Bloomington Telephone, Volume 8, Number 40, Bloomington, Monroe County, 6 December 1884 — Page 7

THE TRUN15G SCHOOL. Adds Kw M$y to Ubw- ArtUaas

wIt in a very good thing!" said an old gentleman, energetically, a he looked at the display of tools made in one of the galleries on the Olive street side of the Exposition Building by the Manual Training School. "Whafa a good thing?" a reporter inquired "This school, w said the gentleman, adjusting his glasses as he glanced admiringly at the long tables and decorated walls. "It adds a new and fresh dignity to labor, and gives hope that the trades, and all branches of the mechanical arts, will receive the attention from A-"" which they deserve. The reporter asked for an explanation. "They've all taken to the professions, said the old gentleman. "They've all started oat to be lawyers, doctors, artists, actors, and things of that sort, haven't they? Of course. Well, a few more schools, of this kind will break up that sort of thing. It will make young men feel proud of work they can do with theix hands, and teach them that it is as noble and honorable as the work that folks do with their heads, "I talk this way," the speaker continued "because I have given some attention to this matter, and find that the trades are gradually slipping out of the hands of Americans. Your artisan nowadays is seldom an American. Foreigners build your houses and fashion the metals that are used in the construction of your machinery. a Go to any house in process of erection and count, the carpenters there employed. You will find them Scotch, P,ngii'ghj or German, but not American. Count the bricklayers; they are usually Irishmen or the sons of Irishmen. Go to your foundries; the em ployes are of all nationalities except American. The same state of affairs will be found in nearly every factory and place of product in the country. Question the bosses, and they will tell you it is the most difficult thing in the world for them to obtain good apprentices of the home-made pattern. The foreign element predominates to an alarming extent in every department of industry, in every branch of skilled labor, particularly of the middle order. "It is not only curious it is reallv painfully absurd to see the neglect with which the skilled lines of labor are treated by American boys end AmeriaV - -w m- ...

can parents, as jl saia oexore, tne industries are now in the hands of our foreign-born citizens or their sons, and it takes two generations of these to find out that the trades are beneath them and not worthy their time or 'attention. That's what makes the socalled workingman's vote a matter of every-day barter in these United States the fact that it belongs to the new element coming constantly in, like a wide and deep stream filling the gulf that submerges and sinks out of sight the real American. n "What becomes of Young America ?w the reporter asked "Young America," was the straightforward and emphatic reply, "is a glorious fraud. Young Americans want to hold lilies in their hands, part their hair in the middle and walk like a lot of animated saw-bucks strutting around on their hind legs. The young American wants to be adored. He is thirtynine hundredths ambition and one hundredth ability, as a general thing. He always starts out in life with an object, and a poor one at that, or he is started out in the wrong way. He puts in all the time his parents can pay for at tfchool, and when he lays aside his calculus, piano, and Indian clubs, he turns up his nose at the smoke of our factories with an "Oh, dear me, how horrible !" and turns his eyes in the direction of the arts the professions something at which he can sit for a few hours with his heels on a desk, and spend the major portion of his time regretting the fact that he is ashamed to beg and afraid to pilfer. iSt Louis Globe. GMkbff There are many ways of cooking a frog, or rather the only joints of him that are eaten namely, his hind legs, to which a part of his back is left attached; chiefly to hold those limbs toSther. The edible portions should st be thrown into plenty of fresh cold water to blanch; next, they should be drained and dried; then put to soak awhile in white of eggs well beaten up; now powder them over with flour; and finally fry them in plenty of fine olive oil until they are crisp as "the whitebait of the minister, that treasure the sea, ; and the bones are changed into something so rich and strange that they melt in the mouth. Add a lemon, red pepper, brown bread and butter, to complete "the loaves and fishes9 illusion, and say if "fricassee de greneuilles be not much easier to eat than to pronounce, and a species of "small deer by no means to be abandoned to poor Tom. You can devil them like the "bait, too, if you like; and they make a tip-top curry. Or they fry well in batter; or you stew them in butter and white wine, with parsley and enough garlic to swear by chopped up fine. Bit, no matter how they be tooked, they are very pretty eating, and make a delicious entree tenderer than the youngest chicken, and still with a flavor and a velvety texture all their own. Pall Mall Gobme. In the cotton States there are 197,000,000 acres of land in farms, of which 67,350,000 axe improved. The cotton area actually tilled were about 44,000,000 acres in 1879. The crops in tillage now occupy about ,000,000 acres, the difference representing the increase since the census from which the above figures were taken was made. The census value of farm production for this section is $547,000,000. During thte first four months of this year, $54,000,000 was invested in Southern manufacturing. Comment a fool for his wit, or a knave for his honesty, and they wfll receive you into their bosom. Field-

HOW HE ESCAPED, She Strange Story of a Doctor's Persona Experience. Syracuse (N. Y.) Herald. The Herald lays the following statement before Ita readers, with the assurance that it is undoubtedly true in every particular. The writer is a well and widely known citiizen. and his case is familiar to a large nam ber of our readers, To the. Editor of the Herald: Sir I dislike the notoriety of a newspaper letter over my own signature, but in this matter duty compels me. As many are aware, I was for years in a feeble condition, many people expecting my death at; any time. In 1879, while at Denver, Col., I was attacked with a mysterious hemorrhage. I lost twenty pounds of flesh in three weoks. I . came home utterly broken down. My physicians said some peculiarity of the Western climate produced, the disorder. I made the journey again a few months later, however, without ill effects, but on my return home I was pros trated with pneumonia. My left lung soon entirely tilled, and my legs and body became twice their natural iiize. 1 was obliged to sit upright in bed for several weeks, In tue midst of the severest agony, with my arms over my head. I was in constant fear of suffocation. Many a night I bad deadly sinking spells. When the pneumonia abated the hemorrhages returned. My legs were twisted with cramps, my skin was very hot and dry, my blood circulated unevenly, my mouth was parched, I was tormented with the painj ot gravel and mucus in my fluids, and my back ached excruciatingly. I did not know what was my especial disorder, but in April, 1881, a council of five of the best physicians of Syracuse said I could not possibly recover. They advised me to try the virtues of ft certain mineral spring. With pitiful helple ssness, I dragged myself to the cars, but was obliged to stop over at Worcester, Mass. There I was again thoroughly examined by fifteen physicians, who concurred that I wtts incurable. Nevertheless, I continued my journey to the springs, remained there several weeks, but returned home without benefit or hope. My disorder was for years sapping and mining my constitu bion before the final at

tack was made. Fir.it I had chills and fever, then severe and protracted cold, then restlessness at night, nervous irritability by day, constantly distressing backache, unusual disposition to catarrh, pain in the chest, torpid liver, headache, and dull sensation in the base of the brain. For five years painful rheumatio pains affected my knee. Stomach and bowel derangements came in their turn, with an occasional fluttering of my heart, and an Inability to draw a long breath; quick fatigue followed much conversation; irregularity of appetite succeded Fitful pains of a neuralgic order flitted about my body, and after a day of hard work, my arms would feel numb, so I often had fears of paralysis. So terrible at times did my back and arms aohe that at the close of work I would lie on my couch for an hour with arms upraised in vain attempt for relief. After a night of restlessness and hallucination, I would awake in tbe morning with such a distressing headache that I could not arise until I had drunk a cup of strong coffee or tea. The disease which had fastened on me during all these years, my physicians said, was Br.'ght's disease of the kidneys, pronounced by every medical authority to be incurable. Having exhausted all authorized remedies, I

dismissed my medical attendants and began the use of Warner's safe cure in December, 1881. I faithfully persevered for two and one-half years, and it has saved my life and restored my health, when twenty of the most competent physicians said I could not recover I have taken over 20C bottles, following all diet rules and directions. I have hitherto refrained from publishing details of my case, because I wished to secure permanent effects before stating- results, but as I have been comparatively a well man for the last two years and abie to attend to my business daily, wholly through the preparation namei, I feel that I ought to spread its merits before the world. If you see fit to publish what; I have written 1 shall be gratified. Yours, ota. Dr. 8. G. Martin. Syracuse, N. T., Oct. 16, 1884. The Art of Personal Beauty In an article on this subject, Dr. Foot&s Health Monthly says: It is Eretty generally known that this art as been cultivated during at least a few thousand yeara, and mainly hj the gentler sex, A history of the art ra all its phases and developments would, no doubt, be interesting; and if we were to follow the investigations into a close study of the habits of animals and birds, we should probably be able to show that nature herself has pointed out sufficient reasons for perfection of form and color and artistic self-decoration. In lieu of all preparations recommended to effect the desired result, we have one specific to offer; it is health. A woman who can maintain perfect health hardly needs to patronize the artists who supply artifical aids to beauty. A woman who is over-stout can reduce her flesh and form to the artistic level by due attention to diet and exercise, and she can accomplish more in this way than by the use of any anti-fat medicine. By the same means diet and exercise, judiciously proportioned, the lean woman may gain flesh and rotundity. The pale and sallow girl can acquire a ruddy complexion in a better Why than by the application of liquid or powdered rouge. Falling hair and pimples can be remedied by means superior to any hair renewer or freckle lotions. It is largely through lack of education in hygiene that women fall into evil ways and acquire bad habits and lose the beauty of form, feature and color which Nature would willingly endow them with. m Beform in Dancing. If fashionable dancing should earnestly seek the modest and graceful, what a revolution it would be ! Can not that craze for revival of the antique which has inflicted upon our home architecture mediaeval English ugliness and inconvenience, find in the past some graceful and high-bred modes of dancing that are worth revival? Why not display graceful movements and posture in the minuet, instead of physical violence in the hugging whirl and bobbing and bumping? Or, if sweating physical activity is the want, why not hare it decently in the old style of steps and pigeon-wings and other gymnastic feats, done by each one singly and in emulation? Or why not have the Irish jig an entirely modest dance, into which each can put all desired violence without doing violence upon one another? Cincinnati Com merrial Gazette.

A Mercenary Parent. "Father, that voting reporter you kicked out of the house last week wants me to share his lot," said a New York girl to her father, who was a man of sense, and some means. "Nonsense," replied the flat-headed parent; "you tell that reporter to scoot, and you be polite iio that gentleman who comes to buy empty bottles and old clothes. He makes more money in one day than, three reporters do in a week. "I know it, pa; bus why are you so mercenary T&pqs Sittings.

" The Necessity off Sanitary Reform. Houses that are perfect, even in the general arrangement and construction of their sanitary works, are extremely rare. Those which, having begun perfect, contiwte so under daily occupation, are still more rare. So true is this that it is sometimes asked if it is, after all, worth while to encounter the additionl expense and the constant attention that perfection demands ; whether, indeed, the world has not got on so well in spite of grave sanitary defects that it is futile to hope for an improvement corresponding with the cost in money and time. The most simple and the efficient answer to this is that the world has not got on well at all, and is not getting on well; that among large classes of the population one-half of all the children born die before they attain the age of five years; that those who come to maturity rarely escape the suffering, loss of time, and incidental expense of unnecessary sickness ; that the average age of all ma n kind at death is not one-half what it would be under perfect sanitary conditions; that one of the chief items of cost in carrying on the world, to say nothing of the cost of burying those who die, is that of supporting and at tending the sick and helpless; that another great item is the cost of raising children to or toward the useful age, and then having them die before they begin to make a return on the investment; that the great object of a wellregulated life is to secure happiness for one's self and one's dependents, an aim which is crushed to the earth with every death of wife or child or friend. There is a sentimental view, no less important, which need not be recited, but which is sufficiently suggested to the minds of all who have had to do with the sanitary regulation of bouses by the frequency with which their services are called into requisition only when the officos of the undertaker have been performed. No cost and no care would be too great to prevent the constantly recurring domestic calamities which have had their origin, and which have found their development, in material conditions that a little original outlay and a constant and watchful care would have prevented. George E. Waring, Jr., in the Century, A Lump of Lead in the Stomach Could such a substance be introduced into it without jeopardy to life would produce scarcely less bodily annoyance than a mass of undigested food in the organ, which cannot act upon and convert its contents into nutriment because It is weak, or its gastric juice vitiated or deficient. To remedy the suffering, a wineglassful of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters should be swallowed without delay, and a course of that invaluable remedy for indigestion taken thereafter. For the debility, loss of flesh, night restlessness, despondency, and odd sensations to which chronic dyspepsia gives rise, it is a cheering and searching specific. With dyspepsia are usually associated cpnstipation and symptoms indicative of liver disorder. These ailments are entirely removed by the Bitters, which, moreover, invigorates the system and fortifies it against malaria.

How a Yankee Earns His Salt Some Yankee has devised a new method for salting cattle. The old way was to dump a handful of salt on a roek in the pasture or in the barnyard. Frequently it was dumped on the ground. In any event it had to be dumped somewhere with reasonable regularity to keep the cattle in good condition. The Yankee wished to save labor and to save salt. Devices to save something are the chief ends of Yankee inventive faculties, you know. This one made his salt into a firm cylinder nearly five inches long by three inches in diameter, hung it by iron spindles on a bracket, put a lacquered tin bonnet over it to protect it from the weather, and nailed it on the side of a barn, or a fence post, or some other place where the critters could get at it easily and lick it. Then he took out a patent, and sold his salt rollers for twenty-five cents each, including the bracket, printed directions, and sworn testimonials. New York Su7i,

An improvement in Upright Pianos has been introduced by the Mason & Hamlin Company, long- famous as organ makers, which is regarded as very important, adding to the beauty of tone of this instrument and rendering it much more durable. Boston Journal. Evolution and Religion The Rev. Mr. Windrow, a Presbyterian professor in a theological seminary, not only believes in evolution, but advocates it in his lectures to divinity students, and declares that it is in accord with, or rather not in contradiction to, the orthodox faith. He believes in the miraculous origin of life, but asserts that the evolution found in nature is God's method of creation. Various Presbyterian synods have discussed Dr. Windrow's theories with a view of declaring them heretical, but it has been decided that his teachings are not subversive of religious truth. Demore&Vs Monthly. Young and middle-aged men, suffering from nervous debility, premature old age, loss of memory, and kindred symptoms, should send three letter stamps for in: to illustrated treatise suggesting sure mo ms of cure. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N- Y. There is a girl in Georgia who has four feet. The man who mtirries her could keep his feet warmer toy sleeping with four icebergs. Netvman Independent,

Every Woman In the Band owes it to herself and her family to take care of her health. When she finds her health failing, anddebilitand weakness undermines her strength, her surest and best remedy is Kidney-Wort. It builds up the general health, keeps the secretory system in perfect order, regulates the Kidneys and Bowels, and enables these important organs to perform their natural functions in throwing off the accumulated impurities of the body. "Follow my baton and go with me," shbuted the conductor. " Don't turn out on our account; we are only killing time," replied the chorus. Texas Sitings.

Economy is wealth No woman really

practices economy unless she uses the Diamond Dyes. Many pounds can be saved every year. Ask druggist.. Only lOo. Simple to use. Wells. Hlohardson&Co.. Burling ton, VC u Do you believe in fate, Bridget?" asked the up stairs girl of the oook. " ghure, an' if Oi didn't, d'yer s'pose Ol d be af ther buyin' shoes?" That wonderful catholicon known as Lydia E, PJnkhain's Vegetable Compound has given the lady a world-wide reputation for doing good. It is a, living spring of health and strength.

A Barg ain In Cornter Lots is what most men dmire, but to keep from filling a grave in a cemetery lot ere half your days are numbered, alwayi keep a supply of Dr. Pierce's 44 Golden MeCcal Discovery " by you. When the first symptoms of consumption appear lose no time inputting yourself under the treatment of thl&favaluable medicine. It cures when nothing else will. Possessing, as it does, ten tinjes the virtue of the best cod-liver oil, it is not only the cheapest but far the pieasantest fo take. It purifies and enriches tho bloctf, strengthens the system, cures blotches, pmples, eruptions, and other humors. By dri ggists. Why would a practical joker make a successful auctioneer? Because of his success in selling his fiends, " Work, Work, Work !

How many women the-e are working to- ; day in various branches cf industry to say j nothing of the thousands of patient bousewives whose lives are an unceasing round of toil who are martyrs to those complaints to which the weaker sex is liable. 3 heir tasks are rendered doubly hard and irksome and their lives shortened, yet hard necessity compels them to keep on. To such Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription " offers a sure means of relief. For all female weaknesses it is a certain cure All druggists. Diminutive Dude "Why do you make me Wait until the last dance?' Young Lady "Oh, to give you time to grow." Important, 1 When you visit or leave New York City, save Baggage Expressage and Carriage Hire, and stay at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand

Central Depot: 600 elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator, Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cabs, stage, and elevated railroad to all depots. Families can live better :'or less money at the Grand Union than at any first-class hotel in the city. What should be the length of a man's arms? A man's arms may be short, but every bold step lengthens them two feet. Color Your Butter. Farmers that try to sell white butter are all of the opinion that dairying does not pay, f they would use Wells, Richardson & Co.'s Improved Butter Color, and market their butter in perfect condition, they would Btili get good prices, but it will not pay to make any but the best in color and quality. This color is used by all the leading creameries and dairymen, and is sold by druggists and merchants. It doesn't speak rauch of the size of a man's mind when it takes him only a minute to make it up. New York Graphic. Horsford's Acid Phosphate. WELL PLEASED. Dr. C Roberts, Winchester, 111., says: I have used it with entire satisfaction in cases of debility from age or overwork, and in inebriates and dyspeptics, and am well pleased with its effects." Why should you be careful how you entertain friendship? Because it has cold shoulder. Horse Breeding In America, Fifteen million of Horses are now owned iu America, and more than a million a year must be bred to keep up the supply. The largest portion of these are used for agricultural and heavy draft purposes, and such horses bring from $175 to $250 each. It would be impossible to breed them if it were not for the importation of Percberon horses. Five hundred stallions are now annually imported from France to the United States. The immense wealth they are adding to the nation will be better understood when it Is known that the first cross of a Percheron stallion with a native mare doubles the selling value of the colt when mature. Large numbers of Per cheron stallions are exported from the United States by Canadian breeders to renew the old French blood so highly prized, and also to give quality, style and action to the large English Draft and Clydesdale stock which has been bred there so long. Nearly one hundred Percheron stallions have been sold to Canada during the past two years by M. W. Dunham, Oaklawn Farm," Wayne, Illinois, the greatest importer of the French race, who has imported from France nearly 2,000 bead. He now has on hand several hundred of tbe finest Percberons to be found in France, nearly a!l recorded, with their pedi

grees, in the vsrc tt nov of France. How to Secure Health It is strange any one will suffer from derangement brought on by impure blood when Scovill's Sarsaparilla and StilUngfc, or Blood and Liver Syrup, will restore health to the physical organization. It is a strengthening syrup, pleasant to take, and the best blood

purifier ever discovered, curing scrofula, syphilitic disorders, weakness of the kidneys, erysipelas, malaria, nervous disorders, debility, bilious complaints and diseases of the blood, liver, kidneys, qtomach, skin, etc. Put up'9 at the Oaolt House The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of $2 and $2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator; all appointments first-class. H. W. Horr, Proprietor. , Write for a Copy If you would lfkc to know all about the remarkable curative agent called Compound Oxygen, write to Drs. Starkey & Palen, 1109 Girard st, Philadelphia, for their Treatise on Compound Oxygen. Sent free. Brown's Bronchial Troches for Coughs and Colds: "The only article of the kind which has done me good service. I want nothing better." Rev. ft. H. Craig OtisviUt, N. Y. Sold only in boxes. Mensman's Peptonized Bkbf Tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its en tire nutritious properties. It contains bloodmaking, force-generating, and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility; also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-work, or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard & CoM proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists. From Maj. Downu, Military Instructor, Mt. Pleasant Academy, Sing Sing, N. Y.: During the very cold weather I was suffering with Catarrh. My head and throat ached so severely that I was obliged to keep quiet. Ely's Cream Balm was suggested. Within an fiour from the first application I felt relieved, the pain began to subside. In a few days I was entirely cured. W. A. Downs. Price 60 cents. What is beautiful? Why, Carboline, a deodorized extract of petroleum, as now improved and perfected. Clear as upring waterv delightfully perfumed and will not sou the finest linen fabrio a perfect toilet preparation and absolutely makes the hair grow on bald heads.

L

CI DU Telegraphy, or gJiort-Hand and Type CAnn Writlnsr Here. Situations furnished.

Address VALENTINE BIOS., Janesrille. Wis.

BEST HOLIDAY GIFT to Pastor, Parent, Teaclier, Child, Friend.

A WELCOME GIFT.

'WB3TEf

IDlQTlQNAj)

I IM

to

'iJBRARY

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Supplied at small extra cost with DKMSOJTS PATENT REFERENCE INDEX. The latest edition has 8000 more Words In its vocabulary than are found in any other Am. Pict'y and nearly 3 times the number of Engravings G.A c. II ERRUUI A CO., Pub'rs, Springfield Mat.

BEAD THE EVIDENCE Wltlch will Remove all Your Doubts Valuable Suggestiona A Good Investment -One that Yields "AN HUNDRED FOLD.1 Everything claiming the power to do good should be from a reputable source, otherwise it is open to suspicion. Dr. David Ken nedy, of Bondout, N. Y., affirms that his medicine, "Kennedy's Favorite Remedy," is the best article of its kind ever produced. Hence it is only just to the public tfcat he refer to his record as a physician and surgeon. Among the capital operations performed by him.are: Amputation of the thighbone in the case of Abraham Els worth, Port Ewen, Ulster Co., N. Y.; amputation of the arm, case of Mrs. Edward Meyers, of Rondout, N. Y., and the operation of lithotomy, (removal of stone from the bladder,) in the case of Simon Tietsell, of Kingston, and the removal of the eye for Oscar Craigg, of Rosendale, Ulster Co., N. Y. These are a few of many. All these persons are now in the bloom of health. Dr. Kennedy does, not hesitate to say that the happy result of these and other cases of a similar character, was due to the use of the "Favorite Remedy. " It was thi? that purified the Blood, regulated the Live and Kidneys, and thus gave tone and strength to the system, and in this way preventing a return of the disease which had necessitate! a resort to the surgeon's knife. "Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy" for sale by all druggte. ALI. DISEASES OF THE THROAT AND LUNGS BY TH2 TIMELY USE OF ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAII STRICTLY PURE, HarmleM to lte most Delicate X By its faithful CONSUMPTION HAS BEEN CUKKD vrhen othei Remedies and Physicians have tailed t to effect a euro. Jeremiah Weight, o Marion County ,W,Va., writes us that his wife had Pulmonary Consumption, and was pronounced incurable by their physician, when the use of Allen's Lupg BUsam entibkly cubed heb. Ue wrifAB that e and his neighbors think it the best medicine in th world. Wm. C. Dioavs, Merchant of Bowline Green, VawriteB, April 4th, 1881, t$at he wants us to know that the Lung Balsam hasjCuhjcd his Motheb of Consumption, after the physician had given her up aa incurable. Ho says others knowing her case hare taken the Balsam and een cured; ne thinks all so

afflicted should give it a trial.

xjpi oi (Jincmnati, was cnouRnt

of consumption, ana wa

try Alien's Lung Balsam

5Vo

Db. Mjekedith, De

to be in the last 8ta

induced by Ms frien

after the formula was

that ft at once cured 1 to resume his practice"' Wm. A. 0b ah am & Cc .

ville, Ohio, write us o1fa well-known citizen,

Bronchitis in its wo

Lung Balsam cored f j.

BBONCHITIS.

a him. We have his letter

ugh and that he was able

olesale Drusnriets. Zanea

'ftcure of Mathias Freeman, j had been afflicted with m for twelve years. The Fu it has many others, of

It is Mess h e most delicate cMli! It contains DlJpiiim in any form! Recommendeo-br FrtyHlcians, Ministers and Nurses. In fact, by ejwgybody who has given it ft good trial. It Never jFarls to Bring Reflet

1 -

and shun the use of

ma.

U remedies without merit aiid ait established reputa-

Call for Allen's Lung

tion. As an Expectorants! t hiss no Equal t

SOLD BY ALL MEDIC INiE DEALERS.

MASON & HAMLIN

f 1)E

100

ORGANS

32 TO

HIGHEST HONORS AT ALL GREAT WORLD'S EXHIBITIONS FOR SEVENTEEN YEARS. Only America Organs Awarded srtch at any. For Cathy Easy Payments or RentwL Upright Pianos presenting very hlfrhest excellence yet attained in such instrumental adding to all previous Improvements one of greater value than any ; seonr ing most pure, refined, musical tones and increased durability; especially avoiding liability to got out OI tune. Illustrated Catalogues free. MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO.,

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NO BY BIDDING. NO BIDDING IN. On Dee. 17, I8849 At lO o'clock. A. M. A. ROOY, of Seward, Neb., and J. BUPONT, of France, will sell at bona

import ea

PERCHERON

Mi

(AIfo called normani), Broodmares and 2-year old stallion at No. 4141 Seuh Halated Street, oppoalt Union 6toca Tarda, Chicago, 111. In the meantime 9 bead are kett at private sale, making 28 In all. B. AD. hare told several hundred to importers in France and 58 In America last year. Remember that Mr. D. sold C BUS It I. winner of 1st prize at Paris Exhibition 1878: CHE KB, winner at Le Mans and 8t. Lonta; also PICADOR, MASQUES, KfONARQVK, winners at the great horse shows of Alencon, 1681: 6C Lo, 1882; and Caen, 1883. snd again took Brrandoblect of art for best herd of draft stallions at Roaea, ISM. Every horse offered at this sale will be started by the owners at actual value in France pins a reasonable advance to cover costs and risks of Importation and sold to the highest bidder. Terms: For sales of one thousand dollars or less, cash; for the part over that amount a credit of eight een months will be given on approved security. Stock Is of highest quality and breeding. Some by Piiador, Chert Chere, etc, ete. Mares bred to Bayard, winner of 1st prise at Universal Exposition of Amsterdam, Holland, 18&4. Don't nla this chance. It will pay you to come. 1 RflRY No. 4141 So. Halstad St., Ill IIUW ly opp union stock Yards, Chicago, BL

CatarrH

HWFEVER

CREAM BALM

Cannes no Pain. Gires Belief at Once. Not a Liq

uid or Snuff. Ap

ply into nostrils.

Thorough Treat

ment will Cure.

isiOlYe it a TriaL

HAT-htvt.K 3ASIS tared. Send for circular. Sample by mail, 10 cents. ELY BBOTELERS, Druggists, Owego, N.Y.

Hand-Book FREE.

Patent Att'ys, Washington, D. a

PATENTS

Words of Warning and OosnfiaVtv

"If yon are suffering from poor health ot 1 'languishing on a bed or ei&atees, take cheers 'if yon are simply ailing", or if ym Sam weak and dispirited. without- clearly know ing why. Hop Bitters wiU surely core you. If yon are a minister, and have overtaxed yourself with your pastoral duties, or a mother worn out with care and work, or a man ot business or labor weakened by the strain of your everyday dntlML or a man of letters toiling over your mMniffifr work. Hop Bitters will moat surely strengths you, If von are suffering from over-eating or drinking, any indiscretion 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 feel 4 that your system needs cleansing, 'toning, or stimulating, without iav'toxioating; if yon are old 'blood thin and impure, pulse 4 feeble, nerves unsteady, faculties ' waning. Hop Bitters is what you used t 'give you new life, health and riiotr If you are costive or dyspeptio, or suffer ing from any other of the numerous dfta

own fault if you remain UL If you are wasting away with any form of Kidney disease, stop tempting death this moment, and turn for a cure to Hop Bittars. . If you are sick with that terrible idk ness, Nervousness, you will find a " Balm in Gilead in Hop Bitter,. If you are a frequenter or a residentef a miasmatic district, barricade your systern against the scourge of aU countries, Malaria, Epidemic, Bilious an 2 Intermittent Fevers, by the use of Hop Bittersw If you have rough, pimply, or sallow skin, bad TT Till 1 .4a .Uh m1 fc

blood, the sweetest bieath and health. $500 will be paid for a case they will not cure or help.

PENSIONS

Navr

ine bes

R. U. AWARE

THAT

Lorillard's Climax Ping bearing a red tin tog ; that Lorillard's Rose Ttmnf fine out: that TxiiH11ah

dlatftinirsL and that IrttlArd'a fimiffk am

t and cheapest, quality considered t

Or

Z-MAS PRESENT II

in every town can obtain aa illustrated

880 page Story Book as a

Bond 8 two cent stamps to the Publishers of the beet ot all the BOYS A GIRLS Macaxines, WIDE AWAKE, and ct

iiujtruotioxis AT once Jfcfr, D. LOTHROP dfc CO.,

32 Franklin 8U, Bosxos,

A Idady's Wish " Oh. how I do wish my skin was as dear and ' soft as yours," said a lady to her friend. "Yon 'can easily make it so," answered the friend How ?" inquired the first ladirV "By using Hop Bitters that makes pure, rich blood and blooming health. It did It tor me a you observe." X 9None genuine without a bunoh- of gram Hops ou the white labeL Shun all the rile, poisonous stuff with "Hop" or "Hops" in their name

' n to Soldiers and Heirs. 8udstamn for Circulars L. BINaHAjar tor&cy. Washington, D. C.

tff f aw A MONTH and Board for 3 live Young tfltfMen or Ladies, in each county. Address tjljgjp. V, ZIBOLKB St CO- Chicago, BL The BrjYXBrf Qvnm is issued dept. snd March, each year : 224 pages, 8J x 11) inches; with oyer 3,300 lHostosAiotts a whole picture gallery. Gives wholes! prices direct to oonsumen on all goods for personal or Jmmtms foniir Telia how to V nd gives exact if cost of everything you 11 II ose, drink, eat, wear, or V? ave u witli. These invaluable hooks contain information cleaned from the markets of the world. We will mail a copy Free to any address upon receipt of the postage 8 cents. Let ns hear from you. Respectfully, MONTGOMERY WARD A CO, 887 A S8S Wabae lmu, CJalaasavUU

AGENTS

TOO MailM HOHCTf

Wide nwake Agents, are making from 9l9S

to saw per roontn

tbe

MISSOURI STEAM WASHER.

Over 40.000 sold. A new principle. Sarin? Of CSothoa. Labor, Mendtirs and Health. Hade of roeial. Con tool of territory sriren. Write for terms and drcoJaia. , THK SO. STKAS WASHER CO., SIS State St., Atceaa 711K MO, STSAn WASHER CO.. tfos.SlBt..Bt.tit.aW

GOUKX 8KAX, B1TTEB&,

Broken down in raUds.de you wish to gain flesh, to ao Qoire an appetite, to enjoy m regular habit of body, to ob

tain retrMiiBog- Bieep to roe

and know to as ery nova andtUane of your system ia beinjr braced up and reno-

.vatedt If so commence at

'once a court of QGLDEEC SEAL BITTERS. In ODS 'week yon will be eoaralss-

feent. In a month yor. wWbewellr DondeepaSr because you hare a weak

constitution. Fortify st

ith

YMirimnK au cne umas wx

GOIJENSEAIi BrTTEBS. No epidemic can take hold

f a system tttusroreanneo.

The lirer, tho tdinach th

bowela, the kioneya ars rendered diaAaaok. proof by

this ?reat iavifforaili- Rulfr oua bills for medtcnllattend-

an way be avoided by counteracting the first tome of sickness with this ere at German re

They are recommended from friend to friend and

sale increases daily, we warrant a cure. IMJ.

SEAL BITTERS CO, Holland City, SUCA, all druggists. Take no others.

1

1" -o

Wayna. Ira Pass Co.. Xlliaoia.

HAS IMPORTED FROM FRANOZ JPsawheswa Heme vatoS a MV wUea isttbtSea 75 PER CEIT OF ALL DORSES SVCR IMPORTED TO AUCCtOA.

TCK OB KABt

UftEK

BaM

mix

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art i

laafirMfcMgXHwt

OldStMNtffcBk

IOOCOLT8 .

Xan years M sm yosjacsr

Sumnlibif tfti nrtaw

fnfifa-mfc hrMderathma

Maw h MfriftA It if KMW

i II mi n ma- Jkri Jtnrl MiiTW)t fttfiantaattahUV

Sven.thev ahou'd be ralu t onlya rad, will art J all Imported Stock a: Grade rricea wken I cannot furnish wiSithe nimal sold pedigree Trined kr tae rtf jn French ce. tlncate of its number and eco:-d In thotttus Book In France. 140 Pare CataJorto sent fw. It is Illustrated with Six Prize Horses of the Exhibition of ths 8ocict Hippiqu Percheronne ot Francs, I884 tmr ehaed by M. W. Dunham and drawn froi a life by Kea Roheur tha moat famous of all animal pal&feei. You'll never loose anything by keeping posted. Maps, pamphlets, papers, etc., concerning Tandy Farming, Stock-raising, Fruit-growing, J lining. Mam facturing, etc., in Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico Arizona, California and Old Mexico sent free oa application to C. B. SCHMIDT, Commissioner of Immigration, A. T. & S. F, R, R., Topes, Ksav

BOW TO WIN AT CARDS. DICE,

'T V Anyone I mannfactare and kep X J f constantly on hand every article c3 f tbe aportin fraternity to WI? wHbf t fin a-ames of chance. Sand for man 1 f llmoth circular. AddreatOA.s SUTlAM,V-l M Uaadat Saawa Basest. afevlaefc At 14

f A M Oil PI EIT1 fl IH

uuiutfumi iiuiu

I bare a noelttre remedy for taasAowUssaee: a tat

ose thousands of cases ef tha worn ktadandeX loaa taudlar hara been cured. Iadaed, sostroncta atyfaHa In ies efficacy, that I will send TWO BOTTLKSFEBaV tof .sthar with a YiXCAI.BTBKATlBl oa thlsdiMata III any sofltewr . aire express mnd P. O address. ; PR, T. A. fiLOCUM, 1st Pearl St., Kew Tormv

111 nDTlnll UnuntTD For PI

Ait ur i iurl iiunucn m

unoBpox muu ocwar man atasio iMKoenm,

. i cSIs (0

1

TTli Medal HP Merit fN. T ia twASSSi 1883). awarded to ouf new, elieap and original Laatem

sissf sjfras "wsss

deUrhtsaid mytiflen every bcjT Useful to FortzaH

AraHwanuwerCTy iHrnnr wantuis; tfonw annuamBaat,

Rent tWe with VcklvttMMi. aawAw

JOO Waatifrtl llciat- kcaltri fwa? Full and free drsrnpdTe cir:nlar. Murray Hill Pub. Oot i f . teth H.

'HCKN IVKirmo TO ADVlCRTtaieM

nleara aaw von mam iraw -

in UUs paper. wmmwmmrm-