The Syracuse Enterprise, Volume 1, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 11 November 1875 — Page 4
OUR JUUENILEB. .4 f.ittlr C»M»f»rtrr. HU>, CblcXaUUdy. »o eover, to cover; ' Cuddle your yellow brood under your wing: Above, In blue Woven, tbe harpy hawka borer. Below yon tbe cruel rat croocWe to epring. Keen the tru rry north wind la a foe to you. Otbt your ruffled bark t urnlug j our tail, R uißng your luaay clock, bringing I ut woe t u, Worry and bony, and cackle and wall, Foor chlekabifl.iy. now what ean I do for you ? Build yo« a < -wy noop, aunny and rate • Feed you, and aet our obi Boa- to cry •• 800 !" for you. When the cate frighten you, poor little waif ? Why. "twaa laet apring you w< re one of tbe cbu kem, Becking and chirping, ro Uapjo and free; But time haa wrought change*, and aa trouble thicken*. c . I The care of your family fal'a upon me. Well, I'm a boy that baa i. are to go fUhing ; But then, the wind blow*, and the *ky i* too clear. Bol'U juat atay at h me, and put off what f'm wiabing. To attend to your want*, CbickaUddy, my dear, i J/«elf«Mre'eM. A great many years ago there stood, mrtltxi cosily down among the ktfty hills of New England, a quiet little village. The.inhabitants were equally as; quiet and unpretentious. There was one particular family which consisted of two aged persons, as quiet, old-fashioned, and tradition says, almoat as ancient as the town itself—- Uncle Joseph and Aunt Katie. Every year troops of grandchildren and cousins, came up from the South to spend the summer months, and sometimes lingered until Christmas. ’Twas the last of October, anil the first snow of the season lay on hill and dale, ; covering. them ns with a mantle of er mine. The frozen lakes and streamlets 1 which lay in almost every nook of three old mountains, sparkled and danced in ■ the moonlight like fairies at a banquet. Within Aunt Katie's house was all cozy and bright; she busy knitting heels and | toes in Uncle Joe's nocks, while that worthy gentleman was quietly perusing a inqu r. The young folks, some reading, some sowing, while others talking, wen' scattered about the room in groups. Towrer and Tabby, sleeping |>racrfully on the rug liefore tile tire, helped to • form as pretty a domestic picture as one could wish to see. Presently one of tile children, growing tired,addled for a ■ story. . . I “ OIM yes! a story, a story! Aunt Katie- a story !” echoed through the room. All drew near ,the huge fireplace, which was filled with blazing pine knots,, and the friendly fire which leapedwildly up tlie chimney, drove away all remem- ' bmnee of the cold and snowy outer .: world. ■■ ' ■ ; j ? “ Well, well. I’m no gr>*at hand at story telling, but I'll do my best. I suppoah you all know tliat this Hallowe'en, How the very name brings up thoughts of ghosts and fortune-trying! It was on this night twenty, yes, thirty odd j y<wrw ago, wasn't it, Joseph f’* '* Ofe, never mind, never mind I” mid Uncle Joo, blowing his nasal organ vigorously with his yard square red liandkercbtef, “ that story grew etale yean* ago when Uvvte childnui'A mothers and’’ fathers were young.’.' "Well,” said Aunt Katie, meekly, J "if you’d rather I wouldn't tell it, I - won't," . ~ . "Ob. I don't can'," he returned, “ but you must bear in mind tliat I was very young, and tliat accounts for any weak num on my psrt." Aunt Katie langhod and adjusted her spectacles, while she began: "There: was a taffy pulling at Farmer Dobbins',d and all Uh* young folks in the country t were there. After the taffy had Iswu duly pulled, and the games played, we settled down tp story-telling. Naturally, the cm vernation turned upon Hallowe'en. Three stories took such a deep eff.-et- upon tbe minds of four of us girls, who wen- to remain all night with Ma tibia (our bortraa), that we determined - to try one of them ; which one «w*-tb go down the cellar backward, carrying a light and a looking glass, and, as the story goes, you will see your fate mirrored in the glam before you. " We were planning, all unconscious i that sous pairs of ears were eagerly drinking in all tliat we mid ; but we were not destined to remain long in ignorance, for one of our |>arty overheard the merry plotting of the artful schemers. Tlicir plan was, instead of going home, as they i tdiould have dune, to hide in tbe cellar, and each, as his sweetheart descended ' the stairs, was to present his beautiful visage in the mirror before her. ." Now, 'twaa our tarn to put our beads together, to form a plan to Irnftte tliem, and thia is how we managed it In the first place we secured tbe confi deuce of Tim, the hired boy, who, being' of a mischievous tarn of mind, was easily persuaded to personate Mr. Ghost Procuring a false lace, a sheet, a long white whig, and a dark lantern, we succeeded in making Tim look quite ghostly. We stationed him in the darkest corner of the cellar, ami giving him his orders, hid behind a tree, and waited in si lence. Swrcely five minutes had elapsed before we saw a proeeanion of for.r filing round the corner of the kitchen, con valued with laughter. They crept slily down the cellar staire, and when we were quite certain that they were all down. a!i|>ped noiselessly out from our hiding place and shut and locked the cellar door. For a few minutes silence reigned supreme, when, as Tim hadbeoa .wdered, he fiaslied his lantern, displaying his ghostly proportions. “ The whole band, with a whoop and a yell, soogfet the steps, bat Tim, enjoying the fan, ran among them, giving one a punch, grinning in the face of another, all the white giving utterance to the most nneartldy sounds, until becoming deiqwrate, they rualied in a body against the door, bursting it off the hinges. Once free, they took to their heels in disgraceful flight, which was by no means slackened by the laughter of four merry girls. The next morning Farmer Dobbins, upon investigation, found that he was minus half a barrel of apptes, and a score or two of milk-crocks, which had been buried st random at tbe bead of unfortunate Tite—and the cellar floor wm completely inundated with a barrel of his best cider." Here the old fashioned clock on the tending struck 11, and the story being finished,' teb sdhght our couches to dream at mtechievwus Tim and the unfortunate four.— yougp FWAr’ Site Steas ta Ste JSsoW. There was a Duke once who diaguteed himself, and placed a great rock in the ’ -wvv-SI Jit-, AL.- natw
Nert morning a peasant came that way with his ox-cart. "Oh, these lazy people!** said he, "there is this big stone lying right in the middle of the road,-and no one will take the trouble to put it out <rf the way. " And so Hans went on, scolding about the laziness of the people. Next come a gay soldier along. His bead was held so far back that be didn't I notice the stone, and so he stumbled over it. He began to storm at the country people' aronud there for leaving a huge rock in the road. Then he went on. Next came n company of merchants. When they came to the stone, the road was so narrow that they had to go off in single file on the other side. One of them cried out, " Did anybody ever see the like of that big stone lying here the whole of the morning, and not a single person j stopping to take it away 1” It lay there for three weeks, and no one tried to remove it Tlien the Duke sent around word to nil the people on bis lands to meet where this rock lay, as he liad something to tell them. The day came, and a great crowd gntli i ered. Old Hans, the farmer, was there, I I and so:were the merchants. A horn was j heard, and a sph-ndid cavalcade came galloping up. The Duke got down from his horse, and Itegan to speak to the js*->ple gathered there. "My friends, it was I who put the i stone here three weeks ago, Every pas-J aer-by lias left it just where it was, and : has scolded Ina neighbor for not taking it out of the way.’’ , ! He atoopeil down and lifted up the I stone. Directly underneath it was a round hollo*, and in the hollow lay a small leather bag. The Duke held up this I mg, that all might see what was writ- ! | ten on it : " For him who lifts up the stone.” He untied the bog, and tiirmsl j it upside down, and out upon the atone fell a Iwwutiful gold ring and twenty large, bright gold coins. I z , So they all lost tlx* prize because they had not learned the lesson, or formed the liabit of diligence. N />o lose Ctel/ I'owr frtfltrr* “The old num won't let me go." > '"Pshaw! my gov'ner'll let me go." " Well, liavcu't said anything to my pop , about it." Such talk among boys is very common. When boys get to be of a eer I tain age—from twelve to sixteen—they - seem to think it manly, in speaking of ; tbeir fathers to other boys, to use Borne .■dang word. We hear "Old Man," "Dad,” "Old Squaretoea," "Pop,”; "Governor," or "Gov,’’ iusbvul of; father, one of tlie liest, ami which should ‘ lw -next to mother— the dearest of j names. Thia nicknaming is not by any means coutined to rude and tough boys, but unfortunately prevails among those who hare licen well brought up, prop»*rly <xlucated, and l»ave pleasant homes. -It ; i would be sad, indeed, if these names were use, I to express dismapect, or con j b-mpt, but they arc heard, and more's ' the pity, from tlie lipa of those boys' who really low their fathers, and who i would at once rcaent it if anything disrespect'ul were said of them. Not one of the boya who is in the liabit of apeoking of his father by a slang name, would go to him and say, " Old man, won’t .you please" do this or that, or nay ! " Good night, pop." It is a very safe rule never to sjx-ak of your father—or Tin fact any one else—by any name you prouhl not use in speaking to him. Tlie go»xl old Saxon name father is not only , a pleasing word, but it is appropriate at all ages, whether from the tiny child or the full grown man. Hoys, don't use slang at all, bnt <wpecially not when yon mean father.—.fmerican AgrifulturiHt. 4 »o.\DKgn l rites or xi:in jxnv A correspondent at Ikmaldson, Pa., writes to the Pottsville Journal aa folI lows about a wonderful piece of mechanism: Talk about the apostolic clock which was on exhibithui in Pottsville, I some time ago, and which is now before the public at some other place! It cannot compare with tbe wpndtrful piece of mechanism which has been made by a man of our plact*. This alao is in tlie shape of a dock. It is a tank to n>pn*I sent the sea, and in it is a large whale as natural looking as life. A ship in ilistreas appean* on the sea, and tbe crew j are in the act of- throwing a man over board. The whale cOmea romee np out ot the water, and, aa its head appears, lite mouth gradually opens until it reaches the man thrown out of the ship, when it suddenly swallows him up. ‘No dect>ptiou is practiced. Tlie man jwwes down the wiial«<'s throat, and the whale sinks into the tank. Himultam*ously a figure representing an angel appeals in a cloud and hovers around tlie I place where the whale appeared. After the lapse of three-quarters of a minute the whale reayipeara, anJ, gradually opening his mouth, casta the man out upon tbe shore. At this and cloud disappear, and a ing God appears near the map. This eerne, of course, reprvaenta the Bible I story of Jonah and the whale. | In the same case is a figure represent ingGtptein Jack, of the Modoc Indiana, who was bung by tbe government, striking on a bell the w.-conds he had to lire before execution. Suddenly a door opens , and a group of Indians march around | him, taking their farewell look at him. I They then pare out through ’ another j door, which opens for their exit. IXtJiiriTV in AV»TKAt.IA. Australian statistics show that insanity of a violent kind prevails to a frightful' extent on that continent, especially in ' South Australia, with its population of I 300,000. In 1861 there wrre 161 inmates of asylums in that part of Aus tralia, being one to 760 inhabitants. In 1870 they numbered 307, and at the close of 1871 there were re many re 324, or one to 524 of the population. These figures do Dot represent the entire list of the insane, bnt include only madmen and other inmates of the asylums. The' caaas of this great prevalence of insanity can only be surmised, as no authorita j tivw explanation <rf it is given. Dr. Patterson, Director of the Insane Avylum at Adelaide, does not think that alcohol is tbe principal cense. One explanation is, that it is produced by the weakening effects of the dimate, and by tbe restIsm, anxious fives ted by tbe English edentate, who are often made mad by repeated fiuhoee in buriMoa.
rvm of sffOKB. Very few young men who regularly smoke cigars are aware of the expensiveness of the habit They whiff away their Havanas without a thought of what the practice is costing them. It is only five cents or ten cents a time, and so they indulge unconscious that they are converting houses, lands, capital, and the 1 essentials of life, into smoke. But let I us look at it in the light of arithmetic. Suppose, reader, that you should save I, the money yon pay for cigars and put it into tbe savings bank where the interest will be compounded semi-annually—have you tbe sligbhwt idea of the amount of such savings in the run of years 1 1 Beginning with a low daily cost of tlie use | of tobacco, five and one-fourth cents I per day would amount to 820 in a year, 8200 in ten years, $5,800 in fifty years. Saving likewise 11 cents daily, you will | have S4O at tbe end of the yew’, $520 in ten years, and $11,600 in fifty y<*ars. ; This last sum, if saved by tlie yonng i I clerk, in a single decade would leave him J ! quite a little capital to invert in some legitimate business. And many |»oor j young men in this city are spendiDg 11 I cents daily for cigars or tobacco ! Young ' men, you can’t afford to smoke at this rate. We say nothing of the unpleasantness of the liabit, but look at it entirely from a p cuuinry point of view. You can’t afford it. By studying the above ; can you not sv bow you are uncon- | sciously sending off into space to make : the circuit of tlie globe money tliat would ! > purcliaae a giaxl homestead, and leave i j you sometliing beside to make comfort-1 able your old age ? We recommend to : all smokers to take an evening, sit down with tbeir families, and consider whether they can afford to smoke; whether their Imppiness, their future pro«;>ects and tte'ir nwpectability would not l>e greatly eulianced by a total discontinuance of the odious practice. thk hood nor r.v n.ixnvnr. There is a nice little story about a Boston l»oy wlk> threw a l<all through a window, and then went homvitly to tlie owner ; of the house, confessed what he had done, and gave him the add 1 ess of his father. It is well to circulate good stories like these, as they frequently stimulate other boya to go and do likewise. A Danbury b<>y who had read this story was throwing stones at a dog on White street, Saturday afternoon, when a missile missed its aim and flew through afour-dollar pane of glass. Tlie first impulse of the boy was to lift his feet and dep<wt from tliat neighborhood with vehemence, but* the experience of the Boston boy suddenly come to him, and with it the glow of pleasure he had felt in perusing it, and he made np his mind at once that he would go to the man, tell him what he had done, and give him |he name of his father. It was a beautiful—nay, a grand and inspiring scene, this pale-faced bnt honest-eyed boy, humbly bnt firmly confessing the wrong to, the deeply-affected merchant. That evening the manly youth returned home. As he opetuxl the door to j«ass in he sett himself suddenly grasjxed by * tlie collar bone ami lifted into the air, and then <irop|>ed down again with a swiftness that startled him. And then the voice of his fattier pealed forth—- " Break out windows, will ye?—(another jerk)—destroy people's property, hey ?—(cuffing him under the ear) —and then go an’ tell ’em who did it,’you infernal vagrant." And he picked up the struggling and screaming but noble lad, and threw him I over his knee, and during the next five minutes a boiler explosion might have taken pla-.x» in the next building without being noticed. The boy was at tbe dejmt next day, inquiring the fare to Boston.— Danbury I ■ nKAvrr .ixo nn.itxn. Some newspaper writer reviews the lamentable truism that literary women are seldom beautiful. Their features, particularly their foreheada, are more or I less masculine. But there are exceptions j Co all rules, and Mias Landon was an ex- ; option to this one. She was exceedingly feminine and pretty. Mrs. Stanton . likewise is a pretty woman, but Miss Anthony and Mrs. Livermore are both plain. Maria and Jane Porter wenwomen of high brows and irregular features, as was also Miss Sedgwick. Anna Dickinson has a strong, masculine •face; Kate Field has a good-looking thmigh by no means pretty one, and Mrs. Stowe is thought'to l<e positively homely. Alice and Phtebe Cary were both plain in features, tlamgh their sweetness of dispoaitioii added greatly to tbeir pt rsonal appearance. Margaret Full* r had a splendid head, but her features wen- irregular and she was anything but though sometimes in the glow of conversation she appeared aimart J radiant Charlotte Bronte had woudroudy beautiful dark-brown eyes and a perfectly-shaped had. She was small to diminutiveneM*, and was as simple in her manners as a child. Julia Ward Howe is a fine-l<x>king woman, wearing an asp»*ct of grace, refinement and great force of character in her face and carriage. Laura Holloway resembles Charlotte Bronte l>oth in personal appearance and the and experience of her yonng life. Neither Mary Booth nor Marion Harland : ean by claim to handsome faces, though they are splendid specimens of cultivated women, while Mary Clemmer Ames ia just aa pleasing in her features as her writings are graceful and popular. oFirjf BAtrxo. In an article on tbe efleeta of opium eating, which discusses measures proposed in Parliament concerning the revenue derived from tbe production of tbe drug in India, tbe London Spectator expresses th*» fo’lowing opinion concerning the effects of its consumption by tbe inhabitants of the Chinese lowlands, which will lie novel to many readers: That the physical evils arising from opium eating may be enggerated is no I doubt tree, and we incline to believe, after years of study of the evidence adduced by experts, that they have been exaggerated in a very curious way. Opium affects all prtiants in England more or less in tbe same way, and it has, I therefore, been imagined that it affects all men throughout the world alike, but that is not the case. It is probable that, like whisky, it has a different effect on different races. Scotchmen and Swedes j drink too much whisky, but to say that
whisky destroys Scotchmen and Swedes is a rhetorical exaggeration. The liquor does not make them, as races, lees strong, leas brave, or leas prolific. But it is, nevertheless, a certainty that whisky can kill out some races, such as red Indians, and some tribes in the South Sees; and it is probable, though not quite proved, some castes of low vitality in India itself. Similarly opium—and especially Indian opium, which is extremely mild, and there little used in medicine—does not appear to permanently injure the : Chinese of the Delta, who have taken to it by a kind of instinct, and may find in I it a protection against fatigue and mala-1 ria, such as the Peruvians find in cocoa; while it kills out the Assamese, and we greatly fear would kill out the Bengalese of the Gangetic Delta, who, were the drug but cheap, would be under the ! same atmospheric temptation as the Chinese. j. TJJT* GOOD OLD TIMES The good old times I Wliat man or woman among past two-score years, but sings that eternal song! A correspondent of the St. Louis Republican, who was pleased with the recent editorial reference to the signal anda’most invariant’ failures of the architects of the day to provide proper ventilation for their buildings, both private and public, says - “ things were different in the good old times." The correspondent thinks that: the old fashioned open fire-place, with i j its great blazing logs, offered a perfect < ventilation, ami that the stoves and far naces of latter days are abominations | that should be swept from the face of the globe. There are some people nowadays who are not quite prepared to assent to this, however, and it seems that even in the days that are gone, in tjioee “ good old times " that we hear so much of, there was just as much disagreement on this subject as there is to-day. A correspondent of the New York Tribune. semis that paper an extract from a magazine published in Philadelphia, Decern-! bar, o 1792, entitled, “ Observations on 1 the Effect of Close and Open Fire placets” which illustrates so well the way doctors disagree about this thing | that we append it-in place of any Comments of our own : "Prejudice among Amcncuis is great against i atovee. Whttber facte are prevalent in support of thia biaa may bo questioned. Perhaps the Germans of Pennsylvania, who universally use stoves, are lees liable to consumption than people who are accustomed to the open chimney fires, and are not oftener afflicted with other disorders than their neighbors. Those Germans appear generally healthy, and they bred .to advanced ages. When, indeed, we enter their rooms, 80 degrees warm, from suddenly quitting an air of only 30 degrees, w* are ‘ surprised with the change and we say they ; , ; broil themselves with heat. Perhaps they inI cru'ioualy give more fire to their stoves than is necessary or proper ; yet they seem not so apt > to take a cold on rushing from a room 80 or 90 ' degrees warm, as those persons who rush into ; ■ the same degree of cold from a room having an j •pen fire-place, when the side of them last pre- , seuted to the fire may be 120 degrees, or nearly scorching, while their opposite side and the air of their room is only 40 or 50 degrees of warmth. The German may be as safe in his ' 1 extremes as the Indian who heats himself till , he drips with sweat, and then plunges into a river of cold water. In those cases the person b is heated all over alike, externally and on his L lungs ; out the person wartned on one side by a fire while the opposite side is comparatively cold receives the shock partially, locally, not j alike all over the body. So a person soon take* | cold who site in a room having a door or win- [ dow a little open, while a stream of cold air ' pours on only a part of him. A writer in a British periodical paper is of opinion that pull tnonary consumptions carry more than onethird of the people of that country, excepting 1 children, to their graves ; there open fire-places ' , are universal. The same writer adds that ■ ; in countries where stoves are used consumption is a disease hardly known. He is of opinion that the pulmonary consumption of Britain is caused by the unequal distribution of heat by means of open coal fires." HKTtKOrH KM K Richard Grant White elaborates an extremely ingenious theory in this month’s Galaxy, to account for liia re--1 mark in a previous number that no one who had ever learned tliat two gills make one pint was likely to forget it All the '\ papers had Mr. White on the hip, with such inquiries as whether he bought his milk in such small pints as tliat. They I supposed they had caught the philoloI I gian napping. But ah! • ; They knew not well the enbtle ways Be keptand paae.d and turned again. r At the word, presto! Mr. White . magically offers a new disease, a sort of • first cousin to aphasia, heteropbemy, the f using of the wrong word while at the 1 same time you are seeing or thinking the r| right one—the one you should be using. - This discovery is nothing short of a godr send to printers, proof-readers and edir tore, who suffer and utter such cur see for t1 carelesanetis, ignorance and stupidity -1 and other cardinal sins in their affintive t labors. When an editor writes “ A ' Drunkards’ Convention,” referring to t the Dnnkera, that most temperate of ■ sects, it’s not absent-mindedness, but i only heteropbemy. He reads the word Ii “ Dnnkera ” all the time. So does the i printer who sets it up and the proofII reader who lets it pass, Likewise the > I business man, when he puts the letter he t ' has just written to "bis correspondent in Philadelphia into the envelope and ad- • /dresses it “ Boston;” be reads it “ Phili ■ adelphia,” all the same. So with the . | minister who cites Paul and ascribes the I i quotation to Peter—heteropbemy. So i j with the gentleman who puts his neigh-1 I bor’s name on the back of a check, supi < posing that he is writing his own ; be ■' shouldn't be arrested for crime—heterophemy men ly. With a little extension, this discovery may be made very useful—a convenient catch-all for many j j inconvenient blunders. . •■■ — | te , HKKOIC WOMAN. i r One dark night, not long ago, a bur- i glar entered a private residence on '. Broadway. On ascending one flight of stairs be observed a light in a chamber, 1 and while deliberating what to do, a :! large woman suddenly descended upon i him, seized him by the throat, pushed > him down through the hall, and forced him into the street before be had time to think- “Heroic Repulse of a Burglar i by a Woman,”, was the way the story ' was told the next day. But when friends called and congratulated her upon her ! courage, she exclaimed, “ Good grai cions! I didn't know it was a burglar.' If I had I should have been frightened to death. I thought it was my husband come home drunk, and I was determined be shouldn’t stay io to* house in that ; '
GHOSTS WON'T WORK. I A California ghost lately had a good opportunity to make himself useful, but declined the honor. He was doubtless a • miner in the flesh, and it appears still had a spiritual hankering after mines and p miners. He began to rattle around and [ play with the machinery and tools of the Croesus mine near Santa Rosa. From the noise made and heard by the sleepless miners, it seemed as if a whole troop , of goblins were at work in the mines ! from 10 o’clock at night until 3 o’clock ; in the morning. When the men re- . sumed their labor next day they found i nothing had been done in the way of < work, for all the clatter and wear and tear of tools and machinery. During * these nightly,demonstrations no move- s ment or shadow could be seen about the mouth of the shaft One day lately a 1 lone miner was at work at the bottom of ‘ the shaft—his fellow-workmen all being i above ground. He beard a noise close | to him, looked and saw the figure of a ' man clad in a mining garb. He looked j < I jnst like a genuine miner. The miner asked the appearance what it wanted, j There was no reply. He punched at the ( figure with a drill and the drill went through the sliadow without striking any i substance. The figure continued to stand there in the form and semblance of a man. At length the miner made a propi oration: “If you are going to work here, I’ll get out." No voice, or move- , • ment like going to work. “ Or,” con- | < tinned tlie miner, “if I’m to work hero , 1 j you must get out.” The ghost took the | hint and vanished up the shaft, and the mine lias not l»eenlwanted by the ghostly j ; troop sinw. Thev went as soon as the sub- ** , c ject of work was mentioned to them. It i ’ may lie their high privilege to loaf i around in idleness, but it’s a pity, nev- i | ertheless, that ghosts won’t work, when J the effort costs them so little and men | and women so mu< h. The California ■ ’ miner made the first practical test of Ulis ‘ j kind, and it may now be recorded as a | j j hard fact that ghosts won’t work. KllfG WILLIAM AT HOME. Emperor William of Germany is not j a man who cares much for luxury. The | Rev. Wayland Hoyt, of .-Boston, has vis- I ! ited his palace recent/y at Berlin, and i writes entertainingly about it as follows: “ The Emperbr William does not seem ; to have anything he wishes to conceal. • I spent a very interesting hour in pass- f ing through the palace, which is his constant city residenct'. It is not very ; [ grand, or even sumptuous. But enter it and you at once feel that you are in the home of a soldier. It is almost an ■ | { arsenal, it is so warlike every way. Old J | i armor and new armor, fragments of ! i shells—the mementoes of battles, models j of the different kinds of soldiers in their I appropriate uniform, models of various ! ‘ guns, great relief maps of battle-fields j and fortresses—these are everywhere I about. Almost all the pictures, too, are ' martial—battle scene after battle scene; j some of older conflicts, others of the 1 modern fights in which the Emperor | liimself is the conspicuous figure. I went into the Emperor’s private study j and library. I saw the chair in which he sits, the desk at which he writes, the I pile of dispatches awaiting Ips attentions the books he uses, the papers fresh from his hand. It is manifestly a workman’s I place—this study. The grim old Emperor is evidently no idler. He keeps . his hand on things. lam told that he is at his table regularly every morning jat 6. Well, no one can help honoring the fearless old fellow amid such proofs ot jMiinstaking devotion to duty. SixI teen miles from Berlin is Potsdam, the favorite residence of King Frederick the Great. Here, too, is the present Em- ■ peror’s summer palace. Well, there i many a country seat America more splendid. I was most interested in this palace, in the Emperor’s sleeping-room. It is utterly plain. His bed is but a single mattross upon a narrow and comJ mon bedstead.” A Fifth Ward widow moved into her new house the other day, and her first six callers were lightning rod agents. She bluffed them off one by one, but : when the seventh came he said : “I don't claim that a rod will protect the i house, but I do say that if I was looking i for a second wife I’d never marry a widow who didn’t have a lightning rod on her house. 'And that’s the way all rich i men think.” “ You may put up two of . j ’em!” she promptly replied, “and be . sure that they are conspicuous, too!”— Detroit Free Rrex» Ax Illinois editor boasts of being the proud possessor of several ears of Egyptian corn tliat are quite a curiosity. Husks not only inclose the eara, bnt the kernels themselves are each cpvered with a husk, the same in texture as the outside husks. 1 M l -OKT AXT ImFBOVXMKXT IX TBXATIXG I Rmraz.— Tb« Elaativ Truss Company have produced a great revolution in the treatment of j hernia. Their new Ttusb te worn easy night and dav; adapte itself to everv m otion of the bodv ; never dteplaced by hardest exercise : retaining rupture comfortably, till soon permanently cured, bold at the office of the company, Jte. 683 Broadway. New York city. Trainee eent by mail. Send for circular. j — . , The season for coughs and colds is rapidly approaching, and every one should be I prepared to cheek the fin* symptom*, aa a cough contracted between now and Chrtetmaa fre<|uentlv lasts all winter. There te no better ' remedy than Johnecnt Aftodyne Lininient. For all dteeMee of the throat and lungs it I should be used internally and externally. Vegetixe.—This preparation is scien-. I tificallv and chema-ally combined, and to | strongly concentrated- from roots, herbs and > barks, that its good effects are realized ‘mme- I diately after commencing to take it. . - j Lcxg fever, common cold, catarrhal fever, and naaal dtecharge of a brownish color > in horses, mav be checked at once by liberal use of Shertditni Cavalry Condition Powden. > - COXSCMPTIOX CAS ■* CURED. Sai<xcs*s Pcukmk Sracr. ScnracK's Baa Wasn Tomic. ScnzMca's MaMtwaas Piua. ' a™ ibaaebsMdfcteat thatwig ears PahaowCooj amptteaFraeaaatir awdiclMS that wfll atop a outate will ocea- , •ion the Oaathte the patteat ;Uaar luck aptlM Um. stop J, the etrealattea ol the blood, b—orrh tae toilow*. and. la fact. Uwvetes the settee el the veer ecaana that canted ■ thceoeah. Uter CutepUini and Drepepate ate the oanaee o< twola nf tti* l CJLMM of CkMMQflßptilML MaCJI C<MBb> p4ata of a <HQ pain in tbo sid*, eMkaupation, coated fcatew.peia lathe nwoldecblade.leeUn«v o<dmeteteae ! asd rwatle nnete. the food trine heavily oo the atotnach, . aaeonpaated with acidity aadbalubtna ap at wiaA „ ■ Them aympl-wte aaaahy odginate ttan a disordered eooditem te the etoorMb or a torpid Brer. I Pinues ao aSeteed.U they take eaa er twobeavy eokla, and if the c£M<tk mb tbete <tuei be aoddenly will find the ateMaaeh aad Heer ektegjl. ewtetes torpid > and bucthe. and abacat before they are aware the htnee - are a ateae te sores aad uloentad. the neeJt te which is ! death. Schenck's Pahaoafc Byrep to aa axpactorsnt which < does ik* - ** eo**t*ui octant or <Mlcnl*tod to check *SSindk^S^WeedThato dissolves the food.salite with Ute aaatate jwteaate the atomacb, aids dlgetetoa. an I ezaatoa a ravesanxs appetite. When Use bowels are neetiva. akin sallow, or the armptosns otherwise tea bttiuu tendeacy, Schenck's Man. drake PUto are seqateed. These OKrlltenea are prepared only by J. H. bCKZVCZ * Sos. X. K. corner Sixth aad Arch Streets. Phila. And are lor sato byall drautoto aad dealers.
The names of victories may be ■BslsßaKnaam Shoes will never become obsolete. They are a national instiintlun. ■■mbudmEmi Ateo tty Wire Quilted Solee. For coastin*, akatin* and all WBHPHTrI kinds of out ot door amusements, SfwV > > parents should provide their chil- arehtw irr-n with Boots made with the CABLE SCREW WIRE SjJnSjl Abo try Wire Quilted Solee. fiEXDeYoerOwiPrietiM! q rna *’•k*’ l - •“’•itss. so. ffhfllSrS VO lte l wuw.fwl« n r«a? Rustnesa Mea So ■ prlnt-ac rna Mvartls. muov, sat Uwrvaw usd,. Pkaows ste J* imjllif hteatawv PrteUac. Ths Girls as grutaxgßo j-steUS Si £lO F'or NOTHIMG. Agents Wanted everywhere. {JO Address J. KENNEDY A CO.. Richmond. Ind. OJX FANCY/CARDS. N«w Styles, with name. »e. Address J. B. lll'bl RD, Nassau. Rente.Co.,N.Y. ON SALARY ossly. Acente wanted, Iftee «sd Atoata. Address. G. B. Christian. Marine. Obis. WANTED AGENTS. usd Ow*/res. rn«sr Ona Gold. A. COULTER A 00.. Chios«o. ArCOßpVfd*/ Send tor Chramo Catalogue. 4>l V ► H. brrvoaD'B Sons, Bosten. Mam CRA per Week Salary. Male or Female. CirenvDU far free. Address Crvstal Co., Indianapolis, Ind. AC A/a AOft • day at hosM. Samples worth gl sent «pu 10 ipZU free. Stixsom A Co.. Portland. Me. Dally to Acente. 85 new articles and the tdteiV beet Family Paper in America, with two S 5 Chroanoe. free. AM. M'PG CO. 300 Broadway, N.Y i re * '1 A ten-dollar bin of 1776 sent free A Curiosity, I" Am 2 Materials to adorn hom*. WAN IAN AGENT in erery county. Picture and n I Frame Business $ 100 a Month. Gzo. K I ED. iPztujtk, Pub.. 66 Reade SA. Naw York. A A .M -A<ent« wantei •▼erywh'ra W "IRjl Baainem honorable and first class Par«nXlll| ’icnlars sent free. Address WORTU A V V co Mo $3 SAMPLE Address THE UNION PVB. CO.. Newark. N. J. THE WHAT IS IT.-Somethlnf new. Sells at aigbt. Bia inducements to Ayenta. Samples. S 5 cents and atemp. Agente wanted. Send■ for Catalogue U. 8. SPECIALTY CO.. 7 and O Fnltoo-at.. Boston. re we www **>d Morphine baba absolutely sad 1 1 DI 11 M speedly cured. Painless; no pubicity. fl Send stamp for particulars Dr. CarlVI lULU ton lK St . Chicago. 111. n I" meansA We have the finest and cheapest AGENTo riri E EngravluKa. OID LC Big Terms and - Freight paid. Western Bible House. St. Louie, Mo. , CLARK'S BOOK KEEPING Short 1 * | Price SI.OO jxt-pald. Send for circular. W. S. : CLARK CO.. 1« P»nm umet. CincinnatL Ohio. ' D n T d f lb * yrRjTTDK - ftoHv prvMtael la omr arar DU I Jfewtot-#. CintC <*•>»**«. -<■*<**»*-r i ’* L uIUIO ,C P :i - H-n’wi c r \l \T. Crariatoa**, U trial tottleof Dr. Lanes* UR I RnnirlCatarrh Cure ven awajr with testimony nIIn C n Ito wonderful cures performed Send tc U U It t U .liUHBY Rekd a Co , 643 B’way. N Y A n TllTffnn Aia wast IT—Thouaands of Uvea and 11 JU ’I*U Millions of property aared by it—For H ITpil I |\ tunes made with it. Address IjmlK lIULHI 1 U TON BUGS t New York or Chicago, A WI HP ' an make money on SatAvLN Ib Post. Urges! Chromo. BreObiper, ! Pay. Rud, WICKERSHaM A Co.,Philadelphia. . Orders filled from Boston. Balti.. Pittabargh or Chicago i —a. PER WEEK GUARANTEED to Agente. ' (T'jT Male and Female, in their own locality. >| f Terms and OUTFIT FREE. Addrws ■ ■ P.O. VICKERY A CO!. Augusta. Maine. | Geo. P. Rowell & Co. | THIS Paper is printed wtthZnk made by G. B. Kan A Co.. 121 Dearborn Street, Chicago, and for tale by ua in large or small Quantities CHICAGO NEWSPAPER UNION. lit Mon Foe Street, Chicago. 11l FT ■TV A CTJ 181 BKO.WWST. New York. evl • ,Lv 2* PI 1, manufacturerte Solid Gold JKWKIJtY ot every deecdpte-n. The stock is large, very choice, and is offered at retails! trade prices to keep our workmen going. Biiis under sls. P.O. order in advance. Over sl3, C.O.D. privilege to eaamme. Catalowute free. Cn D Q A I E Chicago Suburban Lots at slo* each. lUn OHLCI SIS down and $* monthly for balance, within a short distance of City Limits, with hourly treins and cheap fare. Send for alrcalare. IRA BROWN, tel Ttetalfote . Chitego, 11l CINCINNATI DOLLAR WEEKLY STAR. An Independent Family Newspaper. 8 Pagea 48 Columns of Reading, dkl “ex YEAR. Specimen Cooy ragg. tPA Free te postage AddreeaThe ■'XT#K”CO.,Cla>elanati. Ohio. gfote o eta Invested in Wall Street, 1 e- ?re TT a wfi w often leads to fortune. A wrete ww boot explaining everything and giving price of Mocks QCUT EDCC JOHN lUCKLING ACO , Bankers UER I rntt. 4 Brokers. 72 Broadway. New York. Mind reading, psychomancy, fascination. Soul Charming. Mesmerism and Lovers' Guide, showing how either sex may fascinate and gain the love and affection of any person they choose instantly. 00 pages. By mail, SO cte. Hunt A Co., 13*8. 7th St., Phils. Your Name Elegantly Prfntngil'l.W d oo 11 Taaxsrxassv Vtsirreo Caso*, for It Ceuta. Each card contains a scene which is not visible until held towards Ute light Nothiuglike ihemvvvr before offered in America. Bigindeeemeuta to Ageate Novxltt Pa)xri»o Co^Ashland. Maas M Yon want to make Large PROFIT I gff Jg ■ Selling the beet article ■ ■ ever offered to Agents. ■ wfi ■ One Agent made sl3 in three hours. Try It. Address, , HOOD A JOSEPH. Indtan ipoUa. Ind. Sls SHOT CUN. 4 Kami raa. bar ar OaMaaMM toafta; vamotal aKai nbl bamta. aad a caad Aaaoar. ora ao araaa; wKb Ftaat, PetMffitoKl Wad-oaucr, Ibr tlk Caa berarat C. O. D. wMi yrtwftawa io anadraa baßrapartoc bOL Barad Swap fcrofirraUar to F. FOWBLL B BUM. Draw Daatora. SB Mata Bti. ClatoraaaM. <k StOO pace Book and sample* of Rubber fompfefo materials for new roof. 4>fc a ft, Eire-proof < 1 arable.elwap. Easily applied with p< ailh e wrte ut vme and save money. H. Y. .'ate Roofing Co. yOvDABbT N.Y. With l«>< 'art ridgee, $3.1)0 iSWWOsoId ; every on® warranted ; sat iafaetton guaranteed. F 'ertrorte f 'urafovee WESTEHS GUN WORKS, Chicago. HL, C«J Dearborn st., (McCormlckYUock). 1 IJ.UBTRATKD Hoxr Mauauxg. " The Hocaehted X Magaxine of America.” Two Serial Stories in IS7«t. “KGH.KM UFFK," by Mrs. Julia C. IL D 0..; and ••MIRIAM.” by T 8. Arthur. BITTERH K’S Newest Patterns in every number. Truk-a i'4.30 per year . 3 e„piee for g 6.30. Splendid Book offers and Premiums e Rj c r«. T. M. ARTHI'K <k SON, PUllad'a, Pa. AT.TVIi’ ■Rnnw FOR LIT* AGENTS. Xu V A DUUA Thi* rta , paUtahed. the new revised, the CENTENNIAL EDITION te the immeuely popular work. Wells’ Every Man His Own Lawyer And BUSINESS FORM BOOK. A complete guide in all mailers of law and burmeee tranaaclioaa. For teary State in the Union. Price, Catenet library. $4.-4.'. | sent postpaid. Send for deacriutive eircdlars. Address ROBERT MACOY, Puteteher. 646 Broadway. N. Y. i *■■ ' -ra Drl, coll, (liuirh & Hall. ‘ r *> •' * * Jfra**., *•».— Th* Armand f«»r yonr Sea F aru inraw » ra -j Nrver a rxtinpUinf.” Jcurs, FcwnrrdfcC o.- M Wrr*. /to.. a. Id yuur Fi<m to au rlarair* of trade. It Ixißby/ ' te ne’»er failed Io lirafaction.*’ > Birteat tain* to ra»« you ever araw.' i. 1 h»n« to ae I you ever knew. I valuable rc-Jrwr t. etpeaeent Ur£Wrw3i> fire Send at once for Ci’mHi to WSXISMf . <.FU. F. <-* &< O~ tso Dnane St., New York. AGENTS WANTED for our new book <m MOODY and SANKEY _ Aad Hair Werir aw tark Ai'dea e/ tec Sre. By an KMnrgjrr Cmcaoo nrvrxr.a xrtaHßou te Mb. Mooi>T forraxfa.and an ETK-wiTXUaof and .exanciravTm hktgrert revivalme-Ungxm Exui-ayb Indoreed aad approved by eminent Chrietiana. Says PuantßST Fowumte the XoBTHWKSTtJtx Übivbjuitt “Jfoy tfud yreel rat. Aete a aitbo* wed ere.y cosrerra to CAri*.” Send far circular, to AMERICAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. 11* Randolph St.. Chicago, til Thl * "■* Truss to worn with perfect comfort night Ifii, A 8 T I c ■K T RuS 8 . rapture under the hanfoetoxercMe or aeverete strain null! permanently cured. Sold cheap by the XjrXZ Elastic truss Ci, NO. 683 Broadway, N. Y. City; Senibymali. CaE or aend for Circatax and be cured. MANUFACTORY ANO BALESROOM. 23a,25RANDOLPHSt..CHICACO. MERIDEN Cutlery Co. Make all kind, of TBb>e Kntvte »r I Fork.. Rxcioelve Wrtkcn te •■PATENT IVORY,’’ mrte daxabte WHITE HANDLE kn-mn Always call for “ Trade Mark" on the blade. Sold by all deilere and by MEKIDKN CUTLERY CO.. 49 Chambers St., N. Y.
CKicaso Brass DiraM AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. CHICAGO SCRAPER A DITCHER CO.. SA fafoMa AUCTION ANO SALE WSGMS OF dSSGSG, CARRIAGES AND HARNESS. WESTON A CO.'S. ISA .nd ISA E. Washington, *TU» Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday, at 10 a. m. AUCTION MART FOR THE SALE OF HORSES. HARNESS ANO VEHICLES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION AT AUCTION AND PRIVATE SALE. NORTHWESTERN TATTERSALLS, 1 to 9 Monro*. AWNINGS. TENTS, TWINES AND CORDAGE. GILBERT, HUBBARD A CO., SOS to M South Wster. BAKING POWDER AND EXTRACTS. BANNERS ANO GLASS SHOW-CARD WRITERS. MUNN A DRUM, 115 W. Midtoon. BOOTS .’NO SHOES-AUCTION AND COMMISSION. JAS. P. MCNAMARA A CO.. 17 K. Washington. COWING'S DRIVE ANO WELL PUMPS. Ac. DOWNER A WOO LN ER. 98 »nd 100 Franklin. CROCKERY. CHINA AND GLASSWARE. ABRAM FRENCH A CO., 101 and UB WabMh-W. ENGRAVER. SEALS. PRESSES. STEEL AND BRASS STAMPS. STENCIL TOOLS ANO STOCK. C. H. HANSON, 18 South Clark. ENGRAVERS. 8. D/CHILDS, JR.. A CO.. UiFranklin. ENGRAVER. DIE SINKER A MANFR. OF STENCILS. L. BOCHE. KI K- Randolph. ENGRAVERS ON WOOD, Etc. SEARS BROS. A CO.. S. W. cor. Clark and Washington. FLOWERS ANO STRAW GOODS-SPECIALTY. DALY, HENROTIN A CO.. 144 and 14t Wabaah-aa. FURNITURE. A. L HALE A BRO.. UM. 38. and » Randolph. GRASS SEEDS. ALBERT DICKINSON. 117 Klnxte. GUNS-CUTLERY MANUFACTURERS. W. E. SPENCKR A CO., M Stat*. Sand for prie*-UA HARDWARE AND CUTLERY-WHOLESALE. EDWIN HUNT A SONS. M and «oLak*. HEAVY HARDWARE-WHOLESALE. KIMBARK BROS. A CO.. W to 44 Mloklgaaax. HOTELS. WOOD'S HOTEL 118 A 118 Flftb-av. Enoch Wood, prop, late proprietor ot Wood'* Hotel, Stalest. BREVOORT HOUSE. IAS and 145 E. Mad toon. On th* Europeanoton. H. M. Thompson, proprietor. METROPOLITAN HOTEL—SAW per dar. Cor. Stat* A Waah'n.alteof old St. James.opp. Held. Leiter A Co. OGDEN HOUSE—FIrat-claaa In erory particular. BarI her A Forrey. prop'ra. Cor. Washington and Franklin. WOOD'S HOTEL, M JtWashington. O. Sends, prop. Price $3 per day. O. S Palmer date City Hotel), clerk. LUMBER. THE PESHTIGO CO -Green Bay Lumber. North Pier. W. E. Strung, Prea't iG.C. Hempstead. Sec’y. i MNFRS. OF WARWICKSHIRE AND COLUMBIA SAUCES.IMPORTED CATSUPS. FLAVORING EXTRACTS. LEWIS A CO . HB E. Kintie. Send for orice-Uat. REAL ESTATE. JAS B GOODMAN ACO .73 Dearborn. SAW MANUFACTURERS. HENRY DISSTO.N A SQN.N.W.cor. Randolph A Market SEWING MACHINE COMPANIES. HOME S. M. CO., Johnson, Clark A Co.. 141 State. WATCHES. JEWELRY AND JEWELERS' SUPPLIES. COGSWELL. WEBER A CO.. ICS and 107 State. sin a day at home. Arent, wanted. Outfit and term, Old fro*. AddromTßUK A CO: Au*uata. Maine. Arts ft A MONTH.-Agent* wanted. H 4 beat .sell V <h|l nut articles in the world. One aampte free 9J JU Address J. BRONSON, Detroit. Mich. .TDM. »*ltllE IFIMU» ISELIN! . I ■’iC/*. Volta's Ellie '«•» BaiTsand e P ,’F Bauds are iiaiorse.! by tin V X \ J 8 p mo»t eminent physicians ill •~<x*»l V Hie world for tbet-iireofi lien"<\\ll// a*B** neutslKia.liiereoni. T—sXWJ/ P1» 1,, t, djspepila. kidney .!>*- *•■ ea«« k ,aches.rains.nervi usdieXw -r- onb-rs.fits.female conipluintnervous and generaldvbiliti, \ mm and other chronic iliwases ot AgK I hccliest,head.liver, Stomacj- . I ki<ih**y«bi»«! Imkm will IS ilf F initpart cular-fnel.v Yoir> w Lil L, r.Kt.r Co. Cincinnati. Ob’” THE HORSE<«fc_ Sc ien Uy e x plain ed f r bain Th»» requisite '? -.-3 ■!) W dt'tnt -n Ww *’ ra. A work <4 ervat ; , V » BS interest to horse owner* and breeders. Also.civ wjy Inga 5m re <’«r* fnr Epitootic. PhickJSCextm. Address J. P.VINCEVT.Box 9S,Chicago,lll. CUSHING S MANUAL Os Parliamentary Practice. Rules of proceeding and debate in deliberative asrem* i bite*. This is the standard authority in all the United j State*, and to an indispensable Hand-Book for every ■ member of a deliberative body. a» a ready reference upon , i the formality and legality of any proceeding or debate “The most authoritative exiMtunder of American par* I liamentary law." -CfUa. Summkil Price, <»3 cent*. <Bent by mail on receipt of prion. Address THOMPSON* BROU S CO.* Bowtoii. Mmss. Ellxtr ► LtoaM F.atreartorßeer. which p- wrd of the 1 jtiirs of raw meat with Iron Tonics. Diuretics ai.d • mild Cathartics, and prescribed by Phvakians for Hie cure of lndig*«tion. Constipation. Dy«pep*ia. Pile*, Lnng. LWer, Kidney .Children. Blood and all female dIBSMTR and wealinea»ee. Price »l.«) per bottle. RICUARPMiN A TULL! DOS. Proprietors, ('incin. na'i.-O. For sale by all druggista. J<<®« oiUr jvmiiD*. GRAND CHANCK FOR AGENTS, «A FFi7eA’o.l9. ANN ELIZA YOUNG S NEW BOOK. W j£’i*x?sf a I*4 POLYGAMY, iMrudwctum by J*Kn B. aod I Mn. Uvvntwwv. Arr«tfi ndl f»vm |Q‘b 2Q * rrT y day; . lluu-irrd* ar» cl-ia-: 1. >’vl YOU r * n *b»it- lb* be* I selling { iuM.ko(tbv war 200 ILLUSTRATIONS. Wntefor >. W ttmlWi.. pCsflA. tILMAN A CU-, >iawre»a»i A*9»n. ( Cmkam, ItUgCisrtjiMill Ohio. Only Think of II I A LARGE 1 48-COL. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER I" I . F • Will be sent three months, ppstpaid. so Twenty-Five Cents. Address CRAMER, AIKENS A CRAMER • Prop's of Weekly Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wta _ This offer open until Dec. Ist Ask Your Stove Dealer for oui FaB ELm - Adjnstable. jSM Fits Any Angle. " ; Sargent, Greenleaf & Brooks, ; Chicago, LU. i Smith Organ Co., BOSTON, MASS. These Standard Instruments Sold by Muac Dealers Everywhere. AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN. Bold throoghoat th* Unit*d GUl** on th* INSTALLMENT PLAN: That to, o* a System of Monthly Itoyiati Fi 1 <toa*M **k for lh*S»cm AMSS*Q*S.O—II O*Ute«*** >ad tall particular* o* aepttarttoa. i When the 8100. l Raahes with rockat-lika violence Io 111* h«ul. ciuring hot flnshea, vertigo and dim- ' nreanf sight. It to a certain sign that a mild, salubrious, cooling and equalizing laxative to inquired, and Tarrant’.* Efferveseent Seltzer Aperient *boukl be *1 one* retried to. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. GIVEN AWAY Ta every reader «>< The Family *lom nal: CENIENNIAL AMERICA I A ttO Tinfetl F.ngravlng* size OIRB, Our Large and BeautLulTinte I Engraving, c ntnininj over <<M> Htoto ival View# and P»»rtrahsot all leading events and peinimgre. tmm the lauding of C'dumbua t< the pce»**nt time, including a magnificent and pertecl view 61 the Centennial Buihiings in FAirmount Park al Ph’Udelphia. will lie given T» ne Our Greet. LHfi*rg FAe HaeZ/g I'usniijf r>re» sp r re*L*« f\fAtittued Styria*, togetbei with short akeiehe' and a torg« amount t»f misceUancoui reading. Sent four nwmths on tnal. including the En > graving, nuettuid, for A»tf wdf ji®. , NOW U »»jW/r*e-. «*r Jlr I‘Mulg 4#»>«vwwt > Brozdffzy, N. Y Agents Wanted Everywhere
ipk xx TXT asm/I Affi nKAminipp JLUv TT uUUvI C VI LuvUvi xl WVllxxßvl'y v Sarsawßan Sf Its Associates. Changes M Seen and Felt as They Da Uy Occur after Using a Few Dose* of DB. RADWAY’S Sarsaparillian Resolvent, THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. I. Good spirits, dtoappoaranoe of woaknee*. l*n«uor, melancholy; Increase and hardness ot flesh snd musCI T Strength increase*, appetite Improves, relish for food, no more sour eructations or waterbrash, good dlgestion. calm and undisturbed sleep, awaken fresh and "TStoippearanee of spots, blotches, pimples , the skin looks clear and healthy, the urine changed from its tur bld and cloudy appyarenre to a dsarsheny oramlwr color ■ water passes freely from the bladder through the urethra wit twutpain or scalding; little or no sediment; no p*in or weakness. 4 Marked diminution of quantity and frequency of involuntary weakening discharges (U afllicted that vaj), TVSMS e M d , tt tethy. saffron appearance of the skin changed to a clear, lively and healthy color. 1 6. Those suffering from weak or ulcerated lungs or tubercles will realize great benefit in expectorating freely the tough phlegm or mucous from the lungs, ato cells, bronchi or windpipe, throat or head; diminishing of the frequency of cough; general increase of strength throughout the system; stoppage of night pains and feeling of weakness around shoulders, etc.; cessation of wild and chills, sense of suffocation; hard breathing snd paroxymas of cou|h on lying down or arising tn the morning. AU these distress’AX“ne? WsfflWKuOb taken, new signs of returning health will *PP ear * Jjss? blood improves in strength and purity, disease wUI diminish, and aU foreign and impure deposits, nodes, tumors, cancers, hard lumps, etc., be resolved *aw*v and the unsound made sound and healthy; ulcers, fever wires, syphilitic sores, chronic skin diseases graduaUy d whore th* system has boon salivated, and Mercury, Quicksilver, Corrosive Sublimate, (the principal constituent in the advertised Sarsapariuas, associat* e<i in some cases with Hyd. of Potassa) have accumulated and become deposited in the bones, joints, etc., causing caries of the bones, rickets, spinal curvatures, contortions, white swellings, varicose veins, etc., the SARSAPARIU.IAN will rooolve away, there deposits and exterminate the virus of the disease from the system. ft. If those who are taking these medicines for the cure of Chronic. Scrofulous or Syphilitic diseases, however slow may be the cure “ feel better.” and find their general health improving, their tlesh and weight increasing or even keeping its own, it is a sure sign that the cure is , progressing. In these diseases the patient either gets Cetter or worse—the virus of the disease is not inactive; if not arrested and driven from the blood* it will spread ’ and Kxmtinue to undermine tie constitution. Aa won I m the makes the paUent “feel better,” every hour you wUI grow better and increase in health, strength and flesh. The great power of this remedy is in diseases that threaten death—as in Consumption of the Lungsand Tuberculous Phthisis. Syphiloid* Wasting. Degeneration, and Ulceration of the Kidneys, Diabetes Stoppage of Water (instantaneous relict as--1 forfM where SohXere have to be used, thus doing away with the painful operation of using these instruments), dissolving stone in the bladder, and in *ll . ’ flam ma Mon of the Bladder and KidnQF ß . in Chrpnic cases of Leucorrhea and Uterine diseases. In tumors, nod<«, hard lumps and syphiloid ulcers; in dropsy and vener ysJ sore throat, ulcers, and in tubercles of the lungs; in gout, dyspepsia,: rheumatism, rickets: in mercurial- deposits—it is in these terrible forms of disease, where the human body has become a complete wreck, ami where every hour of existence is torture, wherein this great remedy challenges the astonishment and admiration of the sick. It to in such casm. where ; all the pleasures of existence appear cut off from the unfortunate, and by its wonderful, almost supernatural agency, it restores the hopeless to a new life and new existence where tkjto great remedy stands alone in its might and power. In the ordinary skin diseases that every one is moreW less troubled with, a few closes will in most cases, and e few bottles in the more*aggravated forms, work a perI manent cure. Those afflicted with chronic diseases should parchase a package containing one dozen bottles. Price SL> per dozen, or pernalf dozen bottles, or $1 per bottle. Sold by druggists, RADWAY’S READY RELIEF ‘ . A AVILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE. I INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS. INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER. . ! INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS. CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS, I SORE THROAT. DIFFICULT BREATHING. I PALPITATION OF THK hkart. o HYSTERICS, CROUP, DIPHTHERIA. CATARRH.INFLUENZA. HEADACHE. TOOTHACHE. MUMPS. NEURAIr.IA.RHEUMATISM. o COLD CHILLS. AGUE CHILIS. II | f Tbe.pplic-vUnn nt the RE ADV RELIEF to tbe | p part or. part* where the pain or difficulty exists will I, afford ease.end comfort. . ... . t - i Twenty drop* In half a tumb'er of water will, in a few I ! moments, dire CRIMPS. SPASMS, SOLR STOM- • ACH. HEARTBURN, sick headache..diar . , RHKt. DYSENTERY. COLIC. WIND IN THK , - BOWKLS. and all INTERNAL PAINS. . . Travelers should always carry a bottle of RAI>i WAV’S RELIEF with them. A tew drops in water ! will prevent sickness or pains from change of water. IT IS BETTER THAN FRENCH BRANDY OR I BITTERS AS A STIMULANT. Priee 90 Cents. Sold by Druggists. DR. RADWAY’S mm pills Perfectly tastels**. elegantly coated with sweet gum, I ) Stomach. laver. Bowels. Kidnegs, Bladder. Nervous i ’ Diseases. Headache. Constipation. Costivenee*. Indlges- ; lion. Dyspepsia. Biliousness BlUous lever, Inflamma- > ’ Hon of the Bowels. Piles and all Derangements of th* . I Internal Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. ! Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or ■ deleterious drug*. , XTfObee—e the following symptoms resulting from ' Disorder* he Digestive Organs : Ctmstipation. Inward Piles. Fullness of the Blood in i the Head? Acidity of the Stomach. Nausea. Heartburn, i Disgust of Food, Fullness or Weight in the Stomach, ‘ S»mr Knutations/Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the I Stomach. Swimming of the Head, Hurried and Difficult Breathing. Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or j Suffocating Sensations when in a I*ying P<»ture, Dinr I ne*s of Vision. Dots or Webs before the Sight. ?•*** ’ and Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, i Yellownee* of the Skin and Eyes, Pain ih the Side. ; Chests. Limbs, and Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in , thft Fkmh A of RADWAY’S PILLS wUI froctha i system from all the above named disorders. I*rtce •«'> 1 Cents per Box. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. “ Rend “ FALSE AND TRUE.” L Send one letter-stamp to RADWAY & CO., NoI 3'4 Warren Slreet. New York. Information I worth thousands will lie sent you. .WEEKLY WISCONSIN, . 3 Months, Postpaid, - F"or 25 Cts. r Try It! Try It! Try It! • k In order that every person may have an opportunity of I i judging of th* .Mwfor meriu t*. W,non««, a I the proprietors will .end It to any address for the above ri amount. Thto offer will remain open until Dec. Ist > f THE WEEKLY WISCONSIN to a large 48-cota*m [ p “*cramEb. NEW nnd BEAUTIFUL INSTRUMENT. > ’ TIIE ; Piano-Harp ' CABINET ORGAN. An exquisite combination adding to the capacity of the ergan much of that of the piano-forte and harp. With a duable-reed organ, complete and perfect in every respect, ' to combined a new instiuvnont. tbe Pl A NO-HaRP, the * I which are produced by steel t< ngues or bare. . rigidly set in steel plates affixed to a sounding-box, and ‘ struck by hammers, as in the piano-forte. The tones are i of a pure, silvery, bell-like quality, very beautiful in com lunation or alternate>n with the organ tones. The organ »nay be used il’-ne. and is in every respect as complete and perfect an orgnn as without the Pi ANO-HARr, or . may be naed with the Tl A NO-HARP; the latter may be used separately or in combination wit hnny or all the stops of the organ, to which it adds gieatly tn vivacity, lite and | variety, adapting it to a much wfiler range of muric. Upon its invention and intreduction, al out a year since, this new instrument wnfc received with so much * favor that the demand gteatly exceeded the mnnufactl ureia’ ntm wt sldlity to supply; s<> that they hi\e had no hccaak n to advertise it extensively. Having now per- . feeted fai ililim, for a large supply, they offer it to the i public with confidence. | Utrcutois. with drawings and full descriptions, free. I MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN CO.. 1 ’»4 Tremont St.. I BOSTON; <6 Uni n S iusie, NEW YORK: 8U and ! - ____ »a- SANFORD’S • The** Gl.MSre- • Pe r*on* u»i»K move aU morbid • - ahowld adantthe or bad m.fter Q 2 dos* to their in- £ dirMmal resitl- *- sapplylhcb* wh O tatltoh, from a i. their place a tea»poo«full to . healthy flow of M a tableapooafall bllef invigorat- QS according to «f---tlng Ute .tomaeh, m <l feet. For all afeaaaihg food to VJ Jfe ctiona of the digest well* PC- I"! ftg LIVER, irreguI RIFYINtt THE x psf laritiea ofstom- ; BLOOD, gi-rtag » A ach.ahd Bowels, f tone and health Q diseases depend- ' to th*whole ma- fad—eat oaoreaased i chlnery, remoy- by such derangelug the cause of meat as Bilious the diseases, es- attacks, CostivefccUng a radlesil |a**s, Chronic IH cure. As a FAM- . iarrhcm,DyspepILY MEDICINE X> L_ sia, Jaundice sat Jit is UNEQUAL- Z Female WcakY I ED, smd is I WAYS SAFE. M !*poonfull taken « 1 at commencement of an attack of SICK to i HJEADACHEewMlnlSmlawtes. YEL“i LOW or SALLOW SKIN MADE YOUTH>i FUL by 1 bottle. TRY IT! For pamphlet f containing us*ful information and all about theXiver, addroaa DE. SABFOBD, a York. SOLD BY ALL DBCOOISTSa N. a Na. 49 • paper.
