNITURE. Cases, Stands, Cabinets, Quoins, Ac., ~ 272 West Lake Street, Chicago, 111. Also, onr New Patent Combination Cabinet, the Cheapest and Best manufactured. t3—A large lot of good Second-hand Cases, Stands and Cabinets for sale cheap. tySend for Specimen Sheet and Pries List. Sewing Machine 18 THE BEBT IN THE WORLD. Agents Wanted. Send for circular. Address, “ DOMESTIC ” SEWING MACHINE CO., T. ■PA YETTEVILLE NURSERIES. -Pear. ApX pie and Cherry Trees and Seeds: Wilson Strawberry and Clark Kaspherry Plants! Quince and Currant Cuttings at lower rates than have yet been offered. Address WILL & CLARE, Fayetteville. Onondaga Co., N. Y. <t! K (fiOA Pw day! Agents wanted! Allclasaesof. ipy l/U tfJ&KJ working people, of t'lUii r«tx,youiigor old, make more money at work for us ”t their spare moments or ull the time than at anythlngelse. Particulars free. Address (1 Stinson & Co.,Portland Maine. nnm/o! SfeJlcal Wonders, thouid be read by BuuK ,iL S2OO LiP3FE£*£*i£sm, o-ldal Needle Co., 719 Olive 6t., Bt. Louis,Mo. ■; Xlfl tn $9Q Mf-pAESitaJftlZ'Z'S: I U 111 4) Au hlaIK A CO., Bt. Louis. Mo. TIT i ITIIITITT Students to learn Telegraphing and W A M l 1 H I | take offices. Send for circulars. N.W. n fill x MJ Telegraph Institulo, Janesville. Wia. DR. WHITTIER, « 7 Longest cngngM. an<l most ■OKCWsful phyakUh. 0/ the Og« v Cocnuiuilon or t«JD*hlei/r«u. Call or write.

inf £E23EM2mSIS2* Vlneffur Bitter* are not a vile Fancy Drink, made of Poor Rum, Whiskey. Proof Spirits and Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, ana sweetened to please the taste, called “Tonics,” “Appetizers,” “Restorers,” Ac., that lead the tippler oh to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true Medidine, made from the native roots and herbs of California, free from al! Alcoholic Stimulants They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition, enrichingit, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body.. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certaiu in their results, safe and reliable in all forms of disease. No Person can take the*e Bitter* according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by nvneral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond the point of repair. Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Headache, Pain in Jhe, Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Pizziness, Sour Eructation* of the Stomach, Bad Tasto in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions ot the Kidneys,-and- a hundred other painful syrap*- .'s, * are the oflsprings of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it has no equal, and one bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertisement. For Female Complaint** in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseases ar-e caused by Vitiated Blood, which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. They are a Gentle Purgative a* well a* a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liverand Visceral Organs*-and in Biliou* Diseases. > ' For .Skin Plaeaae** Eruption*, Tetter, SaltRheum, Blotches, Spots,~Rlmple.<v Pustules, Boils, Carhuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head,-Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a -abort time by the use of these Bitters, One bottle iff* such cases will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects.

Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through the skin i» Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins ; cleanse it when it is fotil; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure* and-the health of tlie system will follow. Grateftil thousand* proclaim Vinkgak P.itTKRS tile most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of "so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed Says a distinguished physiologist : There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms. -It is not upon , the healthy elements, of tire body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease. No system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no antheiminitics, will free the system from worms like these Hitters. Mechanical Diseases. Person* engaged in Paints and such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance 111 life, will be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against tins take a dose of Wai.kbk’s Vinegar Bitters once or twice a week, as a Preventive. Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which are so- prevalent.in_the valleys.of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile. Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast nes, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. There are always more or less obstructions of the liver, a weakness and irritable state of the stomach, and great torpor of the bowels, being clogged up with vitiated .accumulations. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organg, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr J. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters, as they will speedily remove the dark-colored viscid matter with which th* bowels are loaded!, at the same time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Scrofula, or Kim?’* KvY%, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter. Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker’s Vinegar Bitters have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and infractable'cases. ' - . Dr. Walker’s California Vinegar Bit ter* act on all these fcasqs in a similar manner. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected. The properties of Dr, Walker’s Vinegar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic and Carminative, Nutritious* Laxativej "Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-Irri-tant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious. T!ie Aperient and .mild Laxative properties of Dr. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters are the best safeguard in all cases of eruptions a\,d malignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and soothing properties protect the humors of the sauces; Their Sedative properties allay pain in the nervous system, stomach, .and bowels, either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc. Their Counter-Irritant influence exten *s throughput the systenf. Their Diuretic properties act on the Kidneys, correcting andiegulating the flow of urine. Their Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, in the secretion of bile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts, and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc. Fortify the body disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus forearmed. The liver, the stomach, the bowels, the kidneys,, and the nerves are rendered disease-proof by this great invigorant. Directions.-—^Take of the Bitters on going to bed at night from a half to one and one-half wine-giassfull. Eat good nourishing food, such as beef steak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, and vegetables, and take out-door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetable ingredients, and contain no spirit. J. WALKER, Prop’r. R. H. Me DONALD A CO.* Druggists and. Gen. Agts., San Francisco and New York. *ar SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS. The Guide is published Quarterly. 25 cents pays for the year, which is not half the cost. Those who afterwards send money to the amount of One Dollar or more for Seeds may also order 25 cents’ worth extra-the price paid for the Guide. The First Number is beautiful, giving plans for making Rural Homes, Dining-Table Docorn tioiiH, Window Gardens, &c., and a mass of information invaluable to the lover of flowers.—-130 pages, on fine tinted paper, sonie 500 Engravings, and a superb Colored Plate and ChromoCover. The First Edition of 200,000 Just printed in English and German. JAMES VICK, Rochester, New York. FOREST AND EVERGREEN Trees and Seeds! The Largest Stock in America. Fifteen Million* Evergreen Tree a. Twelve Millions European Larch, See., See. All grown trom seeds in our own nurseries. Aims, Frolt and Forest Tree Seeds. Catalogues tree. ROBERT DOUULAS Sc BOSS, Waukegan, 111. CASH PREMIUMS FBEEi OVER. Twenty-One Thousand Dollars Distributed next April, Free, among the *2.00 subscribers of the WEEKLY E7V QXJIRBII. ■ Inclose *2XO for a year’s’ ’subscription, or send for -31. r-arttctLSM. Kxtra premiums for Agents. Address FAlt AN & McLEAN. ’ - Cincinnati. Ohio. ONT wear that Spring Truss, which is killing ■ ■ you, but B#n<l for circular for llOWE’h ■ D ELASTIC BELT TRUSS, which la ft ■ ■ easv to wear as a Barter, aniMms cured patients ■ ■ In from sto 25 weeks. Aildi*ess Box 758, Ha HENKY HOWE, • ; Council Bluffs, lowa. A, N. K. 3W3-R. X. DR. WHITTIER, 617 Lon rent engKfM. and »o*t •oor<‘s-,fu4 piij.ioiaj* of tie agP Coanultßtloß. or aospb M free. C*Jl©rwrii*