Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 33, Bloomington, Monroe County, 22 December 1883 — Page 8
f i
iaw jjt MMinara cam, The expression of a fresh mining camp, at the height of its "boom," is something -which most be seen to be comprehended. The camp is in the heart of a fir fpreat, perhaps, or on the stony sides of a gulch. Nobody draws breath till he has got a cabin, or a bough hut, or a tent oxer his head. As if by magic, there grows up a sort of street, a dozen or two board shanties, with that cheapest and sQIiest of all shams, the battlement front, flaunting its ugly squares all along the line. Glaring signs, painted on strips of cotton sheeting, bleached and unbleached, are nailed over the doors. In next to no time there will be a "mint," an "exchange," a "bank," a "Vienna bakery," a "Chinese laundry," a "hotel," and a "livery stable." Between each night and morning will blossom out crops of '"real estate offices," and places where "mining properties are bought and sold," "claims located, proved, bought and sold," "surveys of mining claims made," etc ; crops also, alas, of whisky saloons, with wicked names and lurid red curtains, danger and death signals. The stumps are not taken out of the pretense of a road, neither are the bowlders; nobody minds driving over them, or over anything, in fact, so he gets quick to his "claim," or to the tract in which he is feverishly "prospecting," If a brook trickles through the camp, so much the better; it can do doable duty as drain and well. Luckiest they who drink highest up, but they who drink lowest down do not mind. The women, if women they are, are fierce and restless, like the men. They make shifty semblances of homes out of their one-roomed cabins. It is not worth while to have things comfortable, or keep them in order, for there is no knowing whether the camp will turn out to be a good one or not; and to-morrow they may pack up their chattels and move on. At the faintest rumor of a bigger "find" in another camp, the men to whom they belong will be off, and they must follow. They stand in their doorways, idling, wondering, waiting, gossiping and quarreling. The only placid creatures are the babies, whose simple needs of sun, dirt, and being let alone, are amply supplied. They are happy, and they only, in all the camp. It is a strange life, unnatural, unwholesome, leading to no good, comfortless to a degree which many of those who lead it would not endure a dav. except for the hope of great gain, which fires their very veins. The worst of it is that the life ia,as fascinating as it is unwholesome. "Once a miner always a miner" is a proverb which is little less than an exact truth. The life is simply a gamester's life, with the wide world for a hazard table, and the instances are rare in which a person who has once come under its spell ever breaks away. It is no uncommon thing, in Colorado, to meet an old gray-haired man who has been prospecting and mining all his life, and has not yet made a dollar, but is buoyantly sure that he will "strike it" soon. The Atlantic,
A. SEVENTH SEN8S. Sir William Thompson, the eminent Professor of Mathematics in the University of Glasgow, in his inaugural address delivered as President of the Midland institute, at Birmingham, broached the idea of the existence of a magnetic sense. This sense he called the seventh sense, to distinguish it from our other six senses namely, those of sight, hearing, taste, smell, heat and force. He said that, in speaking of a possible magnetic sense, he in no way supported that wretched, groveling superstition of animal magnetism, spiritualism, mesmerism or clairvoyance, of which they had heard so much. There was no seventh sense of a mystic kind. Clairvoyance, and so on, was the result of bad observation chiefly, mixed up with the effects of willful imposture, acting on an innocent and trusting mind. If there were no distinct magnetic sense, it was a. very great wonder there was not. The study of magnetism was a very recondite subject. One very wondertol discovery that was made in electric magnetism was made by Faraday, and worked out very admirably by Foucauld, au excellent French experimenter, showing that a piece of copper or a piec3 of silver let fall between the poles of a magnet would fall down slowly,, as if through mud. Was it conceivable that, if a piece of copper could scarcely move through the air between the poles of an electric magnet, a human being or living creature in the same position would experience no effect? Lord Lindsay got an enormous magnet, so large that the head of any person wishing to try the experiment conld get well between the poles, and the experiment was marvelous, the marvel being; that nothing was perceived. Sir. William Thompson, however, was not willing to admit that the investigation was complete. He could not think that the qualify of
matter in the
jarwwroduced such
feet on a living body. He thought the experiment was worth repeating; and it was worth examining whether or not an exceedingly powerful magnetic force was without perceptible effect on a living vegetable or animal body. His own speculations hod led him to conclude that there might be a seventh or magnetic sense, and that it was possible an exceedingly powerful magnetic effect might be produced on living bodies that could not be explained by heat, force or any ether sensation. British Medical Journal.
CUMtSXMAH TUOUGUTS. Would that Christmas lasted the whole year through (as it ought), and that tiie prejudices and passions which deform our better natures were never called into action among those to whom they should ever be strangers. Christmas time! That man must be a misanthrope, indeed, in whose breast something like a jovial feeling is not roused in whose mind some pleasant association is not awakened by the recurrence of Christmas. The Christmas tree casts no glowing shadow. But, as it sinks into the ground, I hear a whispering going through the leaves: "This, in commemoration of the law of love and kindness,- mercy and compassion. This in remembrance of Me. " On this day reflect upon your present blessings of which every man has many not on your past misfortunes, of which ail men have Borne. Smile again with a merry face and contented heart, then your Christmas shall be merry and your New Year a happy one. Happy, happy Christmas, that can win us back to the delusions of our childish days; that can recall to the old man the pleasure of his youth; that can transport the sailor and the traveler thousands of miles away, back to his own friends and his quiet home. Charles Dickens.
THE EDITORIAL WE." There is something so distinctively terrifically horrible, or horrifically terrific in a cold analysis of the editorial "we," that we almost pause, awestricken and dumbfounded on the threshold of its discussion. How did it get in? That is, who first flung it into the broad arena of journalism, and then slunk behind its embattled walls like the cowardly cur that he was ? Where is the wretch who forced it upon us? Reflect for a moment upon the incongruity of an editor writing about "our wife," or "our sweetheart," or "our boil on the back of our neck," or "our toothbrush, "or anything else that implies personal possession.' Yet, by the baleful use of the editorial "we," the editorial hack writer is compelled to use just such insipidities and linguistic atrocities. How does it sound to say "the man whipped us," or to vary the illustration "we whipped the man?" In the first' we become pusillanimous ; in the latter, cowardly. Either of them is an incorrect representation of the fact. "We mounted our horse," signifies that the animal was a good one, and could carry double. We have a strong suspicion that the term originated with a wild-eyed editor who first wrote, "we took a drink." In this case, no matter if it be a solitaire 12$ cent drink, there is a chance to divide the blame somehow, and throw half the responsibility on some other fellow. But this is the only redeeming feature about the "we. " It is a doubleheaded hydra which should be squelched and fired into the dim Buena Vista of the past, relegated to obsoletism, and drummed out of the editorial camp. At least, that is the way we think about it. Texas Sifting s.
LEAD POISONING. A printer named Bobert H. Jones died in this city from the effects of leadpoisoning. He was a sober mim, and while at work he inhaled the dust from the types which he was compelled to handle. This dust is known to be quite poisonious. The death of this poor man brings out the fact that alcohol is very generally regarded as an antidote for lead-poisoning. This is at least a tradition in all well-regulated newspaper offices, and is for this reason that printers are never asked to join temperance societies. If they do sign a pledge it is with a mental reservation touching lead-poisoning. New York World. The Chicago Cosmos, a weekly newspaper in the English and Noi-we-gian languages, published by Mr. Jac. B. Ellerston, lias reached an enviable circulation, and been enlarged to a sixcolumn quarto. We understand still further enlargement is contemplated in the near future.
Keep away from Norristown, Pa., if you intend to become a newspaper man. The Herald says: "Young men who become jockeys and drive the winning trotter in a horse race, accumulate more money than a Harvard graduate who embarks in the newspaper business."
The bigger a newspaper is the more
bustle there is about it.
Cause of HI Health. In the shape of bad sewerage, the development Df foetid gases in dwellings and closely populated neighborhoods, bad bouse ventilation, and the Impregnation of the air with miasma in the vicinity of sunken lots and stagnant pools, are 10 rife, that it is a wonder how the inhabitants of towns and cities preserve any Immunity from disease. The necessity for prompt and offieicnt household remedies is daily growing move imperative, aud of these Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is the fihief in merit and the most popular. Irregularity of the stomaoh and bowels, malarial fevers, liver complaint, debility, rheumatism and minor ailments, are thoroughly Kmquered by this incomparable family restorative and medioinal safeguard. Both in town nd country it is regarded, and justly, as the purest and most comprehensive remedy of .ts class, and it has, moreover, the sanction of leading medical men who have thoroughly and practically tested it. 'What do you mean, you rascal, by spilling my coffee all over me?" shoutod n enraged passenger. "Never mind, air," protested the waiter, "I'U get you some more, sir." The original Jacob'sladdor was one of those thiugs that worked both ways. It was not only a flight of stairs, but scairs of light. A Good Investment. One of our prominent business men said to us the other day: "In the spring my wife got all run down and could not eat anything; passing your store I saw a pile of Hood's Sarsaparilla in the druggist's window, and I got a bottle. After she had taken it a week she had a rousing appetite. She took three bottles, and it was t he best three dollars I over invested." C. 1. Hood k Co., Lowell, Mass. At a town meeting in Ireland it was recently voted that "all persons in the town owning dogs should be muzzled." From Boulder, Col., Miss N. E. Wilder, writes: "Samaritan Nervine cured me of epilepsy. " Some one who believes that " brevity is the Boul of wit " writes, " Don't eat Q cumbers, they'll W you up." No opiates or drastic cathartics are to be found in that peerless remedy, Samaritan Nervine. If they take the tax off whisky it will go down. The kind they make now shows an occasional disposition to como up. An Interesting patent Suit. Kelson Eyon, of Albany, N. Y., has recovered judgment of $8,477.10, against G. T. Fisher & Co., in the U. S. Circuit court, at Detroit, Mich., for an infringement of Lyon'a Patent Metallic Heel Stiffener. This contrivance is one of the most useful of modern inventions, and has achieved a remarkable sale over 8750,000 worth, the testimony showed, having been sold since the patent was granted, being a grand total of 3,888,000 pairs. The invention consists of a neat metal plate fastpniug to the outside of a boot or shoe heel, arranged to prevent the counters from breaking over and the heel from wearing down unevenly. The Attorney General of the United States declared the Lyon patent invalid on account, of an infom.a'.ity in tho application. This was afterward corrected by the Commissioner of Patents in accordance with a special act of Congress aut horizing it. Aet;on was commenced in May, lst-0, a perpetual Injunction was obtained iu December, and the esse was referred to a master, who reported the damaros as $3,631, but on motion tho court doubled the same, and directed judgment to be entered against defendants lor such double damages, with interest and costs.
S. Cnultan, of Circlc-illc. Kau.,
Wmte Wine of Tar
'ur-l Clergymen.
I!ev. L.
s-vvs: Dr. Warrior, your
Syrup has beo.i in my family and fou'id to bt nil and eren more fian you claim, of it. it is a speedy cure for all Throat and Lungdisia?es. Nothing Like It. No medicine has ever been known so effectual in .the cure of all those diseases arising from an impure condition of the blood as Scovill's Sarsaparilla, or Blood and Liver Syrup, for the cure of scrofula, whits swellings, rheumatism, pimples, blotches, eruptions, venereal sores and diseases, consumption, goitre, boils, cancers, and all kindred diseases. No better means of securing a beautiful complexion can be obtained than by using Scovill's Blood and Liver Syrup, which cleanses the blood and gives beauty to the skin. " My Wife and Children. Bev. L. A. Dunlap, of Mt. Vernon, says: My children were afflicted with a cough resulting from Measles, my wife with a cough that had prevented her from sleeping more or less for years, and your White Wine of Tar Syrup has cured them all. Fon dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of amirita and cmnara.1 dnh1lit,v in thatr vorlnno
forms; also as a preventive against fever and
ague, ana outer incennraent levers, me "Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Galisaya." made by Caswell, Hazard &Ca, Now Tork, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal The medical properties of petroleum ha'e long been known to the aborigines, and since Carl Qine has become so well known as a hair restorer and dressing, petroleum takes front rank among the new remedies. To cure a sore throat, gargle with Piso's Cure for Consumption. 25 cents. The most comfortable boot in town is that with Lyon's Patent Metallic Heel Stiffenera, A CHiiiD that wakes with croup should have a dose of Piso's Cure.
I
If and If. "If you are suffering from poor health
or languishing on a bed of sickness, 'take cheer; if you are simply ailing, 'or if yon feel weak and dispirited, without clearly knowing why, Hop Bitters will surely euro you." "It you are a Minister, and have overtaxed yourself with your pastoral duties, or a Mother, 'worn out with care and work, or a man of busi'ness or laborer weakened Ly the strain of your 'everyday duties or a man of letters, toiling 'over your midnight work. Hop Bitters will 'surely strengthen yon." "If you are suffering 'from djrer-caling: or 'drinking, any indis'cretion or dissipation, 'or are young and 'growing too fast, as is 'often the case," " Or if you are in the workshop, on ' the farm, at the desk, anywhere, and 'feci tlrt your (system needs cleans'ing, toning, or stimulating, without 'intoxicating, if you are old, blood ' thin and impure, pulse feeble, nerves 'unsteady, faculties waning, Hop 'Bitters is what you need to give you 'new lifo, health and vigor." If you are costive or dyspeptic, or or suffering from any other of the numerous diseases of the stomach or bowels, it is your own fault if yon remain ill. If you are wasting away with any form of Kidney disease, stop tempting death this moment, and. turn for a cure to Hop Bitters. If you are sick with that terrible sickness Nervousness, yon wlU flnda"BalminGilead" in Hop Bitters. If you are a frequenter or a realdent of a miasmatic district, barricade your system against the scourge of all countries malaria, epidemic, bilious and intermittent fevers by the ass of Hop Bitters. If you Uttve rou?h, yhuply, or sallow skin, bad broach, Hop Bitters will elve you fair skin, rich blood, the sweetest breath, and health. $300 will be paid for
a cose they will not cure or help.
lid i u
ew bottles of Hop Bitters costing but a trifle.
That poor, bedridden, invalid wife, sister, mother.
or daughter, can be made the uicture-of health by
DR. SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP. SEAWEED TONIC, & MANDRAKE PILLS. As the proprietor of these medicines I conscientiously offer them to the publie as safe, reliable and certain remedies for the Cure of Consumption, and with equal confidence as almost a specific for those morbid conditions of the body, which, if neglected, are apt to terminate in fatal diseases of the lungs. I claim that the use of my remedies will cure Consumption. I do not claim that the disease can be cured after the lungs are destroyed, for no medicine can create new ones ; but I maintain that tho first stages of Consumption are curable, even when the lungs are partially decayed. When one lung is sound I aru almost certain o making a cure, if the patient will take proper care of himself and follow luy directions. It may be asked, "How is it that you can know so much about this disease, and pretend to cure it, when so mauy educated physicians, who have made a study of it for years, pronounce it incurable f The Question is a fair one, aud shall be fairly answered: I do fwt claim to know more than other physicians about the causes, nature and" history of Consumption. I suppose that my views on these points would be found to agree with those of most educated and intelligent physicians. We should agree that wlille the final cause is obscure in otheirwords, while it is not possible to say tehy Consumption selects this otvtbat person as a victim yet the predisposing causes are : 1st, Inheritance. Consumption is hereditary in a wonderful degree. On parent very often entails it upon the offspring, and both still more frequently, so that whole families are often swept away, and hand fiie predisposition down to their children. 2d. Cold. By this we do not mean those changes of weather which often produce inflammation ; but long continued and steady cold, so that a condition of debility is produced. Indeed, whatever tends to produce long continued debility will, in some persons, generate Pulmonary Consumption. Prominent among these influences are insufficient diet, living in an unwholesome air, sedentary habits, grief, anxiety, disappointment, whethor of the affections or in business, and all other depressing emotions ; the abuse of mercury and the, influence of weakening diseases. I also agree with the best doctors as to the manner in which the lungs become affected. Pulmonary Consumption is also called Tubermtlou Consumption, by which we mean a disease of the lungs caused by tubercles. A tubercle is a small, roundish body, which is deposited in the substance of the lungs by tho blood. This is the beginning aud first act of the disease. Mauy of these are often deposited at once. Each one undergoes several changes. After producing inflammation of the parts of the lung next to it, it ends m ulceration, opens a passage into the bronchial tubes, and passes out at the mouth by spitting. The place where the tubercle grew and ripened now becomes a cavity, aud where there are a great ninny tubercles of eoutse they make a great many of these little cavities, which gradually uuite and leave great holes iu the lungs. Unless a stop can be put to this process, it will go on until the substance of the lungs is consumed and death ensues. Of course I agree with the faculty upon the symptoms and course of the disease : the short, dry, hacking cough, so slight at first, but gradually incroasiug ; then shortoeHS of breath, a quickening pulse, thou feverish sensations, flushing o the cheeks, aud heat iu the palms of the hands and soles of the feet; the slight but growing emaciation, with feeble appetite, hemorrhages, increasing cough, disturbed sleep, fevered tongue, then loss of appetite, expectoration ot sof teued tubercle in the shape of small lumps of yellowish, cheesy or curdy matter; hectic fcver, brilliant eye, chills, night sweats, sharp pains in the sides, increasing emaciation and debility, disordered stomach aud bowels, diarrhea, nausea, swollen extremities, hollow cheeks, sunken eyes, weakness so great that expectoration is inipo.-adble : then death, bringing welcome relief from the tortures of this horrid monster. Xoiv, as I have said, I mainly agree with the medical faculty on these points. But whou we come to the treatment of the disease I differ from it totally. The doctors believe Pulmonary Consumption cannot be cured. Therefore they do not try to do anything more titan to smooth the patient's path to the grave, and seem quite reckless of the medicines they give, so that the patient is kept comfortable and easy, even it his life is shortened. As soon as tubercles begin to appear iu the luugs of a patient, it is a common practice with many leading physicians to begin dosing with whisky in increasing uuantities, until the ravages of excessive dram-drink mg are added to the ravages of tlie disease ; and I have yet to hear of a single case of Consumption which was cured by stimulants. I can say the same of Cod Liver Oil. Many physicians send their patients away from home on distant voyages, to Minnesota or Florida anything or anywhere so that they may die easy. For they do not pretend to cure, and they have no remedies which will do so. Now I say not only that diseases of the lungs can be cured, but that my medicines do cure them. Tlie proof is, that by their use thousands of Consumptive have been and are now being cured by them. The whole science of medicine is based on experiments. We cannot by any process of reasoning decide that any particular medicine will help or ours any particular disease. How was it found that Quinine will cure Chills and Fevers? Why, by trying one thing after another, until experience demonstrated that it was a specific for that disease. In just that way the knowledge was gained of my remedies, which are almost a specific in diseases of the lungs. FulmonaryConsumption is hereditary in my father's family. His father, mother, brothers and sisters died of it, and he had reached almost the last stages of the disease when he was providentially led to experiment with the articles which are incorporated in these medicines. He was cured by them, and lived a strong, healthy wan for over forty years after his recovery. What cured him has cured thousands of others all over the country. These results are not accidental. There is no such thing as accident in nature. Whatever may be the came, the origin of Pulmonary Consumption is in the blood. Whenever, from any of the predisposing causes which I have just now mentioned, the blood becomes degenerated, it begins to make tuberculous deposits in the substance of the lungs . This must be stopped or death will surely follow. It will not be enough to get rid of the tubercles already deposited, and heal up the sores already made, but something must bo done to stop further deposits. What shall that be? The regular faculty say nothing can be done. I say purify, enrich and tone up the blood, until it becomes so healthy as no longer to make tubercles. Can this be done? Yes. How? By the easiest and most natural way in the world. Take a man who shows to theexperienced eye, by many infallible signs, that Cons-.tlnptiou lias set in. He is feeble and without appetite. Now see what I intend to do : First, I propone to cleanse his stomach, and bowel of their dead, slimy, flogging matter. This I shall do with my Mandrake Mils, which are the best cathartic pills in the world. They contain no calomel or other minerals, only vegetable matter. They evacuate the stomach and bowels gently but thoroughly, and do not weaken or gripe. They act like magic on the liver, rousing it out of its dull, torpid state, and promoting a full, free flow of healthy bile, without which there can be no perfect digestion. Now that the stomach and bowels are cleansed and ready what next? Create an apjtriitr. Thin I do by iny Seaweed Tonic. The effect of this medicine is wonderful. Uulike a temnorsrv .stimulant, which bv it-action lets the or
gans affected Kiuk lower than before, this not only touesnp the stomach, but keeps it toned up. Tlie natural craving for food returns in all its lorce.so that we havt now a stomach hungry tor food, and a digestive apparatus r.dy to make way with it. What next? Any ouh can answer that question. J'ut into tliat hungry stomach nn abundant supply of nutritious food to be converted bp the ntnmge chemlxtry of Mqextlon into rich red blood. This will stimulate tho heart into stronger action, and it will pump a fuller current out tlirons'h the arteries : healthy blood will take the place of the thin, blue flattened fluid in tlie veins, and soou a circulation will be established which will flow through the lungs without making any unhealthy deposits ; strength and health will increase, and the bad symptoms steadily diminish. At the same timo use my Pulmonic Syrup ; it is tlie liest expectorant known . It blends with tho food, and through the blood goes directly to the luugs, attacks and loosens up the yellow, foul stuff left there by the ripened tubercles, and strengthens aud stimulates the bronchial tubes and coatings of the air postages until they got strong enough to lift it out and expel it by expectoration. Then the lungs get over their soreness and have a chance to rent and heal. So you see that I have not only shown that my medicines do actually cure Consumption by experiment, but it also seems plain that they, or something Uke them, would, from the nature of the case, do soT J. H. SCHBNCK, M.D. For a full description of Consumption in all its various forms, and also Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia, those groat forerunners of Consumption, see my book on OoUHiimution ond its CiirA." Thin lr,v .C
tains the history of hundreds of cases that have been cured in all parts of the country. I send it tree, postpaid, to all applicant. Address DB. J. H. SOHENCK & SON, Philadelphia, Fa
DR. SCHENCK'S MEDICINES:
MANDRAKE PILLS,
SEAWEED TONIC,
and Pli'LW J SYRUP
Are sold bv all Drurifai. aiM heir
use ore printed oa the vtW; "'
40s
n Open
Secret. The fact is well understood that the MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT is by fat the best external known for man or beast. The reason why becomes an "open secret" when we explain that "Mnstang" penetrates skin, flesh and mnsclo to the very bone, removing all disease and soreness. No other liniment does this, hence none other is so largely used or does such worlds of good.
70 A WEEK, ftf a day at home eaaflT made . Costly I outfit free. Address True It Co., Augusta, Maine. DIO DRVTo sell our rubber hand stamps. Terras DID rAl free. Taylor Bros. Co., Cle veland.Ohio. IflTUCDO 4-worau. (The Qret Worm Destroyer.) Will Mil 1 fiCnO eur. your children. Get It st Drugglit. Me. K la VIA per day at home. BamplM worth ts free. $9 10 ZU Address Brptgow Co- gortland. Maine. Wm U Hnnnor Constructing and Contracting KngiTIHI. Ili lfUU!6l, neer Minine, Shop and Agricultural Machinery--Assayer 83 William St., New Yore.
I AXS, send for catalogues ; Headq'rs for all i . t. i r . j - iwiviMiin
MUSIC CO., 55 East 4th Street, New York.
music
$250
A MONTH. Agents Wanted. 90 best selling articles in the world. 1 sample FHUS Address JAY BRONSON, Detroit, Mich.
WANTfcD experienced Book and Bible Agents in every County. Liberal Salaries Paid. Address, staling experience, P. Q. Box g. g.. Chicago. 111. Vn iinry MM A learn Tkzjeobapht here and I UUilg IVICn we will give you a situation. ObxulMS fra. TAXEKXINK BROS Janesvula, Wis.
FREE
ALLEN'S
Lung B
alsam!
A GOOD FAMILY REMEDY r THAT WILL CTIRE-w mm, GOLDS, CROUP,
Dr. Meredith, Deattat, of Ciui!lnnU, w thought b be In the but utaava f 4!oiutUon and was Induced by hi friendt to try Alk-n'e Lung Balsam after the formula wt fhoirn him. We nave bit letter that It at once cured kli congli and that ha wmi able to relume hit practice.
c o N S U
Jeremiah Wrijrr, a Marhn County, W. Y wrltei a that MiwWe&a FulaMaary VawaauB4iaa anS was pronoun cvd aaaua raMs by their yaftiaav when the w la Lung BaUam etWaW eared kar. Ha wathJk he aud ub aetf ItMaai It the hot nr la earn.
CONSUMPTION.
Wm, C. Dln, Merchant, of Bowling Green, Va., mites April 4, 1881, that he wants us to know that the Utag Balsam bai enrad hla swtlur of CauinptloM, after tho physician had given her op as incurable. Ha says others knowing her case hare taken the Balaam and been cured. He thinks all so afflicted should aiTO Ita trial.
P T I O IU
Wm. A. Graheen, A Gey. Wholesale PruagtHa, Zanesville, Ohio, writ sar of the cure of MaUnta freeman, well-iaawa, citizen, who bad beea a, dieted with roarhitto a its worst form for two!, years. The Ltm? Habeas, cured Mm at it b cured many others of Ml ealUs.
A1LEITS LUIIG BALSAD Is lutrmless to the most delicate child! It contains no Opium In any form ! Recommended by rhTeMaaa, Miatatcra and Nurse, fa tW V everybody who has given It a good trial. It Serer talis la aViaas As an Expectorant It has no Eqtial. SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS.
a week rn yoor own town. Terms and $5 tiiilM free, AddreeW H. Halljett Co., Portland, !
$66
tfjin ft 1 VniTlira "Hard Cash and How to Gets" 01 U U A fflUnlflThe fastest sellingbook Bowpjatv- . ' TST"T"T lished. Terms liberal. AdcU'aaav Agents Wanted. v.raHr & Co.,Pub,Philadeli1a.
..
C r WSt Crick, Spraina, Wrenches, Kbeaaw-
ar ara aa farek i mism, junmuKun, bct..
PAINS
P Mim, rf 7 VM1I TW..Hm
ISoadT'i Sew Tailor System of Dross Outtiu.j MOOUV a (X), thaeinuaU.0.
Wholesale and retail. Bend for price-list. J Goods sent C. O. D. Wigs made to order, i K.BUKXHAM, 71 State street, Chicago.
PATIENTS
J NO PATE ST, NO PAY! !
it. h. & a. i: i.wkx. raten
Pleurisy Pains, Stitoh tn tho Sids, Backache, Swollen JoJaata).. ITa. TtttuMtaaL Rme aTn Mlem
Pain in the Chest, und all pains and aches either local ar deetxeated are instantly relieved and speedily cured hjr tha well-known Bop Master. Compounded, as ft rs,er the medicinal rlrtueaof fresh Hops, Gums, Batasntsaamtv Extracts, is Indeed tlie feast pain-killlnfc, Btimnlaiints...
sootning; ana bwtojjwivumus - . . Bop Plattera aro sold by all drasaistsandetnintTy atm ma.
xa cents ronw ior 91. w. g m nrm Uailod on receipt of j 111 J'tr
pnetft, xwy jrnei. Proprietors and Manufacturers, Boston,Uass.
PLASTER
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'
AGENT8 WANTED yWR2&,& ting Machine ever invented. Will knit a pair ot stockings with HEEL and TOE ompletc iu 20 minutes. It will also kuit a great variety of fantjrwork for which there is always a ready market. iend for circular aud terms to the Twomhty Knittinjg Machine Co.. 183 Tremont Street. Boston. Mass.
tyCoated tongue, bad breath, sour stomach and Hnmt
disease eared ey Havney s scomaen anu urrer 111a, a
m
0
If?
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Use in lime. Sold by druggists. IS
StMmmMJmSjMJUkAmSMwLmkaZX
CATARRH
SURE CURE
vVueu you have :
had Catarrh lomr ,
enougn and want j
to oe cure.i, tusi
writ tn Dr.CE. SYKES, Chicago, III., for mil iu
lormatiou ot
a Sure cure. You will not
regret it.
fgilRlilLIIIITill&S
iqjBRLHHWeaJI HJflMsaH H IHIB1IB
Ihava a posture remedy tot the above disease; by its U9 thousands of coses of the worst kind and of long acundlnir have boen cured. Indeed, so stronfr is my rntta "S Tw' enScacyTuSrtl will send TWO BOTTLES FHEE, together nrlth a V ALU ABLH THEaTISB on this dhwase.to any uutrerer Give Express and r. O-addrens. v DB. 'A At BhOCClI. m realist.. New Tort. AN OPTICAL WONDER
THE SURE CURE
FOR
KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, CONSTIPATION, PILES. AND BLOOD DISEASES.
PHYSICIANS ENDORSE IT HEARTILY, (
A NEW. oriprinal, cheap lantern, for projecting and en-
larpng photographs, cliromo curds, opaque pictures aud objects. Works like uuuric, and delights and mystifies everybody. Send for our roll aud free descriptive circular iluniUA- HlLL Pub. Co., Box 788, N. Y. City, K. X.
"Kidnoy-Wort is the most successful remedy I ever uaed." Dr. P. C. Eallou, Mc nkton, Vt "Kidnoy-Wort Is always reliable." Br. B.. It. Clark, So. Hero, Vt. "Kidney -Wort has cured my wife after two years) aufferine." Dr. C. M. Summcirlin, Son Hill. Go. IN THOUSANDS OF CASES it ha:; cured where all clue had failed. It is mild, but efficient, CEKTAIJi IX ITS ACTIOS, Mat harmless in all eases. i3T It cleanses the Blood and Stwactaena anal
gives New Life to all the important orga.na of
the body. The natural action of too KKineya restored. The Liver is eleanaed of all discs. . and tho Bowels niove freely and heeUthfaHy.
In tola way the worst discs so. are from tho system. raicK, si.00 uquid oa drt, sou it Dry can be soot by mall.
WEIX8, mcnaJRDSOIf Sc CO. BaurUaartMi Vt.
TO OWNERS OF HORSES! Do you not know that a horse as ordinarily shod does not have the footing: which nature intended? For travel on pavements and hard and stony roads some protection for horses' feet is necessary, but ordinary shoeing: is inadequate and injurious. It throws the entire weight of the horse on the outer rim of the hoof alone, and removes it entirely from the frog, leaving the latter exposed to injury from nails, glass or jagged stones, upon which a horse is liable to step at any time. The result in thousands of oases is that the horse becomes lamed from contraction, corns, thrush, cuts or bruises. Ordinary shoeing: is wrong in principle and injurious in practice. It is little better for a horse than would be a shoe with only a rim of leather for a sole for man's use. A horse can be shod so that the pressure can be distributed just as it would be were the horse standing barefooted on the turf, and at the same time a complete protection against all injuries to the foot can be secured. This can be done by using the LOCKIE HORSESHOE PAD, iho principal feature of which is a Btout soleleather solo placed between the hoof and the shoe, as' seen in tho outs. The LOCKIE PAD is used and indorsed
in strongest terms by BITDD D011LE and scores of well
known horse-drivers and traines; DR. W. RHEPARD,
and scores of well-known veterk.a ".- surtrcous; H.
BEMIS and scores of well-known horse-owners: J.
BROWN and scores of well-known liverymen. Huud
of horscilnei s indorse it. Save vour horse by stv
his test. Increase his value bv em-ina his feet- .'Ike
him lmifh moro valiiahlo hv oivintr him alwat'SEafe,
sure and springy footing, thus increasing hiscoudcncc and annrxl. Inmmvinr liia tnnuutr. and ffiving him the
disposition to do his prettioot nml best. Thousands are now using the LOCKIE PAT), and every one indorses it. Every horse ownr is cordially invited to call and learn more about tie PAD, or to write for full particulars. We will shoe your lame horses with the
PAD. and If rhov aro not cured win vuaiT.e you noting. K
Liberal discount to the trade. All horeeshcers can apply tho PAD without license.
UQiOE HORSESHOE PfiB 881F
ALBERT CEJEYt rras t. J). Kciaaif, Manager. OFFICES : N- E- Cor- N- Clark and Kinzie Sts., Booms 1 and 2, CHICAGO, IIX.
1 1
r.
I
1
I J
M Arw
m mm .
tirvf II
Ms I 1
I
I IT
I
rv m For wusinrss at me tiaesi c ncsi
Mf rTComnterctal College. Circular tree. 6C6eCG&6& AddrtaCAXl.iss,Dubuqu,l.
nP fl "BS $io to $300 per Month El II aecordinj to ability, in handling our
now, HnuuowuKijr .iiuai-roiva anu lamuir
Bead
selling books and Family Bibles.
af Af for large circulars andextra terms.
A.a.Nettleton&Co.,CbicarollL,
Esiulillblicd. 1872; Incorporated, 1fe0. PortheCuro of Cuncera, Tumor, ITlccra, Scrotal and &K1H rlSttSK without tho
use of knife or losr of moon, and little pahv For INJORMATION, OlBCt'LaRS AND RE1'RINCK8. addrCM DM. F. It. FOND, Aurora. Jkamm Co,, III
ORGAN AGENTS Wanted in every County.
TO SPECULATORS.
aS1N ROVISIOIf BROKERS Niw YhriTr&L S2nVl0en Produce BxcbtngM tat. Ohi,?J???,lxUf,1YP TLMV? tolesraph wire baiw., i1r,VoS".dKNewTo,,k- wm execute orders on owF li ,Snntwnenr,'U,e8ted. Send fttroiroularsoontBaam-, biK particular. ItbBT. HNPBU1M l? o5L.CiaZ.
C.N.U.
No. 51-SX
WHEN WKITING TO AOVKKTISKKML . please my you tutvn the aulvwMaswnajsjft in tnis paper, .
A .. ' i, Kp$t!
