The Syracuse Enterprise, Volume 1, Number 18, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 May 1875 — Page 4

- 2- ...! i . ■ '■ ■ gggg k Spanish FtMien Play. sank* MMMM* . . Im a recent number of the London Spectator then fa an account of Chetingu’lr the lead-mining district of Andalusia. The writer says that a crowd of 2,000 people are clustering around the doors of the church in silence at half-past six in the evening, when the municipal guards come up and form in semi-circular array, with drawn swords, their scarlet uniforms making a bright flash of color. Inside the church, where only one sidealtar is lighted, a great number of men and women are collected, and round the lighted altar are grouped the images, each one larger than life, of Our Savior, the Blessed Virgin and the numerous saints who are to have their places in the first procession, which is to Commence at sunset. The Governor and one of the Alcaldes enter the church, and all eyes are turned toward the setting sun. When the golden line touches the horizon the grand, mournful music of the “Dead March in ’Saul'" is struck up by the brass band stationed withip the doors of the church, and eight men, barefooted, clad in long robes of sackcloth, girdled around the waist with a knotted cord of esparto-grass, each bearin« Is huge wax torch in his left hand, < come down the church steps, bearing on their shoulders the image of “ the Christ | of us all," as the miners call the Savior. I The heads of these men are swathed in sackcloth, in which small slits are made for eye-holes. The Image of Christ is larger than life, and clad in * violet-velvet cloak, girdled; the legs are bare. He sits dejectedly, His head leaning on His left hand, tears flowing from His eyes ; His right hand, raised, points over the crowd. The eight men carry Rim fifty yards, then place Him on the ground; the people fall upon their knees, and a man clothed in black, holding along, black, draped trumpet, comes out of the church door, and blows tpree discordant blasts. The bearers shoulder the Christ, a long train of men clothed like those in sackcloth and called “ hum* tides?* or penitents—miners, peasants, * artisans and gentlemen, who walk barefooted, purchase the penitential garb themselves, and pay fol the privilege of joining in the procession—march forward with slow and solemn steps, and the church doors give egress to the other images preceded by a banner of purple on which is a beautifully-painted picture of Christ fainting under the weight of Htocrosa, His tears bedewing the ground. Saint Mary of Magdala comes next to the Savior; she Ik dot bed in a long, drab cloak, and her face is hidden in her hanuX Each image with its bearers is followed by a dozen “ humildes.” The Virgin is splendidly clad in black velvet with golden spangles, and St. John is partly robed in scarlet. St. Luke follows him, then a long train of “ hum ildes." The band playing mournful musk precedes the priests; then come more penitents and the officers of the town dressed in black, with bare, bended heads. Every shop is shut, every window la crowded, but ’ silence reigns, as for two hours the procession moves through the rough streets of the mining town, all cleared 'fufft, and when, ft ill attended by hundreds. It returns to the dark, solemn church the crowd disperses in perfect order and everyone goes to his own home. All through Holy Thursday the fierce sun shone, the rainless wind blew, and in the evening the procession set forth again; but thia time all the penitents wore black calico gabardines an I high, peaked caps of the same material, and on every mad's cap was thrown a crown of thorns, made of the wreathed twig of the barberry tree. They were all barefooted, and they carried lighted torches, and were followed by hundreds of children, of all classes, clsd like them, and carrying tapers. As the procession started the blare of a trumpet and the rattle of a muffled kettledrum were heard, and twelve men in buskins, short, bufl-leather tunica, and with steel helmets, feli hi just behind the image ofthe Savior. “ Who are those?'* was* asked of a Spanish pitman, “ The soldiers who destroyed our Christ," was the answer . So, again, to the solemn music of the "Dead March," the procession went its way; “ the lights showing wan and sickly against the sinking sun, the dark magesXstanding out in bold relief against the vinely-blue sky, the long line of the 'humildes* dividing the eager, or derly crowd." On the morning of Good Friday the cold was intense, but there was no sign of rain. At five ini the morninx the church was crowded, and a multitude of people stood without. A preacher was enforcing the doctrine of the atonement in short, pithy sentences, like proverbs, •At half-past six the procession came forth, and was again joined by the Roman soldiers. This time each penitent carried upon his shoulder a black-stained cross of wood, four feet long. When, after its solemn march, it returned to the church, the extraordinary and impressive ceremony of “ selling the Lord" was performed. The Christ, crowned with thorns and bleeding great drops of blood, was placed upon a raised platform in front of the doors. All eyes were fixed upon Him who was sold. The money was counted from one hand to another, and as the last piece was paid, and the Savior's right hand went up slowly above the assembled crowd, as though in mute appeal against the treachery, a singular incident occurred. From the Bps of the 4,000 of the assembled multitude rose up to heaven the fierce, earnest shout: “Ague! ague!" This was the miners* united prayer for rain. Once \ more the Savior raised His hand, once ; more went up to the steely sky. now growing blue and hot, the urgent cry: “Agua! aguar At five o'clock that afternoon a slight shower fell, and as the procession of the evening wound its way through the mining town the entire multitude cried aloud, “Agua, ague"’ The Christ carried at the head was “the dead lord," a fair, corpse-like figure, under a glass case. It was taken to the church and placed on a lofty tomb guarded by two angels and watched by Roman sol dier*. The wind whistled shrilly around the aMfoat building and the people dis pereed ktowiy when the ddore were closed; but the stranger*, lingering long there, could hear the measured tramp of Boman robbers keeping >l«0 over Saturday dawned in clouds and soon after daybreak the rain poured down in ttriMfia-' Then said tbe miners with en- > Uro conviction, “The Lord brought it when H* moved His hand." The awful solemnity, the picturesque beauty and the startling strangeness of the w*"* to be beheld on Good Frida* JXw terrible reality of the place and the manner of It—the center of an immense thronged Ttiih W pto ~ F » * a 1 FFFr Ji grf ewn ' -

88E55595999990K9888 the accdtapaniment of the heart-rending Passion music tn the face of the multitude, in bright-hued dresses, standing In the full golden sunlight, hemmed in by the low-roofed houses, with the snowcapped ridge of tin Sierra for their outer boundary. Through this brilliant crowd, all still and silent, comes a row of * men, two deep, robed and hooded, and bearing large candles, and they clear a pathway for the first procession of the condemned. The King of the .Jews, delivered to the people, is borne by four penitents; the derisive robe of His mock royalty is rich t claret color, gorgeously embroidered in gold; a crown of thorns is pressed ddwn upon His brow, and His hair (real human hair), dabbled in blood, falls down over Ills shoulders. He has fallen upon one hand from exhaustion, His head droops a little. His nostrils are slightly widened, as of one who pants for breath; mute reproof, utter weariness, uncomplaining suffering are all in the face. The figure passes slowly up the square, severing the thronging populace, and is followed by 100 Roman soldiers, marching two and-two, some mounted on fiery Andalusian chargers, some on foot. These are “ the Centurion's Guard." The band steps to one side, the Roman soldiery foym round the Condemned, the penitents once more clear away, and Saint Veronica comes to make her lowly I obeisance, and stooping down to wipe ' the sweat and dirt and blood from the Lord’s face. Aashe does so thehandker chief is rolled up by means of a spring, and another appears in her bands, with the image of Jesus upon it. Now comes the Virgin Mother, and there is not one covered head or single standing figure. The image of the Virgin is a marvel of art. Her arms move, she wipes her eyes, her pale face is expressive of sim. pie, sheer, unapproachable grief, and, as the many bands play the most plaintive strains of Bach's Passion music, at the most wailing note she draws near and puts her arms round the neck and across the breast of her fallen, fainting and bleeding Son. So the first procession of Holy Friday passes out of sight amid a* orderly, eager crowd, and when it has vanished the prisoners, manacled indeed, but free in a sense during the blessed hours, walk about the city and solicit alms. A little before nightfall, with the same crowds, lights and music, come the final scenes. Through the way cleared by the penitents comes the Savior and washes Peter's 1 feet; the attitudes beautifully expressed and the music exquisite. Then He comes, praying in the Garden of Gethsemane ; a figure bowed with anguish, amid real shrubs, dexterously lighted. Again He is bound to a pil/ar, and the fearful scourging is repre. seated with a realism almost too dreadful tp be borne. Then He carries His < rossSjainting. lacerated, weary beyond all tellibg Night has fallen now; the crowds fre denser, the plaza is all dark; but in pie center are moving forms and the blaze of lighted candles. Profound silence reigns, so that the night wind, blowing in fitful gusts from the mount' sins to the southward, can be distinctly heard. For the last time away is cleared. Now the Christ was raised aloft in that dim. silent, but teeming Plaza, nailed upon the cross—a public spec taels, His dying figure barely lit up by the torch of a penitent or a ruthless soldier. Little, thin, red streams of blood flowed down trom His nail-pierced hands, crossing each other al the wrist and passing to the armpit, and thence trickling down the sides, and soaking in gore the lined cloth at the Waist. It was too fright tully real. The two thieves were on either side and beyond them stretched the long line of penitents whose lighted caudles shed a fitful ray over the whole. When the scene was finished a troop of children with silver wings went by, carrying banners inscribed with the words (in Latin), "For our salvation he hath died " Then passed the Centurion's Guard and the Virgin Mother, with the dead Christ in her arms; and a hush of awe fell upon the crowd as the cleared space remained quite empty for a while. At ten o'clock a beautifully ;Ilumlnated glass coffin was borne along the pathway, bordered by the kneeling crowd, and in it lay a figure with pale,, peaceful feat, urea wrapped in a linen winding sheet. When Mary of Megdala, St. John and St. Veronipa have followed the glass coffin all is over and the plaza is speedily and noiselessly deserted. The " watch" has begun, to be maintained until it shall be exchanged for the noisy congratulations and rejoicings of Easter D»y- p■■ T - — The Fashions. Parisian dresses The leading modistes have returned from ParinLand have displayed at their openings the latest Parisian designs. It is thrf general remark that novelties this year are confined to fabrics and cotors rather than to styles At some of the large houses the eye b startled by the high Madras cojore with thir vivid yellow and red; but a: the smaller, exclusive establishments very few of these gay plaids are seen. Instead of these are limousine stripes with a few lints of color on cream, brown, or gray grounds, or else those invisible brown or gray plaids already described. or iK-rhaps green or blue or violet shades appear in the ptaid Modistes who imported plaid Lousine silks last spring in (advance of the present fancy for them are now making overdresses of damask or clouded silks, or of the amurefigured wools, or summer limousines; if they use the plaid Louisines they choose throe with rich bars, such as black cm ecru grounds, brown on cream-color, or navyblue on gray. Atnong the most plcasing dkcsses for visiting, church and carriage toilets are those of French gray or drab gros grain combined with softer silk of the same, shade figured all over in arabesque designs. The gros grain skirt has pleatings beaded by shirred puflk and the sleeves are of the same gros grain. The overskirt of the arabesque silk has a deep apron draped very full near the foot of the dress and edged with very rich fringe. The basque is of simple design. Such dresses are made without Jackets, as they are so light that they cannot be worn on days cool enough to require wraps. They cost from *3W to *275. Simpler costumes entirely of colored sift, and also of black silk.are made with short. loose, jaunty sacks, quite short behind aqd with deeppointed or square fronts. These are made to wear over the. basque that is worn in the house. The trimming is usually a knife-pkating with rich criinped fringe below. The Byron collar of many fine pleats of the silk is I considered a stylish feature for these jack- . SX o VFfA'Aa DISC* 511® b not new this season, but promises to findl greater favor than when first introfor narrow mftz to edge flounces, and

S-HSS99SBBS9 grenadine, it makes vary effective garniture. BLACK OREXADIKE DRESfiES. I The newest and richest black grenadine dresses are made of the open, squaremeshbLgrenadines resembling Mexioaine, or of plaids alternately thick and thin, or else they are barred or lined with velvet. Those dresses intended for the house only have.the skirt trimmed to simulate a tablier, but no separate apron. The foundation of the skirt is silk, and for this purpose the substantial glossy taffeta silk is used. The grenadine forms a flounce around the bottom, and is then elaborately draped on the silk; in many cases the front, back and sides have each an arrangement of the ir own. The:flouuCe at the bottom may beeether a deep bias-gathered flounce, shirred at the' top, and edged with knife-pleating, or else there are many rows of knifepleating placed to overlap each txher and headed by a shirred puff. On some dresses die knife-pleating extends up the entire back breadth; in others it is arranged iu pyramidal form on the bottom of each breadth; while still others have three rows of the finest crimped pleating sewed on a gathered flounce. On the upper part of the skirt two breadths are shirred*to represent an apron, and these have each a narrow ruffle meeting in the front ; the back is then heki in two large puffs with sash ends. Another tablier is formed of many crosswise folds of grenadine, which may be turned up or down, while others have reversed pleating. The basque is shaped fancifully and trimmed down the back and front with shirring or pleating to correspond with the skirt. The long-hooped bows and the sish-loaps in the skirt are made of gros grain laid in fine knifepleating and pressed flatly. The coat sleeves are formed of folds of grenadine placed across from seam to seam, or else soft puffs separated by rows of shirring; instead of regular cuffs, pleating, a ruffle, and lace trim the wrists; it is the exception for imported dresses to have plain sleeves. Grenadine suits that may be worn in the street as well as in the bouse are far more simply made. They are provided with deep aprons, over skirts with bouffant back drapery, plain cuirass Imsques, and simply-trimmed skirts, like those described for silk and wool suits. The substantial canvas grenadines so long in favor will still be used for these simple costumes. Sometimes they form the entire suit, but in many cases they have basques and aprons Os more fancifully plaided grenadine. Heavy crimped tape fringes trim street suits of grenadine. There are also pretty sleeveless jackets and tabliers formed of lengthwise insertions of yak, thread or beaded guipure, with grenadine between. These may be worn over silks or grenadines, just as the wearer chooses. PONGEE DRESSES. The buff, ecru and brown pongee dresses, so much in favor last summer, are again imported. They are trimmed with insertion of silk guipure of their own shade and with lace of corresjxmding pattern. The skirt and sleeves are of dark chestnut brown silk. The pongee overskirt has a tablier front that represents three aprons by having three bands of insertion Outlining them. The jacket, with short back and long front, is composed of I lengthwise rows of insertion alternating with the ecru pongee. Ladies of quiet tastes prefer these plain pongees to plaids , or figured silks. MORNIItO DRESSES. Pale blue and ipse cashmeres are made ( into elaborate pripcesae dresses for house and morn ing u ‘ front is of pale blue silk, with a jabot its 1 entire length made of white thread lace. The back of (he dress is of cashmere, made in Gabrielle fashion, with the upper part , of,the skirt in panjer puffs, while the low?r part has knife-pleatings of silk in which . white lace is laid. A second, of pale blue, ‘ has pyramids of knife-pleating made oi blue and white striped silk, laid in pleats ‘ that show the blue on top with white be- ’ Death as a sort of facing. FRENCH CAMBHIC COSTUMES. The prettiest imported dresses of wash- ■ ing goods are made of fine French cambrics that represent the checks and plaids > of Scotch ginghams. Sometimes two 1 colors are used in these. Thus a dress of blue and white cambric ofsmall, irregular checks has a vest, sleeves, and inaide ruffles of pink-checked cambric. There ’ are first scalloped blue ruffles needleworked on each edge, and just beneath ’ these, as if lining them, are the pink ruffles This makes a pretty dress for country use. Blue and brown are. put together in the same way, also blue and buff, or buff with* brown. For brunettes are checked cambrics combining rose, black and white. FRINGES AND XARABObV TRIMMING The fringes so fashionably used for trimming silk sacques and costumes are made of silk braid or tape, crimped, or else merely tied in loops, from which depend balls or tassels of sewing silk. Elaborate fringes, made of clusters of the crimp braid resting on a thick silk fringe, cost as high as *4.25 a yard. The newest design has loops of half-inch braid not crimped, but holding tassels. This costs *3.75. The price of plain tape fringe of ordinary width is *1.25; light fringes for grenadine are made of very narrow tape well crimped, and cost only V 0 cents a yard. CX The novelty of the senssta for trimming silks is called the marabout ruche. This is a thick band of crimped tape-ends, re- . sembling feathers in effect. It costs from *1.75 to *3 35. according to width. It is most stylish when made entirely of the braid, but there are some very pretty niches made partly of the braid and partly of sewing silk; these resemble old-fash-ioned mews trimmings.— Harper't Baaar. S«re Remedy for Bets. Tn Department of Agriculture pub Uxhes the following experiments which a gwatlsmin from Georgia tried and found effective in diepcllißg that serip& trouble in horses. About thirty years ago a friend lost by boU a very fine horse. He took from the stomach of the dead horse about a gill of bots and brought them to my office to experiment upon. He made preperatioaa of every remedy he had heard of and put some of them into each. Most had no effect, a few affected them slightly, but eage tea more than anything else; that killed them in fiftey hours. He included he wotdd kiU them by putring them in W trie acid, but it had no more effect on them than water; the third day they were as lively as when put in. A bunch oi tansy was growing by my office. He took a handful of that, ttttfoed it, added a little water, squeezed out the juice and put some in. They were dead in one minute. Since then I have had it given to every horse 1 have seen affected with bote and have never known it to fail of yean later. He gn« him the tansy in ; the morning and a done of salts in the t evening; next mhratng he took up from the exemioas throe fealf-pinte of i

BOVSEXHLB KISTS. i A. little alum, dissolved in stove * polish adds very much to its efficacy. f Fob ComvKKKss is Children.-The , .blossoms of the common elder made into j a tea and sweetened a little. A few <j tablespoonfuls in the course of twenty- t four hours will soon prove a cure.—lJs- f ahaaae Farmer’s Pudding.—One cup of pork 41 chopped fine, one-half cup of molasses, J one-half cup of sugar, one cup of raisins, one cup sour milk, one teaspoonful of soda, and spice to taste. Steam three * hours. I To rkmovb starch or rust from flat- J irons, have, a piece of yellow beeswax 1 tied in a coarse cloth. When the iron is t almost hot enough to use, but not quite, rub itquickly with the beeswax and then i with a clean, coarse cloth. ’ Light Cau. —One egg, one cup of i sugar, one-half cup of sweet milk, one J and one-half cups of flour, one table- 1 spoonful of butter, one teaspoonful of 1 cream of tartar and one-half teaspoonful j of soda. Very nice for tea. - j Spiced Curb ants.—Five pounds of ' ripe currants, four pounds of brown j sugar, one pint of vinegar, one table- ( spoonful each of allspice and cloves, and a little nutmeg; boil one hotfir or until quite thick. To be eaten with meat. As some have inquired about canning j strawberries, I will give my recipe: I 1 fill the Cans with berries and then dis- j solve the sugar in a little water and pour ; it in, not filling them quite full, then put them in a kettle of cold water and let , them boil fifteen’or twenty minutes. After I take them from the kettle I fill them 3 up with boiling sweetened water and ' then screw the tops on and let them stand until cold and then screw them up again. 1 have no trouble with mine and they are very good when I epen them.— Cor. Homehald. *. Tea Cake.—Take one pound of flour, one pound of sugar, three-fourths of a pound of butter and ten eggs; cream the flour and butter together, beat the eggs light, the yolks and whites separately, leaving out the whites of two eggs; mix and beat well. Take one-third of the mixture and put it in a square pan and bake it plain; take another third and mix with it slips of citron and bake in a square pan; with the remaining third put French currants well washed, dried and rolled in flour, and bake as above; take a cup of sugar to the whites you reserved and make an icing for your cakes, which spread on while warm, and mark into squares or diamonds with a knife to make it cut better. This will make two cake-baskets full for tea-drinking. * Nagging. This term, according to one of our leading literary authorities, means “not scolding, reproof qf outright punishment, but being always at a child’’—finding continual fault with him about little things. Though the gentleman,to whom we are indebted for this definition addresses his admonition.with respect to “ nagging” to teachers it occurs to us that parents might, without injury, take the matter to heart. It is not always easy for us to distinguish between what is essential and what is an accident of development in our children. For the fonder we must have long, patient and judicious training, reaching from infancy to maturity, slow'ly weeding out elements that are noxious and as slowly incorporating those that are wanting, just as we graft pears upon quince-roots or apples on the thorn-tree. For the accidental qualities we have only to wait their outgrowth. Yet these qualities, mainly, and not the essential ones, provoke “nagging,” of which mothers far more than fathers are apt to be guilty. At one time in the life» of a boy, and this applies to girls as well, he delights to get into the ink. Look out then for stains on the carpet, scribblings in your choicest books and blotches on handkerchiefe, aprons, dresses and table-covers; they are as certain to come as March winds, and almost as trying; but they go of themselves, and “ nagging” neither hastens nor delays their departure. Dancing a chair about on one leg while sitting is another stage that nervous children have to go through, and it lasts till they grow into easy self-confidence. Though excruciating to the susceptible looker-on, patience is the only true remedy. Mild expostulation and pleasant ridicule may hasten the progress of the disorder to a happy termination, but it will cure itself in time. Slamming doors and leaving them open mark another regular stage in the growth of every boy. Life is too short in the juvenile estimation to shut them quietly, perhaps to shut them at all; and about this time, all along before and after, he has too much on hand to stop to wipe his shoes when be comes in from the muddy street. What matters a little mud! As 3 he aits by the stove, wanning his feet and- leaving tracts of their presence, what more natural than that he should j whistle or sing a comic song or a psalmtune comically* He doesn’t mean any- i ifhing wrong by it. The boy nature, exuberant, effervescent, overflowing, must ' work itself off in some manner or dam gerous consequences will ensue, the very worst of which would be ill-nature re- < suiting from suppression. u Nagging” does no good at all; it only, makes mat- ' .ters worse. Coeval with muddy feet and slamming | doors are images in pencil on the house, finger-marks on the windows, especially of a frosty morning when they are so i templing as tablets, trials of the new , jack-knife on the dining-table or the pil ] lars of the front porch, marginal read- ' lags on spellers and arithmetics in hie- < roglyphics that not even Champoilion > could have deciphered; the boy’s name in unformed chirography scrawled in I chalk or pencil everywhere—on the coal j bln. the barn-door, the parlor windowsill, the walls of his sleepingroom; all these testify to the presence of the boy in the bouse. Can he help it? Are such things to be allowed? By no means; they are to be borne with, kindly re- ■ buked, perhaps, and the activity that en- I genders them turned into a channel large ' enough and attractive enough to absorb ' it all. A damp cloth will remove the chalk and finger marks; erasive soap 1 will lake off the plumbago, tartaric acid 1 obliterate the ink-spot; but what can . eradicate from the child's character the effects of perpetual “nagging ?” The time comes fast enough j there will be no little careless hand to i make a “ muss’* on the dean tablecloth, 1 no tiny fingers to scatter things round, I no clatter of childish feel on the 'stair- I way. Fresh paper may cover all the ' marks on the hard finish, paint may conceal the ambitious handwriting on the woodwork, and those traces of boyish a pranks that still remain the mother’s S eye and heart may cherish as sacred to ' as something she would pot willingly be t ?

In a genial, wholesome, tolerant, loving atmosphere, the boy and girl will go a through the various stages of growth from childhood to adult life, dropping whatever is in its nature juvenile, little by little, as'naturaßy as the bean-vfne drops its seminal leaves; but the forbearance and loving patience of the wise father and judicious mother who under innumerable provocations refrained from ’ “nagging,” DOt be f° r ß° tten - — Whoever buys a Mason & Hamlin j Cabinet Organ may be sure he has got the best instrument of the class in the I world, and this at the lowest price at which it can be afforded by the makers having greatest facilities for manufacture. Still the cbt is for the Wilson shuttle sewing machine. And why? Because it is the most perfect and desirable sewing m*- I chine for family use and manufacturing yet i invented, and is the cheapest. The constant ! demand for this valuable machine has made It almost impossible for the manufacturers to supply the demand. Machines will be de- I livered at any railroad station in thia county, i free of transportation charges, if ordered through the company's branch house at 107 State street, Chicago. They send an elegant catalogue and chromo circular free on appli- j cation. This company want a few more good agents. Symptoms of Liver Compfalat and of Some of the Diseases Produced By It. A sallow or yellow color, of skin, or yellowish brown spots on face or other parts of ‘ body; dullness and drowsiness with frequent headache; dizziness, bitter or bad taste in mouth, dryness of throat and internal heat; palpitation; in many cases a dry, teasing cough, with sore throat; Unsteady appetite, raising food, choking sensation' in throat; distress, heaviness, bloated or full feeling about stomach and sides, pain in sides, back or breast, and about shoulders; colic, pain and soreness through bowels, with heat; constipation alternating with frequent attacks of diarrhoea; piles, flatulence, nervousness, coldness of extremities; rush of blood to head, with symptoms of apoplexy, numbness of limbs, especially at night; void chills alternating with hot flashes, kidney and urinary difficulties; dullness, low spirits, unsociability and gloomy forebodings. Only few of above symptoms likely to be present at one time. All who use Dr.'Pierce's Alt. Ext.'or Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Purgative Pellets for Liver Complaint and its complications are loud in their praise of them. They are sold by all dealers in medicines. A Second Father Matthew.—Who Is there that does not respect the memory of Father Matthew, the great champion of temperance? Innumerable societies bear his honored name; but there is one man who has struck a more sure death-blow to intemperance, and that man is Dr. J. Walker, an old California physician, who has discovered in nature’s “ meek and lowly herbs” a medicinal “ tonic” and gentle stimulant that completely ' takes tlie place of the fashionable alcoholic poisons called “ tonics,” so popular as a compromise between strong drink and cold water, and does away with the mania for drink, and in reality cultivates an involuntary disgust for the same. It even does more; It acts upon the entire physi- • cal system, purifies the blood, and produces hale, hardy health. The discoverer of this great medicinal stimulant is surely entitled to the thanks of a whole nation, and it is not extravagant to entitle him “ a second Father Matthew.” 83 Dr. Wilhoit’s Asti-Periodic or Fever and Ague Tonic'.—Wilhoft’s Tonic has established Itself as the real infallible Chill cure. It is universally admitted to be the only reliable aud harmless Chill med Vane now in use Its efficacy is confirmed by thousands of certificates ot the very best people from parts of the country. It cures malarious djsea.-es of every type, from tbe shaking agues of the lakes and valley to the raging fevers of the torrid zone. Try it! It bas never been known to fail. Wheelock, Finlat & Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. Fob salbbt all Druggists. Horse-Men,’fcand others who pretend to know, say that the following directions had better be observed in using Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders: Give a horse a tablespoonful every night for a week; the same every otherniglitforfouror six nights; the same for a milch cow and twice as much for an ox. The addition of a little fine salt will be an advantage. We have heard recently of several severe cases of spinal disease cured by ZoAnaon’z Anodyne Liniment: one case of a man fortyfive years old who had not done a day’s work for four years. The back should first be washed, then rubbed with a coarse towel. Apply the Linimeut cold, and rub in well w ith the hand. ° , For pickling or table use Prussing’s White Wine Vinegar is unrivaled. Try it. , Burnett’s Cocoaine is the bestand cheapest hair dressing in the world. meat to ttohs paper. . ' $lO YTTK positively pay our agent* a stipulated «*1It ary. Tertusfree. COHN ACO., Box 140.CTuoum. day » some. Teran Free. Addreea J ft JfuJV GaaSrtxsox A Co.. Fortland. Maine. Each Week. GOLD PENCIL FREE. Ol Z Address Palmer. Albert 4 Co., SL Louie. Uu. AGENTS- Chang Chang eelle at tight. NecewaT at soap. Geode free. Chant Cban* Hfg Co.. Boston. Agents everywhere. Addreea gtKVVKXCKLSIORMTHCO.. Buchanan. Uieb: PTEEY FAMILY WANT’S IT. Money It it JCtoJdby Anente. Addreea M.M.LOVELL. Erie. Pa. IJaTBST aioara bought and told ou comuut 'u. Klee JL A Williamson. Room ISExchante Bid’s. Cbleago. A WEEK. Ageata wanted everywhere. For Fsnca A Waucxs. Deytoa.Ohio WANTED AGENTS--Ewyviwre. to eurw tor TV oar great C<Ht.aßi»l Book, trorMy rAe «pa/VTICEBSand SOLDIERS who orttbetr heneein W. 8. Anuy—no matter now loat—can set compena*. ttoa. PeualMMobtaluedforwonadsvrisjur'.ee.hoerever allgbt. Pamphirt tree. C JLAraoM, Au*y. ClncUiaaH.o. etaaap. Sample SI-OSBORNE ADAVIS. RocktonL HL A I ’ I?V r Either *ex; steedy work at home. ADLj Ire Valuable •arnpi™ and term*. 10 ceata. SIMPSON A SMITH. Corttand* &U New York. QQC PER DAT Cotnmkrtcm or*3OaveekßalCLM ary. and expense*. We ofrcrlt and wtllpay < IL Appijmow. G. Webber A BLACK JULUWSJJifJSf tet i lose can be aold. Goodapeed PubHahS Houae.Ctocaig > Fo^ciremart. eudaaiMOf|y The Best. AHCrdora. One Wafer Ira K » makes 3o«new. Sample and CircaS MONEY i tow Dusky man. p. B?wBmKA<XM^St. < N r T 1 ■ tW*FAXBT Sum ASratnMLzr. YOWIENWi Ith X. W. S 3 aoata for Book afoin* theawereta u 3 -xpUining Ineeatmant of the dar. Addreea Box ATTKSTKM. OWEKBS OP mmHES. nr-med d rectifies are fA ' YKSgM-Sgyy kaed. r Torlfc 9 **&«*•» e

- ~ . . . . ALL WHO WISH TO MAKE MONEY! ' M * UE< V AeENTS! %/ EMALE Yb Galatea Fortine . A JBCO3MC3S eAM BY TAKING SVBBCBXFTIQKS FOB THE FAMILY JOURNAL! °! The Cheapest Literary, Art and Fashion Paper In America. ■ ■ ; i,' T ( I t , I I I 1 I ( I 1 1 Mrs. 8.-Oh. Henry! see what I made during one. day. taking sutaertbere among my friend* for Tnx F amtlt Jovksaz. Ills warranted 18 carat gold, a good timekeeper, aud worth Stilt. ’ u Mr. B.—lt ts truly a beauty, and a sensible kilt; and any nubiteher giving such nremiums should snemwd •lovyNat. <*<»• Sprwepdper. ««<?/'the Aeu? York Ledger, and contains to columns of the <h,)icest reading mailer, t>g 8r«« wnlenoftke <lag, bender one page of Illustrated HutAiofu in adranee Os all other pubticaarm,, all for onto 91.00 a vearjm.lhge.mnd, w.lfeither Theualr of “TW INS ASLEEP and TWINS AWAKE?’ size Ixll, mounted ready to frame, or the “ UNWEL-CONarviSITOR.-iexM, - ANNA’S PETS " ISxW, “HEEL AND toE,- 20x24, and “AIKANDP VS WVTCII" 20xM, or tbe engraving of “HORACEGHEELEY AND FAMILY." 22x28; or 51..10 yearly with the magnificentChromo "CONSECILVTION,” 20x24. or tbe fonr beantlfnl Fruit Chromof- llasket of Strawberries Peach and beat. Peaches and Strawberries, Apple and Plnm—printed in 16 colors, size 9xll, each mounted readv for framing- Or we will gwe a choice of any two of our chroman for Si.3o, CONSEtai ATION is a large and magniftcent chromo, printed tn twenty-two colors. It la chaste amt beautiful, and tltb skillful execution has done justice to the beautiful design. As a proof of the value of this ne w and roperb premium, the Publishers may Mate that a leading dealer in chromoe offered to purchase two thousand eonles at 54.00 each, with a view to place it on the market at SIO.OO. a price Its intrinsic worth and beauty would readily command We send all the above Chromo* neatly arranged witb oil cloth eov«-r with samples of the Jounxah, Blanks, Circulars, etc., including the Family Jovbxai. one year for *2,00. Each Outfit contains 12 Chrmnos that would retail fur $25 at New York prices. Any Lady or Gentleman cannot fall In making Bum SIOO to *2OO nionthlr. As an additional Inducement, we give $50,000, In Cash, and other premiums, to encourage our Agents and Subscribers to work in our interest and behalf, we arc determined to make ours the leading paper ot the. Unied States as regards circulation, value of contents, and Hio low price at which It is given to subscribers For the first few vears we intend all the profltc of the I>aper to go to those who arc helpfog us to build It up. If Manr of onr agents only devote their evenings orspare time In taking subscriptions to.the Jouknal. Sou sue so situated that you cannot devote yonr whole time to the business, take the Outfit and solicit subscripons during your leisure hours. Thus eraons wno have not all their time engaged can procure from 100 to 500 subscribers xrithout Interfering with their other duties, thus making many dollars. If not hundredr, in a very short soacc ot time. We feel warranted m Saying that ladies or gentlemen who may devote their whole time and attention to canvassing for the Family JovknaL are reasonably certain of a snug Income of from Bl OOH to R 2.500 a year. If you wish to make money you can become an agent where you reside. \eenta rcmeufb-- that no paper in the United States gives such inducements. The naper Is worth the monev and the chromos or engravings cannot be purchased for less than *I.OO to SIO.OO each. And we nav. besides, the large commiSkm or4o per eent. on each subscriber. Send stamp for sample with 32 page Titastrated Catalogue, containing list of 85 new articles, fist selling Chromoe, Novelties, etc., giving fist ot Gifts so Agents and Workers. W hat our AgenU are doing. What Agents, Subscribers and she Press say of the Journal and its Chromo*. tig-For information to strangers we will give the following leading Houses as references: Pelletreau A Raynor 35 A37 Vesey St., Publishers; Warren A Howanl. Park Place. Paper DealersjG Bissell, M Gold St, Paper Dealer- Bromell A Robhner. 92 White St. Printers; IL Shugg. I Chambers St.. Publisher. we will send the Joubxal six months on trial, postage on molpt oi 25 centa t” th< .sewho desire to know what the Joubxal Is before being regular subscribers. FAMILY JOLRNAL, 300 Broudaay, N. X.

(Jini AGENTS WANT ED EVERYWHERE.-The I II fl Choicest Inthe world—lmporters’price*—lar;rA I Its est Company In America-staplearticle-pleases everybody-trade increasing-best inducements —don’t waste time—send for Circular to ROBERT WELLS, 43 Vesey St, New York. P 0. Box 1287. J || B T MOITEY IN IT SURE! Jnst W w I out Useful, Handsome, Cheap. Sells i thk everywhere. A rare chance. Also, ROOK New Maps,Charts, &c. tod Our new chart. CHRISTIAN CA N GRACES.lsasplendtd»uc<-w<s.Cln- ! A IW cinnatl prices same as N .York. Send UT?T T t for terms to F..C. BttinoMAX.SßareSrililJ • lay St..N.Y.. *179 W.lth 8t.C1n..0. EOTABLISUSED 18S4. WOOL. GRASS SEEDS, &C. TILLIKGHAST, ALLEN & CO.. C7ECXC4LGO, Xlala. fT‘ is n-’w 1 ntto « *,->■. /.■ with perfect comfort, Ka AL ASTIC mS Itself to every motion ot T D IT e c Eff the body, retaining Rupx a U o ». ture under the hardest exercise or severest strain until permanently \ g cured. Bold cheap by the BLASTICTSUSSCO., Wo. *B3 Broadway, N. Y. Cttv, snd sent by mail. Call or send for circular and be cured. tjs. SMITH t*2 c?o., ‘ MAXrrACTTRERS or Plaster Onter-Plecew, Brackets, MODILLIONS, and all k:s>>s or PLASTER ORNAMENTS, 184 dk 186 STATE ST., opp. Pat ns er House, CHICAGO. ILila. jy Parties wialdug Centers would do w ell to send <1 -<■ ot rooms. We M.ixrrACTn;g ScagliolaColnmns. Pilasters.etc. Perfect imitation of the different-colored Murbica. DO YOUIfOWN PRINTINC! IWTOVELTY JM POINTING PHESS. For l*rt>fe»»ional and Amateur Printer*, Mneietle*, ManufUcUircrt, Mercliaals, ami other* it is cw invented 13.000 in n»e. Tenatyles, Prices from 55.00 to $150.00 BENJ.O. WOODS* CO. Manure and dcairtY in all kwdfl of Prtntlng Material, Semi stamp for Caulug’Jt.) Tederal St. BostonThree Money-Producing Certainties and Three Million Dollars. The moatopujgnt plan ever presented to agents for making money. It dwarfs everything else. We control three undeaiaMe and mo’uv pro-l'i-->ng certmnties: Tbe “Trade Bureau.” “Commercial Exchange,” and “GrandSyaiem of bpeclal Discounts.” The dream of live agents realised lien who are making monev can make money rasrxa Address ROBT. B. FORD h CO “ Pub'rs, State and Madison-sts., Chicago. »-■ OBTHK BEST in the World. ’ It Gives V nil vrsai Satudactluu. WONDKRFI'L Economy. W i be. more Bread to bbl. I four. SAVES MILK, EGOS,&e. r 4oCcmey ear's savings will buy acow. rngffian SO MORE SOCR BRE AC. . UMIW/ I . Whiter, LtgUter, Sweeter. Richer. EVERYBODY Fraire It. The Ladle*are ail in love with it. SELLS like HOT C AKES. LJikWTw cA> sySer.d at once for Circular to yF-fffWF CEO V Ok STY. At <O~ , 136 Dasne St- Sew St ork. TJ $ iru&AvviGAZETTEEE Abook tor every American. SeUs every where a. sight ; j Diteetors. Manufacturers. Meebanic*. Siiippers. Soles- t men. men ortearetng and men wboeaa only read, old : and yuuug. all want It for everyday reference acd use. Shown grand results of 100 Years' Progress. A ‘ whole Library. Boston Globe— Not a luxury, but aneeeUlty. InUr~Oeem— Beat-well Ing book ptmiGhed —Good Pajr.XF* Wutt Gee .A«a. ia every city << ItMW. AidrosZc. MrCFROY ACO, PablUiaera, CiUctnaatLO.,Chicago, 111., or St.Leuls.Mo. A Great Offer! SEsSSSS an the benz made { »*« tone* elastic, o»d a fine i slaaiwa isar, powerful, pare and evea. WATERS'Concerto ORGANS l-‘£ tation Human Voice. Agents Wanted, j A liberal Swaant to Teatbere. Hiniaterw, “W —F'# l^ a V l WATER ■ ■ BJI B NOT AFFECT TUE ■ Iy. B HAND LE S I --- --“-p- "- or TUB NY” on the blade. Sold t>yal dealers to Cutlery and MKRIOEN CI;TLKRV COMPANY, fipfrat Habit Cured A certain and cure cure, witbont toconvenlaace and at borne. An antidote that stands purely on Ha own merita. Send for my quarterly magazine. (• hundreds that have been permanently cured. I eialm to have I itocevered aa* produced tbe rinsv, oueuu. an ■>xir auEßccxx rox ontx xafixs. DR. S. B. COLLINS, La Porte, Ind. «' ■ ■ M ' ——————— " • r > nanx luxe, yarnrrim. Tbr brrt air! rhrapest Paint in Ike ; WwM fipr |von. Tin «r Waed. ■ for ante ‘ tor fto- icTi erer-.-trni-re. PRTNi'ES' NTETAfJ-’C I PAlx£< (L N » Cedar Ml fo* Eetk Purchasers will plea?.- ! see that our »ml ttode auric are oa each tod OVM7 psetege. Seat* I r lit.-./‘ Lip ■■

W'DONT'W ejZF’aSKTZ} A DOLIrA-Tl advertising in ant newspaper before seeing] I my new ratal, gae of CO-OP EK ATI V K LISTS I Addreel 3.P. SANBORN, 114 Monroc-it , Chicago Jll Smith Organ Co., BOSTON? MASS. These Standard Instruments Sold by Music Dealers Everywhere. AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN. fh SOLD TUXOVGHOVT TtlS PXITXD STATES OX THE INSTALLMENT PLAN; That is, on a System of Monthly Payments. Purchasers should ask for the Smith AteticurOtosN, Catalogues and full particulars on application. Greatest Invention of the Age! [no list'roii *hf ajcmalA T# TH* ' THE GIIDOcN FENCE / » U yi CANT CET-TttROUCH/ * Jl •-» ’*r-7* - J. F. GEddSsBARB FENCE WIRE. Vo>. r >, ttSTAThoroitghly tested by thousands of farmers, and all are enthusiastic in ita praise. Give It atrial and you will pronounce it the best, cheapest and Moat Durable Fence tn the world. The above cut represents a good rrxrn. coating 40 eta. per rod. In-' quire of hardware dealers. Will send sample rura of chakois bvmail. on apollcatlon. For further particular* address HARB FEM E CO., De Kalb, 111. Free! Free I! Free!!! The Pioneer. A handsome, illustrated newspaper, containing information for everybody. Tells how and where to se--ure a home cheap’. tixr raxa to all pa bis or TUB WOULD. ■ , 11 contains the xtw Homestma p and Ti mbe a L* ws, with other interesting matter found only in this paper. Send For If At Once ! It will only cost you a Postal Ci bp. New number fur April juat out. , Address ‘ O. F. DAVIS, Land CommiMioncr V. P. R. R—» Omaha, Neb* ~ ■ 1 ’ .. 75 GO. OT aaaivcn omexa and rarroxnm: 506 WEST ST.. - - New York. No. 210 South Third St.. St. Louis. Mo. No. 83 west Van Buren St., Chicago, 111. Any Shade from Pure White to Jet Black. A combination of the purest paint with Indi* Rubber. forming a SMOOTH, slobby, nxx, Pvk.biu, XL • trrir andajsam ell Paint, unaffected hr chants of temperature. is perfectly water proof, and adapted to al! classes of work, and isin every way a better paint for either inside or outside painting than any other naint In the world. Being from one thlrd to une-fuurth cheaper and lasting at icaat three time* a* long as the ■ be.t lead and oil paint*. ' Be Sure that Oxr TRADE M IRK (a the simile of which is given above l. Is on every package. ' Prepared ready for nse and soldby the gallon only 1 There has never been a Paint offered the public that • has become so popular itn the «mr time) and given as , perfect satisfaction as the Rubber Paint. m®(h.s,sbbpam&co?B "Vibrator” Tiresier. The BRILLIANT SUCCESS of this GrainSaving. Timc-S.rlay THRESHER 1* un precedented in the annals of Farm Machinery. In a brief period it has become widely known and FULLY ESTABLISHED as the “ LEADING THRESHING MACHINE.” the wasteful other TUrcshe* TH RESHER MEN.FIND IT highly advantageous to ' ran a machine ftatbM noßeaters.” - Wckers,” or “ Aprdn " that handles Damp Gratp Long Straw, » - Kl7 W.” £ easier managed; less repair* One that grain -raiser* 1 preOrto employ and watt for, even at advanced prices, while other machines are "out of Fvrnr sixes made, with », S, X) and 12 horse “ Mounted” Pown. also a special- 1 <T Separatttra ‘•alone,” expmaly for 1 STEAM POWER, and to match other Horse Fowers. If WtffßMted In grain raising Or threshing; ★rite for nitweratcd Circulars (seat fret with full particulars - of steen, style*, price*, term*, eie. HIOHOLS, SHEPARD ft CO„ , Battle Owafr ml*m— w I - *— ■*. ”• a**veM£ WM* j . ■ ‘ ’ , ’ . ■ ■ '‘% ■ - . , ,

Dr. J. Walker’s California Vinegar Bittei'S arc a purely Vegetablo preparation, made cliietiy from the native herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sicrßi Nevada mountains of California, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked, ‘‘What is the cause of the unparalleled success of Vinegak Bitters!’’ Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient recovers his health. They are the great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of tho world has n medicine hp° a comixiunded possessing th« remarkablo qualities of Vikkgak Bittkrk in healing too sick of every diseaso-inan in heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonje, relieving Congestion or lutl&inniation/of ihe Liver anil Visceral Organs, in Jsious 01SC&BCS. The properties of Dr. Walker’s Vinkgar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative. Nutritious. Mxative. Diuretic, Sedative. Counter-Irritant. Sudorific, Alteralive, and Anti-Bilious. Gratefill Thousands proclaim Vinegar Bitters the moat wonderfill Invigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs wasted beyond repair. Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent tn the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially thosb of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grando, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements m the stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these various organs, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walker’s Vinegar Bitters. .as they will speedily remove the darkcolored viscid matter with which bowels are loaded, at tho same time stimulating tho secretions of the liver, and generally restoring tho healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by purifying all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Bad Tasto in the Mouth, Bilious Attackr, Palpitatation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, arid a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of DyspepsiaOne bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertise- • ment. Scrofula, or King’s Evil, wirita Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Nccß Goitre, Scrofulous lufluumations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affection’s, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sure Eys, Ota. ■ In these, as in all other constitutional Diseases, Walker’s Viseoar Bitters have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Go&t, Biliohs, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Bloody Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no eoual. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood. Mechanical Diseases.—Personsengaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against this take a dose of Walk Kr's Vinegar Biitilils For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spate, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Cuilmneles, Ring-worms, Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally duj bp and carried out of the system in a short limo by the use of these Bitters.’ Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. Ng system of medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelminitics will free the system from worms like these Bitters. • Por Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn ofi womanhood. or the turn of life, these Tonio Bitters display so decided an influence that improvement is soon perceptible. Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever yqu find its impurities bursting through the skin in Pimgles, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it whep you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. r. h. McDonald & co., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and oor. of Waahington and Chariton Sts., N. Y. . Sold by all Druggist* and Dealer*. iS4O &, X>£ft3r •IIAKAXTXXD BT V»iMO R. B. PALMER’S Star Well Auxer, . — .Patented May 5,1874. L WarrMtoA «- Bon- X.jthlo" s *eep« Rolbsß Skcbcft* I Wells 50 ft. Deep Sunk In 4 Hoars. I „. Can bore SCO feet deep if neceseary. I “ k ner l ua,M "• Sinking tIW Through Heuvg Bodiu gs It is the cheapest and most perfect Well I Auger ever invented. ■ Owing to the rapidly-increasing demand ■ for our Augers we have been compelled u» ■ remove our manufactory from CUampahrn* I to Chicago, I IL, where we are now fufiy ■ prepared to fil I all orders promptly. ft Highbst Tisti mo vials Fcknishmd. M Before investing in any other Augers. Haeud. for our new Illustrated Catalogue. : I Mark the deception of any party followf Ing us In our advertising, also in circulars, claiming to be the original Inventor of his own Anger. That may be the case. But the object In placing* true cut of ours, a superior anger. In hi* advertisement, would be to mislead the people »nd draw correspondence. If we had an auger that was so worthless that we were ashamed to present a correct ent of the same to the public, we would not use the cut of one we dare not manufacture. This Is a matter we core but little about, only we desire to present facta and theretqr protect innocent people from imposition. For fall explanation send for our New Enlarged Illuatrated Catalogue STAR WELL At GEH CO.. No. 308 South Canal Street, Chicago, fil, HVlvILv CASH. We mean Home Sewing Jfadhinet. W LARGE DISCOUNTS FOR CASH. Jfachinu best os trial M any part of the country at OUK expense if net cepted. Send for latent circvXare and termt tai , JOHNSON, CLARK & CO., ♦ «Sa»bT Aar’ui U.S. A., CHICAGO, ILL. FREE! A< ’* AMERICAN FARM JOURNAL. yt X JOMJE& Ohi*. You wfil Wte tirepaper* WJ-N O.L » ~ * A FAPEH ii Prtxitod with INK 10 un n by