Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 December 1881 — Page 2

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ANNETTE.

Correspoi3ence"Between James1 Gordon Bennett and Secretary Frelinghuysen-

Everything Being Done to Secure the Safety of Commander DeLong and His Men.

Washington, Dec. 22.

The Secretary of Stuic received, to-day the following dispatch 'from the Charge d'Affairs of the d'i tul States at ot. Petersburg: Ferliiif/hvyiH'n, Warhingtim:

Been Ign&tictt'. Russian Government has ordered active search for the second cutter, and will furnish all the funds necessary. For subsequent needs, I will draw on yon. Have along telegram from Melville. Undertrtand the same went through last night to the Navy Department Will communicate with Melville throujin Ignatieff, as regards possible measures to find the second cutter [Signed Hokkman.

The following additional dispatches in 'the correspondence of the State Department, relative to measure for the relief ot the Jeannette, have be furnished for publication:

Palit*, Dec. 21, 1881

Hon. Frcdcriek Frrlirtf/hui/sen, Secretary of Stuff, Wa#hinf/ln. Immediately upon the receipt of the first news from my St Petersburg correspondent. about the Jeannettc, saying thai 00,000 roubles were needed, I transferred that sum by lograph through Messrs. Rothschild to General Igntuicif, at St. Petersburg, with a request to draw on me for any further sums required for the auccor'and comfort of Captain DeLong and Ins party. have to-day received the following telegram from General Ignatietl": "Have hastened to communicate to your corespondent the news received from Yakoulsk.Htid have given orders to the Governor to take most energetic measures for the rescoe ol the shipwrecked crew, together with authority to undertake all necessary expenses, lor which I have promised to reimburse him. ("Signed] "Co.MiTE Iunatieft

You will see bv this that everything possible is being done by the Russian government to secure the safety and speedy return of Captain DeLong and his men. If you or the Secretary ot the Navy have aay suggestion 1 shall do my utmost to act upon them. I intend to send a special correspondent to meet, the party on its way here, and as it will be some days before he starts, perhaps you or the Secretary of the Navy might wish to take advantage of the opportunity to send spatches or l'oward messages from relatives and friends of the party. My correspondent at St. Petersburg telegraphs me that the distance by wagon to the point to where the crew now are is 4,000 miles, requiring for a single traveler, provided with a papier (3c favour, at least a mouth. I also learn from St. Petersburg that the Emperor has personally given orders that all necessary clothing, provisions, money and transportation shall be put at tbe service of the Jeannette party, which gives full assurauce that everything possible will be done for their aid and'eomfort [Signed] James Gokdon Bknnktt,

Dki'ahtmknt ov Static, Washington, D. C, Dec. 21.

•James Gordon Bennett, Paris: Your telegram with the new3 of your generous provision is received. Before the receipt I had sent the followiug cablegram to nil man. [Then follows the tetegram already published!.] [Signed] Frkunchuysen, Sa 'y-

The following telegram was seDt by Secretary Blaine to Minister Foster, at St Petersburg,on the28th of last May: "Ask the Russian Government to direct that vessels of her flag keep a friendly lookout on the Siberiau coast for the steamer Jeannette, fitted for Ave tic exploration by the munificence of .Tames Gordon Bennett. No disaster to her is reported, but watchfulness is deemed a wife piccaution, which this Government desires to invoke.

TUK ENGLISH l'liKSS. ,,

'London, Dec. 22.—The London Daily Telegraph lias an editorial on the Jean•nette, from which the following are extracts: "Every generous heart and cultivated mind must have experienced at the (.moment ureal satisfaction when the news ^arrived that the whereabouts of the Jeannette were known. But just as great will 'be the disappointment to.hear the American exploring vessel has been desejtcd and only a portion of the gallant crew brought back the painful tidings of her fate. "Assistance no doubt has been sent in itheir direction by the Russian authorities and natives, Irit we may, too, surely hear a cruel accouut of their experiences even if any of tbe missing party be recovered alive." "The best that can be expected is that the greater portior of the brave and skillful crew put on board the Jeannette will be saved, while, tta the case may be, if the ship has achieved any discoveries of importance they will have been purchased at a bitter j-ric\ The story of the Jeannette, which is sure to reflect glory on the

American liag and the honor and enterprise of the American press, will not lie buried in the mysteries ot the still invisi)hie polo'." "But what occupies all generous minds at present is the thought of ihe sufferings which must have been borne by those gallant men who strove so long'and so hard to win the scientific distinction which was the object of this enterprising patron."

The writer concludes as follows: "While tbe journalistic enterprise, which has given science such splendid gifts in our day, can display this energy and liberality, it would be simply disgraceful were the government of Great -Britain to allow one of the most gallant of British discoverers to perish «. lor want of a vote of money, which the

House of Commons would so cheerfully grant. "If the failure of the American expedition leaves the blue riband of the Artie

in'- Ji- *vAt

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1

luckieat, fiftSf Ihe free expenditure of funds, by this American editor in the cause of'geographfcftl science forbids Her. Majesty's Cabinet parsimonioui."

Mrs. Nancy Harraan, of Mansfield, O., writes: "I have been under the caie of a physician during the past seven years Sometimes I would feel better and then again I would feel worse. The past two years nothing seemed to help me. About two months ago my doctor seemed to be getting discouraged, and I lay completely bed-ridden. I grew very nervous, the least noisn gave me great irritation. The doctor, I suppose more to get me off his hands than anything else, as he said I would never leave my bed, told me I might try Brown's Iron Bitters, at ihe same time remarking, 'It was a good tonic and would help to keep me alive.' I have used the remedy about two months, and have been out of bed nearly two weeks, and now help about the bouse. It has acted like a miracle in my case.

AS THOUSANDS DO TESTIFY So does ThoWas Roberts, Wholesale Grocer, Philadelphia, who says: "Burnett's Cocoaine allays all irritation of the scalp, and will most effectually remove dandruff and prevent the hair from falling out."

Burnett's Flavoring Extracts—The superiority ot the extracts consists in their perfect purity and grtat strength. They are warranted free from the poisonous oils and acids which enter into the composition of many factitious fruit flavors.

Mr. Frdiughuysen is understood to hold ilia*, the American epgie should not strain his naturally flue voice on small occasions.

CATARRH

Clear head and voice, easy breathing, swewt breath- perfect smell, taste and hearing, no cough,'no distress. These are conditions brought about in Catarrh by the use of Saudford's Radical Cure. One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent and one Improved Inhiler, in one package, for $1.

Death to rats and vermin, parson's Exerminator

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Thurlow Weed says the late George Law could not have passed the examination for night watchman at the Custom HOUSL.

TSPORTANT

When you visit or leave New lork city, save baggage expressage and carriage hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot. Three hundced and fifty elegant 'rooms, and fitted uptot au expense ot ouo million dollars, reduced to $1 t»nd upwards per day. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Hor«e ears, stages and vati.ii railroad traius to all depots

Mr. Longtellow is particularly fond of Thackeray's works. "He was so great —so honest a writer," the old poet says.

BUY NO HOLIDAY PRESENT WITHOUT -v •»'k SEEING

Rheumatism, etc

ness, it not as represented Fancy stores.

w-

.off, themselves

Ij&Trif* TO ®T(M' OWE ^'UHiATfOsjl 1 1 From the New York World. .*/ The common Sense of the country wirf probably agree with the World ih&l it is time to close the chapter ofthe^e arctic explorations, unless they can be undertaken on entirely new principles and with a care, forecast and judgment in, equipping the explorers wnfch certainly Seem to have been lacking in the case c" Jeannette, and whicn have not been Hpicuously present in some of important of recent'E

IIM

Grope an

of the sort.

A BOSTON CAR-DRIVER WILL REMEM BER THANKSGIVING Our reporter found Mr. John Garvin «t No. 8 Thornton Place, who Slid that he was about 53 years old, and has been six years a driver on the Metropolitan Horse R. R. His wife has been an invalid for the past five years, and he had some difficulty in scraping a dollar together to mail to M. A. Dauphin, 'New Orleans, La., to get a ticket in November 8th Drawing of the Louisiana State Lottery but it was the best investment he ever made. He held one-half of No. 46, 353, which won the Capital Prize of $30,000, and the $15,000 came to him in coin b* the Adams Krpress. He invested the the ^amount in government bonds. He had just returned home from spending Thanksgiving with his friends, and resumes work immediately. Boston Commercial and Shipping List, Nov. 30th.

ur'

Dr. Scott's beautiful Electric Hair and Flesh Brushes. They always benefit the well and marvellously cure Headaches, Neuralgia, Dandruff, Falljng Hair, Bald

Price refundeAt Drug and 41

Seventeen years ago yesterday, General Sherman matched into Savannah with his triumphant army. «*-*v

ALLEN'S BRAIN FOOD.

Pestively cures Nervous Debility and all weakueas of the generative organs. Price $1—6 for $5—All druggists. Send for ciicular to Allen's Pharmacy. 315 First Avenue, N. Y. For sale in Terre Ilaate, by E. Bindley & Co.

Mr Colfax said in a lecture at Scranton, Pa that nothing could induce him to return to public lite.

BRAIN & NERVE.-

Walls' Health Renewer, greetest remedy on ea- th for impotence, leanness, sexua debility, &c. $1, at druggists. Depot Gulick, Berry & Co., Terre Haute.

General Franz Sigel is now a School Inspector in the Eight district, New York city,

DR. KLINE'S 6REAT NERVE RESTORER is the marvel of the age for all Nerve Diseases All fits stopped free. Send to 931 Arch street, Philadelphia, Penh.

Bishop Elder, of Cincinnati, has forbid|en round daneing in his dioc^c.

DON'T DIE IN THE ROUSE. Ask druggists for "Rough on Rats." It clears ou' rats, mice, bed-bugs, roaches vermin, flies, ants, insects. 15c per hex.

C. R. McKenna, of Minnesota, has been

Xion leaves iu« oiue nusou oi me auu v. «. .i ., circle stiU a prixe tor the boldest and appointed Enrolling Clerk of the House, them in soapsuds, to remove the oil.

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THE TERRE HAUTE

THE SHABBY CENTBEL.

Oh bit to Tfcen perBagf pity you'IIfil -9br §-»oof F. r. V.

Thars run down at the heel You poftr men can beg, And rich men say steal,

Bat oh pity the shabby gchteel!

You know for vulgar labor \fI always did feel A most supreme contempt.

Not feigned, but real. Thaugh tney are red fetter days

When we get a square meal. Still we're proudly most shabby gentiel

My sisters can_paint, Play music and flirt.

conmou

But Rave ne'er stooped so low i. As to laundry a shtrt For they are aesthetes, you know?

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And of ceramics talk pert,

1

But lor work are too utterly utter.

Tho' we oft go to bed (I tell to my sorrow) With dubious prospects

For food for the morrow But we shabby genteel, Who can't work, still will borrow From those who know we feel -J j'

Overburdened with sorrow. if

What we were 'fore the war Is our main stock in trade

:?Si

How we lived and we dressed, How cur tables were laid Before we became

So run down at the heel, Is the song of the shabby genteel.

The poor men can beg, And rich men may steal, But Lord pity the shabby genteel! —(Jack Homespun.

The Migration of Birds. [London Standard.]

Familiar as the migration of birds ia to us, there is, perhaps, no question in zoology more obscure. The long flights they take and the unerring certainty with which they wing their way between the most distant places, arriving and departing at the same period year after year, are points in the history of birds of passage as mysterious as they are interesting. We know that most migrants fly after sundown, though many of them select a moonlight night to cross the Mediterranean. But that their meteorological instinct is not unerring is proved by the fact that thousandsnrc every year drowned in their flight over the Atlantic and other oceans.^

Northern Africa and Western Asia are selected as winter-quarters by most of them, and they may be often noticed, on their way thither, to hang over towns at night, nuzzled, in spite of their experience, by the shifting lights of the streets and houses. The swallow or the nightingale may sometimes be delayed by unexpected circumstances yet it ia rarely that they arrive or depart many days sooner or later, one year with another.

The swiftness of flight which characterizes most* birds enables them 'to cover a vast space in a brief time. The common black swift can fly 276 miles an hour, a speed which, if it could be maintained for less than half a day, would carry the bird from its winter to its summer quarters. The large purple swift of America is capable ot even greater feats on the wing.

The chimney swallow is slower—ninety miles per hour being about the limits of it* powers but tho passongcr pigeon of the United States can accomplish a journey of 1,000 miles between sunrise and sunset. It is also true, as the ingenious Herr Pal men has attempted to show, that migrants during their long flights may be directed by an experience partly inherited and partly acquired by the individual bird. They often follow the coa9t-lines of continents, and invariably take, on their passage over the Mediterranean, one of three routes. But this theory will not explain how they pilot themselves across broad oceans and is invalidated by the fact, familiar to every ornithologist, that the old and youug birds do not journey in company. Invariably, the young broods travel together then come, after intervals, the (parents and finally the rear is brought up by the weakly, infirm, molting, and broken-winged.

This is the rule in Autumn. The return journey is accomplished in the reverse order. The distance traveled seems, moreover, to have no relation to the size of the traveler. The Swedish blue-throat performs its maternal functions ambng the Lapps and enjoys its winter holiday among the Negroes of the Soudan, while the tiny, ruby-throated humming bird proceeds annually from Mexico to Newfoundland and back igain, though one would imagine that sc delicate a little fairy would be more al home aijiong the cacti and agaves of the Tierra Caliente than among the firs and fogs of the North. „,.X.T "I

How Thimble* Are Made.

The manufacture of thimblee is very simple, but singularly interesting. Coin silver is mostly used, and is obtained by purcashing coin dollars. Hence it happens that the profits of the business are affected instantaneously by all the variations in tbe nation's greenback promise to pay.

The first operation strikes a novice as almost wickea, for it is nothing else than putting a lot of bright silver dollars, fresh from the mint, into dirty crucibles, and melting them up into solid ingots. These aft rolled out into the required thickness and cut by a stamp into circular pieces of any required size.

A solid metal bar of the size of the inside of the intended thimble, moved by

Kttomlessmachinerythe

werful up and down in a mold of outside of tbe same thimbles, bends the circular diskq into the thimble shape as fast as they can be placed under the descending bar.

Once in shape^ the work of brightening, polishing and decorating is done upon a lathe. First, the blank form is fitted with a rapidly revolving rod. A slight touch of a sharp chisel takes a thin shaving from the end, another does the same on the side, arid the third rounds off the rim. A round steel rod, dipped in oil and pressed upon the surface gives it a lustrous polish. Then a little revolving steel wheel whose edge is a raised ornamen t, held against the revolving blank, prints that ornament just outside the rim. A second wheel, with sharp points, makes the indentations on the lower half and end of the thimble. All that remains to be done is to boil

WEEKLY GAZETTJE.

Art Work by Eidograptiie [New York Times.]

Eidographie is the result of mapy years of labor on thoajwrt of Prof. A. F. Eckhardt, a German chemist, who perfected his invention drily a few months ago, and has now established a large factory in Neuremburg. The samples which were exhibited reached this country in the last German steamer.

Silken cushions, such as ladies have been accustomed to spend weeks in embroidering from designs in colored silk, are decorated elegantly by the pencil of the eidographist in a few hours, and the work is done in metal, which will not wear oft as the silk of embroidery does.

Instead of the expensive stained glass window used in churches, windows decorated by the eidographie process can be employed, producing very similar effects, and at a comparatively nominal cost.

Wooden ware can be embellished by the same process, as can paper, metal, ivory, leather, wire screens, and any solid surface. The designs being in solid metal, and the brilliant coloring a component part of the metal, and will last as long as the material upon which it is placed.

The worker in eidographie is supplied with a number of pencils, containing a metal which Prof. Eckhardt has compounded, and the composition of which is his secret, in a fluid form. Each pencil holds fluid of a different color, and it is said tha^every known color can be produced The moment the fluid strikes tue air upon issuing from the pencil it hardens and becomes a metal, adhering so closely to the material upon vhich it is laid that it cannot be renoved without breaking.

One the principal uses to which eido-

Braphie

is now being applied in Europe

is the production of copper and steel plates for engraving. The design is first made by the new process, and a negative is then taken. All the labor of engraving is thus saved, and the plates can be produced at about one-tenth the expense incurred by the old system.

Bas relievos with the most delicate lines and in exquisite colors, are also produced on any. article in a very short space of time. The peculiarity of the process is that it docs in one day what a skillful carver would require four days to accomplish, and the inventor claims that he can teach anybody to use his pencils in from ^twelve to fourteen days.

The {manufacture of eidographie work has already become a considerable industry in Germany, and Mr. Barthel ia preparing to introduce the system this country on a large wale.

The Story of WliitUer's First Poem.| (Portland (Me.) Transcript.^ We have before uh in Mr. Whittier's hand writing the first poem of his that was ever published. In 1826, when he was in his 19th year, he left it under the door of the office of the Free Press, a weekly paper then published by William Lloyd Garrison, in Newburyport. Garrison had just attained his majority, and this paper was his first venture in journalism.

It may interest young writers for the press of the present day to hear the story of this first literary effort of a poet now crowned with years and with honors.

It was many weeks after young Whittier left his manuscript to its fate before he heard from it. He was then working upon his father's rocky farm, in Haverhill, and his father was a patron of the Free Press. Week by week the paper arrived, and the heart of the young poet sank within him as he looked in vain for his verses.

One day he was at work with his Uncle Moses repairing the stone fence by the highway, he going along on the outside, replacing the stones knocked from the wall by sheep that had scrambled over it. While so engaged the postmau came along on horseback, and to save going to thenouse with the paper he tossed it to young Whittier. It was opened with trembling fingers. Many a writer knows the exact sensation of hope without expectation, so often experienced in regard to the firstlings of the brain. The surprise of finding his poem at the "head of the corner" wan so bewildering that he was dazed by it, and he says he stood looking at it along time, and is sure he did not read a word. At length his uncle called him back to his senses oy bidding him keep at work.

No success in future years has evei stirred such a tumult of emotion, as may well be believed. Garrison was so impressed with his new contributor's work that he sought him out, coming up to Haverhill on horseback to interview him. When Garrison called, young Whittier was at work in the field. He was told a gentleman was at the house inquiring for him. Nobody had ever lqu alle

called for him before, and he felt like running away. But he got into the house by the back door, "slicked up," and soon stood in the presence of the young editor, who "encouraged him to make good use of the talent ne had disea.

plT,

Whittier's father came in during the interview, and begged Garrison not to put such notions into the head of his son. But it was too late the damage was done! This was the first meeting of the two men, afterward so intimately associated in anti-slavery work.

Young women are sold by auction in the west. The sales are made at social gatherings, for charitable purposes, and the proprietorship doe* not extend be lond tha occasion V"— ,t:

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2 FRENCH D0LL8.

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October

radcSrcomra

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"Peter Parley**" Grave. [Springfield Republican.] llie grave of "Peter Parley" G. Goodrich) is in a rural grave-yard near Southberry, Ct, only a little ways from the Goodrich place. The marble slab at the head bears as an emblem an open book with two or three dogs-eared leaves —a very significant memorial of the pioneer in children's literature—one who delighted the children of his time more than St Nicholas and all the rest can possibly please the satiated appetite of the small fry of to-day.

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TBE GREAT PAfiOOA PUZZLE.

uiv«ii vi ii. THE $100 PUZZLE!

•^•i.'/ -4 _... •. "V» »a

1

It

COlUllW

mouth will »eem to bo complete maiutverie. FUN FOR THE BOYS.

id

Olliver Chilled

,«p nf W"

Oliver Chilled, Champion and l£ichni*tiif Riding Jplotvs.

MALTA DEFIANCE CULTIVATORS

Excelsior Twine Binder. C. SMITH & SON

124 AND 126, WEST MAIN

OUR CHRISTMAS-BOX FOR LITTLE FOLKS.

IV«(m ArtMu, CMitNhi# tf Ttft, Qamtt, and Piuilt*. Prit* if matt, S# ct*. Itar S9.0#,pM$aU.

8 la. Ull, 5_ln. wldcj oo« with Ban(«4 Hair and BUek XyM, and «i« with Curly n*tr

and Bin* Eye*, dlOtamu atyled dreeeee with each, aa a pattern for tittle oaee to ntke dreeeee from.

PIT .A* ornament fcr Mantle*, Whatnota, Wlndowi, and Brte»a-3iaca. It beaatlfallr tnfnired tMck cardboard, UNI. 8 la. tall, 6 la. wide, It li *o perfect that it I* often taken for a real lire cat.

la anew tojr afTorttlnr a d«li|rtitfal and faKlnatinf paatlm* alike t» old and yoang, made from one piece of paper, and Impoealfele for

any one to make unlet* Inatrocted.

T||C unir ill inlfllTin TOY Orandfather toaetng on hia knee tbe babr. By piilllnjr a atrlnir, the lilt IW»lw HU I UlflH I III I Uli head, arm*, body,and lef of the old man more, and bahy'a body antl leg* alto. A very ammlntc iny for tbe children.

PROFESSOR ABBEY'S AGE AND FLIRTATION CARDS,

mmmmi

IWMM*

tion* b*f*)ktrchicf fllrtmtnn* und humorou* ewort etrdf, thu« th«r furnMt Innocent nmuuMtiem. MACintAUQ nttfki TRinif HADHQ Th«*« wonderful m© n» itrrforut the tnn«t aetonUh* iyjffOiWIMjflO ft W I OtUIV UHnUOi In* meumorphftatu without detection with il»« n«*if~«nm*

1

Milburnand Coquillard MPaviri and Spring

Wagons, Improved Indiana Grain M)rill#, JFurst & Hradley Adinstable Hurt-own, itig ^jGiant Feed Mills,

SBKTX

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR'S APPOINTMENT: Notice ia hereby given that lame* Cox has been appointed administrator of tbe estate •f Jamoa KcOranahran, deceased. Tbe estate is probably aolvenf 'j

E a iT i- fcr^&ctifcc.

COORDEs

j^l 0 I. 7S^^Iat5i$ Jtory$^Hie«l

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MratiLi/ #T. SiKTHti}

Lee. 21st, 1881: County Clerk.

Fern Rock Poultry Yard, nufayette Bo*d one mile north of Terre Haute, Ind. One tbonsaod turl^rs and five thoaMftd chicReae wanted.

H. GBEKKw^r, proprietor.

.C&

Southwest Cor. Seventh and Hulman Sts.

ON 30 DATS' TRIAL»

LE5

OHT OO DATS' itbta r. ja^SUSPKNSOBI E9a TB nc or oldl anm-rititf rmra lictod with IUmtlUTli«M,

nu. PTE'S CELEBBATEP ELECTRO-VOLTAIC BELTS, BAIOS, SUSPENSORIES, TRUSSES, BtTPmilTKlttf, a^ OTHKR *PPUahcks, to any pnn«m^nng or oldl anlTorum frnm NKHVOt'rt PI3BASKS, PKKM ATl'BE 1BCA Y. 1,0" OF VITALITY, otc« or .o t'lioso artltctccT with IiniilHI AtlSiM, NKI MALOIA. I'AHALrBItt, DYSPEPSIA, MVEkI KIDNEY TUOrDLE8, fiPINAJ, AFKKCTIONS. BCPTtrKEH. DISRAS1WOP A DELICATK_rATIE or /ITUktt HKr

M.1.VV OTil.T.i DI8KASES. SPJIEUY CL'lUIIri GUARANTEED. 8K.Ni»/"U ILLLHTKATED lV.MI'ULKX. Aid-™ VOLTAIC BPL.T CO., Wlari"'\9ll.

cBwuuuK isnii/ owr/ IUIVU with bright and vparkling icrial and short

•katcf am

fiimilr circle. In order to lntrodt the fbllowioff eztraMdimrr offer rtr year) frM for lite aazt three

hes, pomuj and In facter^-law

fwimt iUH.im| |wviiii •mi ui thing to amuse and delight the Ea the Guest in every home In the Union where It iaaot now a visitor, we

circle. In order to Introduce tha Onost I lowing eztraMdimrr offer: «n will lend per year) frM for tiu aexi three raontha to all wl for that Jen2th of lime, and to halp p*y the a a coat of thia •dreetiaemeol. we wiU tend (V«e 40 ChOlpe PifOM Of |V| MuslO. wxiattonOfboth mental piccea, by the beaC AimricMi ana I wW fotrlrti compaaen, printed on Aill ilxe. The usual price of *heet music is 3Sc. per piece. A» that prloe the piece* woul coat 14^)0. 8PCCI Ai OFPEft NO.2. We also offrr to swd the Ouasti aaonth* to any one*«KUB|jis30 cts.(ten 3-cent stamps i. atid willscni! free in every subscriber a nice new time-keeper in Oroide cases, with clear(flwascryaul,

here It U.s

THE LITKRAIIV OUEtT (tha

onlnt. Thousands of

/aul.and in noodworkitiR oidm Thousands of Rfl I I I

thw little timc -krepenf hive been aold for $1 each,—here you hu*v a chance to get VI one free. A line plated chain fpr SOc. extra. Ort aevea ofyour friends to subacribe according to above oilers, send us the iboney, and we will send you a four months' trial subscription and MDNCOf th* above premiums fcryotti tfoobto. Adttaass CUE8T PUBLUMIWO CO., WwtDOfO't MllMi,

IMPROVEMENTS—NEW STYLES—NEW CATALOGUE.

THE MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN OO.

WTioee cabinet or parlor organs hare woo atmw bokors at

mtmbt

bubttit ^rwv umi'i'HiNafnr wmprnw tkam (being the only American organs wnicn nare oaen ronna. worthy of mch ataoy), bav« effected moiuiand ob«at»fbaoticaixt yaxuaw.* their Organ* in the last txabUuw in any BimiJarperiodRiiico tho flrstliJtrodttcUonof this instramen

tnforauttlon about

will be sent 46 Em 14th St*

^2

-AND-

&

on Champion

7

Sulky Plows*-

&

out* preiitftit* double faced ott back* arc direc­

CanU

vo« ItII t'ijrh* llHjfK. all nil

etc. rtofMMr Herrtiuu mo*c ••tonlahlnff j^rfbnnatkc«» icvralcd. Ulvct imPjiU bow dono and tb» meant of doing It. The jrrtatect myntenr ouf. §100 wn ib« InventAf any one who onld put ft yoi It t-»*n l»*» d.»n« bv hint in thr»M« iiunuti-*, Th«« \*»i vri

of ihe nl|4i'ihct irt full,and at*u fait»-iour (tgurvs. I»anu«ing aiul iu»

•tract luff THE NEW MECHftNICAt GRASSHOPPER. XOSS^SS.SiZSSS&ajr'

the Si^iss Warbler or mocking-bird whistle.

^rn-r,hr,,?rM,Lr,1h:*UllUi,|»rarl»«»

a A E

,, ni

h:r:r,:

bowl of lb* tvuif. After our

tnnuitachn made of ganulntr btlr. Tan be put on cr off Umnntly. L.11. of

CAMP IIP I flTTll (Lo-to) Lotto i« a Spanish paiae anil xttry popular lywh tbe peopto of 8raiin, and ha* OHlTIU Ul LU I I U. become a faabloniible paaihne In Ktijrlanrl, France, anil America. I I* e««liy umleralood mmft,id can bf played By two or mom, not e*cce*litlfr twelve. It luia twalve beautifully colored tarda ami ninety numbrrn. The Rama ia fmclnailng. «nin-iii|t. and very entertaining for younn people. Tlile (Tame hai beeia aoid at iurty couta, bat iupcricr facilities for inanut'ai turlni enable* ti»to adil It to the Chriattnaa-Itoi The Article* in Our Chrlatnma Itox won Id com Two Dollttra tmgiu nrporon «t any tar*, ri tin bargain *«r tjetttl, tend al u:ice. t'ottags titampi taken. aiiUifi pliiitl},

M. F- JONES dc CO., P. O. Box U030, OOSTOX, Una..

.j#

THE IDAHO IMPLEMENT HOUSE

ii

tOl v-t

7

ANflDSEKTHE X,- ^.i

MILBURN HOLLOW AXLE WAGON-

i'

A NOVELTY IN THAT LINE.

r'*

ta1

ft, t./i,. -.-'j

»-if

Sc.

rt

"ill

make (T55

us 21cts. to siaai^ir to'piy"portarn on the pKer imeot anu to each person Of both vocal and fulfil*

prioeof

rho wlll seoa us 21 cts. to stamps,

which Is

cms of theqagAT wqb^s itr-.

¥OBK or, 148 Wabuh Ave^ CHICAOO

4

withrutpria!.

•.O

most Interesting 1yok WAMIIKOTON Mf* AdmiaistTati'rn tram WanataBtoM to Uarleia. Historr never before published, tlluftrated witk ineladlng idly taken.

irr never berore pubiisnec, iuufcrac«i wita

White Hous'e.

CLIFF & SON,

Mimofactmre of

Locora*ffref

Stationary and MarffleBoiler*

(Tabnter and Cylinder,) Iron Anks, Smoke Stack*, Ac. Shop on Plretstreet, bet. walnut an« Poplar

Terre Hantevind.

V*

5

fv"

MTRepairfeagdone in the moatsataUMUal manner at afenrt notice, .and an liberal In price as any cMtablighment in the state. 0» deza solicited aod ponetoaUy attended t#^