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About Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882 | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1874)
MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. No wise man ever wished to be young. The worst men often give the best ad vice. How to put a horse on his metal Shoe Lira. A defaulter is now called a "hypoth ecary." The leading question in Wisconsin is : How's hops?" Nearly all the summer silks are in stripes, Hope lives forever, but her children die one by one. Woman's hopes are woven of sunbeams ; shadows annihilate them. The. national sin of Americans, says Dr. McCosh, Is self-adulation. ScHOOL-TEACiiERS in . South Carolina are called pad-Bwincers." o o riUENDflHiF is tne wine 01 existence ; love, the dram drinking. Some people have their thinking, like their washing, done out. The sands of a woman's life run out all the quicker when her waist is shaped like an hour glass. Are blacksmiths who make a liviDg by forging, or carpenters who do a little counter-fitting, any worse than men who sell iron and steel for a liviDg? A New York agricultural paper has half a column on what to do if one's horse runs away with him. The article should be read while the horse is running to be appreciated. The Cincinnati Enquirer says the tem perance ladies of Ohio are "brewing" trouble. Well, haven't they as good a right to brew trouble as their opponents have to brew lager beer? It's only a trans fer of the trouble, anyway. A Corning (Iowa) youth paid his at tentions to two young ladies and proposed marriage to both. They found out about it, invited him to the house of one of them and asked him to take a seat be tween them, which he did, sitting down in a tub of water over which a covering had been nicely spread. He did not stay a great while after that. Louisville has unconsciously taken a great stride forward in the matter of tem perance reform, by sending drunkarJs home instead of to the lock-up. Not even the most confirmed inebriate requires a second treatment. The lock-up is beara ble, though somewhat confining; but the chastening influences of home are more than can be endured. The Louisville Ledger has been puzzled for a long time to know why the women of Massachusetts make more noise than their sisters in other States. Archbishop Whately once propounded a similar conundrum: Why do white sheep eat more than black ones? and answered it with the inevitable reply: Because there are more of them. " Mat it please your Honor." said a New York lawyer, addressing one of the Judges, " I brought the prisoner from jail on a habeas corpus." " Well," said a fel low in an undertone, who stood in the rear of the court, these lawyers will say anything. I saw the man get out of a cab at the court door." The unpleasant odor produced by per spiration can be removed at much less expense and more effectually than by the application of costly unguents and per fumes. Place about two tablespoonfuls of compound spirits of ammonia in a basin of water. Washing the face, hands and arms with this leaves the skin as clean, fresh, and sweet as one could wish. The ways of women are past finding out. It is said that the ladies of Jack sonville, Tenn., have a fashion of tying up their taper fingers when young gentlemen are expected to call, and when they very naturally ask the cause they blushingly reply, " I burned them broiling the steak this morning." The result, as chronicled by the local paper, is that several young gentlemen have burned their fingers by believing the story. A story told by Dr. M'Cosh, of Prince ton College, is seasonable. A negro in a religious gathering prayed earnestly that he and his colored brethren might be pre served from what he called their "upset tin' sins." "Brudder," said one , of his friends at the close of the meeting, " you ain't got the hang of that ar word. It's bc8ettin', not ' upsettinV " " Brudder," replied the other, " if dat's so, it's so. But I was pray in the Lord to save us from de sin of intoxication, an' if dat ain't an up settin' sin I dunno what am." A Great Babrington (Mass.) merchant found a box of parlor matches on the store floor the other morning, which had been knocked off the shelf by a rat or mouse over night. On opening the box the discovery was made that by the con cussion every match in the box had been lighted, and the wood of which they were made was charred and turned brown. Fortunately the box was so tight as to smother the fire and no harm resulted. It was a narrow escape; and if a fire had taken place, its cause would have been a perpetual mystery. Old friends are like old boots. We never realize how perfectly they were fitted to us till they are cast aside and others, finer and more stylish perhaps, but cramping and pinching in every corner, are substituted. Then we are often forced to hunt up the worn articles from the attic where they have been thrown, and, for a little season at least, rest our weary feet by wearing them. With our friends it is the same: after trying in vain to fit ourselves to the pecul iarities of new ones, how often we go back with a sigh of relief to the dear peo ple whose very faults may sometimes have been brought about by serving us! Beecher. A man in Kentucky, all alive and well, recently saw a statement of his own death in a newspaper. He did not so much resent the general statement as the inac curacy of the details, and so he wrote to the editor: "Sir, I notice a few errors in the obituary of myself which appeared in your paper of Wednesday last. I was born in Greenup County, not Caldwell, and my retirement from business in 1860 was not owing to ill health, but to a little trouble I had in connection to a horse. The cause of my death teas not small-pox. l' lease matte corrections, ior wnicn 1 in close fifty cents." Young men who sit up late on Saturday nights playing cards, and who go to church the next morning with a " full deck" in their pockets, should be careful about, their being so bestowed as not to 6uU When Bob Howe went to the Baptist meeting in Circleville, ana tooK hig seat with his sweetheart in the front pew in the gallery, he had occasion to use -his handkerchief, and, drawing it from his breast pocket, drew with it the entire pack of cards, which flew about be low. The good minister " saw" it, and, knowing whereof he spoke, simply ob served, " Young ian, your psalm-book has been poorly bound !" That seemed to be the prevalent impression. Christian Union. The statement is made that the woolen trade of Great Britain could not be carried . on to anything like its present extent without the use of shoddy. The latter is mixed with the wool in the proportion ol one-third to two-thirds in some of the manufacturing districts, and is used in the production of cheap broadcloths, fine cloths for ladies' capes, paddings, linings, cloths used for rough and loose great-coat s, office coats, pants, pea-jackets, blankets, etc. A considerable quantity is used in the form of flocks for beds. Felted cloth with spinning and weaving, depending on the felting property of wool by reason of the curl in the fiber. The process is carried on by the aid of warm moisture, pressure, and milling; and such cloth is used for table covers, horse spreads, car pets, paddings, druggets, and the coarser and thicker kinds for covering steam boilers, steam pipes, and ship's bottoms beneath the copper. A correspondent "of the New York Commercial Advertiser sends to that journal V. a f-ll-winr onnnnt. nf tn.A miaari vpn- ' tures of a pet cat:V'In the upper story of one hundred and sixty is a hat-finishing establishment, shellac being freely used in the process, a barrel of which, in solu tion, is kept standing at a warm tempera ture. Our pet, while on a foraging ex pedition the other night, fell into it; scrambling out, she made tracks for a dis tant part of the room, where she eat down to review the situation ; and, it being a cold night, the shellac quickly set, and pussy was fast to th floor. The porter found her in the morning ' unable to more hand or foot or wink an eye.' Being kind-hearted, he procured some hot water and soaked her loose,' but it was no go Bhe was as helpless as ever, ana as fixed as a statue. With a sorrowful face he filled a tub with water, at a temperature of 96 degrees, and, with a view of clean ing her, applied a hot bath, and, after working something less than three hours, he succeeded admirably ; but when he had finished there was no vestige of hair on the cat, excepting a small tuft at the end of the tail. Such a ridiculous object you never saw. Organization and Titality of Parties. Ever since the war sundry wiseacres have time and again decreed the death of the Republican party, but it " still lives." These philosophic gentlemen year after year proclaim that the party has survived the issues which brought it into being has fulfilled its mission and that the only things left for it to do are to go into its shroud, close its eyes, compose its stiffening' limbs and so retire to its ever lasting rest. They have shown a surpass ing anxiety to administer upon its effects, but instead of enjoying this felicity their own incongruous estates have regularly gone to probate. We have had M People's Parties," "Soldiers' Parties," and last, but not least, the great " Liberal Party" of 1872 was sprung upon the country but they have all come to grief, leaving their projectors irretrievably stranded on the bars and beaches of popular contempt. Annually almost have these experiments been essayed. These little cock-boats of parties have been launched upon the' swelling tides of human affairs only to be wrecked by the October an i November gales. Such manufactured political par ties are made up as incongruously as the horrid monster of Frankenstein, and are of as little use and purpose in the moral world. The history of this country shows that parties with any vitality are of slow growth. If they spring into being sud denly they are very apt to be short-lived. If they are based upon vital principles, and attain power alter years of agitation, their duration is only limited by their de votion to the best interests of the people. Such has been the course of the Repub lican party. Annually doomed by its enemies to defeat for many years past, it is still alive and vigorous, and it boldly takes positions in the interests of the people, as new issues arise, just as it did upon the slavery question. For instance, it is the first organization to recognize the difficulties which surround the trans portation problem. In the discussions to which the subject has given rise in Congress we find the Republicans earn estly at work in devising some mode of relief, while the Democracy array them selves against it, alleging the exploded doctrine of State rights as interven ing to continue these wrongs. And do not the Liberal papers generally throughout the country indorse this untenable position: That the Constitu tion, made " to provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare," etc., is utterly powerless, nay, more, prevents any ana all considerations of relief at the hands of cur law-makers? The bill now before the House of Rpnrespnttivps reported from the Committee on RailwavV ana ianais, emDraces an tnartne wiscm , . c i. 1 .i i V ' USEFUL AND SUGGESTIYE. Croquets. Take any cold meat, mince it line; put in an onion chopped fine. Moisten with gravy, make into balls with yolk of an egg and flour, and fry in hot fat The Agriculturist states that a very fine white vinegar may be made from the juice of the white part of watermelons. At a certain stage the fluid is bitter, but when perfected acquires a true vinegar flavor. E. W. Platt sats : " Take the common herb peppermint, scatter it in their paths and places of resort, and no rat or young rat will brook the insult, but leave in dis gust I have tried it for eight years, at least, with perfect success." To Exterminate Red Roaches. Take flowers of sulphur, half a pound; potash, fcur ounces. Melt in an earthen pan over the fire ; pulverize and make a strong so lution in water, and sprinkle the places which they frequent Cure for Diphtheria. A South Aus tralian paper announces that a Mr. Great head, of that colony, has discovered that a dc Be of four drops of strong sulphuric acid in three-quarters of a tumbler of wa ter, for adults, and a smaller dose for chil dren, is an infallible cure for diphtheria. Cement for Sealing Corks in Bot tles. Melt together a quarter of a pound of sealing-wax, the same quantity of rosin and two ounces of beeswax. "When it froths stir it with a tallow candle. As soon as it melts dip the mouth of the corked bottles in it Fried Potatoes. Peel the potatoes carefully, dropping them in cold water as soon as peeled, then cut them either in slices, dice or fillets, or cut them in round or oval pieces with a vegetable Bpoon or cutter, dropping the pieces in cold water also. When all" are cut, have hot fat on the fire, take the potatoes from the water, shake them in a coarse and dry towel and turn them into the pan of boiling fat ; stir now and then with a skimmer until done, then turn them into a colander; from the colander turn them into a clean coarse and dry towel, and shake them in it gently. Dust fine salt all over, and serve warm. The ope ration of turning into a colander and from thence into a towel, and the salting and dishing, must be done quickly to Prevent the potatoes from getting cold, hus done and served, they are dry, warm and crisp. Mashed Potatoes. Take a quart or more of good potatoes, peel and cut them in two or four pieces, which keep in cold water until the whole are ready ; then wash them and put them in a pan, cov ered with cold water and a little salt; set the pan on the fire and cook them. When done, put the pan on the back range or stove, take a potato masher and mash them well, then add butter, and mash well again to mix the butter thoroughly among the whole. When this is done, add about a half a pint of milk, little by little, mashing at the same time; then add salt and pepper to taste, and a pinch of sugar. The better and more they are mashed the whiter and better the potatoes are. Be prodigal of elbow grease for mashed potatoes. An improvement is to mah them through a colander before adding the butter, thus preventing any lump that might escape the masher. The quantity of butler and milk should be according to taste, and, if liked, two or more yolks of eggs beaten with a little milk may be added after the butter. rigidly adhered to, that more than one or two weeks is required to redeem, regen erate and disenthrall tne most besottea devotee of tobacco. And in a few months thereafter he will look back upon his former condition, and upon the habit of tobacco-using, with a loathing and abhor rence of which he now can have no con ception; and probably would not again be thus besotted for all the wealth of this world. Don't Tampbb with a Cold. Perhaps in the whole category of diseases to which hu manity is susceptible, the cough is most neg lected in its early stage. A Elmple cough is generally regarded as a temporary affliction unpleasant, and nothing more; but to those who have paid dearly for experience. It is the signal for attack for the moat fearful of all diseases Consumption. A cough will lead to consumption if not checked so sure as the rivulet leads to the river, yet it is an easy enemy to thwart if met by the proper remedy. Allen's Lung Balaam is the great cough remedy of the age, and it has earned its reputation by merit alone. Sold by all good druggists. 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 phy sician, who has discovered in nature's "meek and lowly herbs" a medicinal "tonic" and gentle stimulant that com pletely takes the place of the fashionable alcoholic poisons called "tonics," so popular as a compronvse 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 physical 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 extrava gant to entitle him "a second Father Matthew." 33 An Outgrowth of Other Disease! Catarrh sometimes exists alone, but is more frequently a symptom of other diseased condi tions. The following letter explains it: CoixrsowooD, Onondaga Co., N. Y., Jan. 25, 1872. Dr. R, V. Pikbce, Buffalo, N. Y. : Dear Sir Allow me to give you a brief his tory of the effect of your medicine called " Golden Medical Discovery " in my case. I am now in my seventy-fourth year, and natu rally of firm constitution. Within the last few years, from over-exercise, I have teen afflicted with a complication of diseases almost incredi ble to relate. In the first place Catarrh, to a degree that, to me, it seemed that my voice passed out at the ears, to which was added its natural ally Bronchitis; to which, at no great 'length ol time, were added jeuraigic pains in the head and shoulders and bloating of the lower limbs, the most of which was superin duced by a torpid state of the liver. I had the advice of several eminent physicians and tried almost every known remedy for such com plaints without relief. A rapid loss of strength and waste ol nesn reminded me mat l couia not long withstand the combined force of dis ease which was fast bearing me down. 1 gave up all business, made my will, had my grave stone placed in position and lettered except date of exit, and resiirned myself to my couch to await events. Not long after this I saw your advertisement, procured your remedies l am now on the second half-dozen bottles of Golden Medical Discovery have a good appetite, have gained fifteen pounds of flesh no more talk out of my ears, no more bloating of the limbs, can walk two or three miles with ease, and feel that you have given me a lease ol ten or hr teen years subject, however, to the ratifica' tion of the Court above. That you may live long tti.do good to Buffering humanity, is the sincere wish or Your unknown friend, LUTHER COLE. has up to this time, looking not to at. ,ud den measure of relief, but to deuueing them from the experience of this and other nations. This plan meets the ap proval of the best men in the country, and is moving in the right direction ; not to arbitrary or destructive measures to check the enterprises of those who build and operate our railways, but to such fair and judicious action as shall conserve their interests and protect the. people at the same time. But this course this effort to arrive at exact justice in this great issue of the times; finds no favor with either our Democratic or high-toned Lib eral friends. In the face of issues and in terests which come home to every person in the land, is there not still need of a party which won its way to power by its devotion to popular rights? Can its mission be said to have been completed while it still interposes its power to abate wrong and insure the prosperity of the great and abiding interests of the country? The day may come for the Republican party to disband its organization, but while it shall remain as true to the inter ests of the people as it has thus far done that time has not yet arrived. In the midst of a detraction never before paral leled it fearlessly grapples with issues as they arise, and its instincts in the direc tion of the right are as unerring as they were at any time during the period of slavery agitation or the war in which it was settled. Inter-Ocean. Churning Milk vs. Cream. A question which is often asked is with regard to making butter by churning the milk instead of cream alone. My own experience has taught me that the milk first drawn from the cow has no butter at least one-third of the milking: there fore, churning this milk is only time and labor lost My Dlan has been to take from the cow such a portion of the first milk as is necessary for family use, churn ing the remainder. Until the past Beason, my family requiring a great deal of milk and butter, I have never had an opportu nity of testing the abilities of a single cow; but since last May I have kept but one cow. I followed tlte plan with the milk, churning each alternate day; and although I had neither cellar nor milk house I have made ninety-six pounds of butter. The churning was done early in the morning, thus securing the advantage given by the cool morning air, and the butter came from the churn solid and ready for packing, with only the aid of a little cold water from the well. 8ome prefer churning every morning, because the milk is more easily separated from the butter consequently the labor less ; but after years of ample experience I find that milk, although sufficiently sour, if churned when too fresh,yields butter that is sweet and good, but not solid as when left a longer period for the water to begin to separate from the milk. This of course refers to summer months; as to winter, I follow about the came rule as my neigh bors churning when the milk is in read iness, which depends on the weather and the surroundings. Cor. Rural New Yorker. Mutton Stew. Take such scraps of mutton or lamb as are not fit for chops or cutlets. Just cover with water. Add a little onion and parsley, if not disagree able, and season with salt and red and black pepper. Boil two eggs hard, or if making a good-sized stew use more. (Two are plenty for five persons.) Mash or grate the yolks fine, and stir them into a table spoonful of butter and the same amount of browned flour. Stir this into the stew just before dishing. Let it boil up once after adding this, and serve as soon as it thickens. f he Farmer? Union sugge farmer should have a o, map of his farm, with each field, t&IVfe and wood lot, together with all the fences, roads and ditches, plainly drawn, and either num bered or named, so they can be readily designated. Few farmers can appreciate the real value of one until they have tried the experiment, for with a map of the farm before you you can direct your work men to any part of it without the possi bility of their making a mistake. You can plan improvements and estimate their cost at your leisure instead of spending half a day of your valuable time in sur veying the land itself. Any person with a little ingenuity and patience can draw a map of his farm. It should be about two feet square, or larger if desired, and drawn upon thick card-board, to prevent its being torn or defaced. Let our farm ers try the experiment and they will soon earn its value. Currant Cakes. Take six ounces of currants, the same quantity of pounded loaf sugar, a little gratea nutmeg, half pound of butter and three-quarters of a pound of dried and sifted flour; rub the butter with the flour till they are well mixed, then add the other ingredients and bind thm with three beaten yolks of eggs and two or three spoonfuls of rose or orange-flower water. Roll it out and cut it into round cakes with the top of-a wineglass or tin. Rev. Dr. Stratton, of the Methodist Church, has been talking temperance sta tistics on the largest scale. Clergymen cost $12,000,000 yearly; criminals, 40,000; lawyers, $80,000,000; intoxicating drinks, $700,000,000. The city of New York Invests $65,000,000 in manufactures, $90,000,000 in seventy one banks, and $200,000,000 in the liquor business. A BOLvnoH of pearl ash in water thrown upon a fire extinguishes it instant ly; the proportion is four ounces, dis solved in hot water, and then poured into a bucket of common water. How to Quit the Tobacco Habit. In reply to inquiries from correspond ents as to " How to Leave Off the Use of Tobacco," the Science of Health publishes the following, from " Tobacco-Using," by Dr. Trail : " Touch not, taste not, handle not" Do not think for a moment of substitutes. Abandon the foul thing at once and for ever. Do not try abstinence as an experi ment, but adopt it as a duty, a principle, a necessity. Differences of opinion exist, and much discussion has been had on the question whether it is better to abandon the habit of tobacco-using at once, or leave off by degrees. My answer is, Leave off at once. The experiment has been thoroughly tested, in cases of liquor drinkers, of leaving off gradually or sud denly, and the result has always been in favor of breaking off at once. Dr. Day, the Superintendent of the Inebriate Asylum, publishes a letter, in which he advocates the practice of totally withdrawing from the habitual drinker all liquor, in opposition to the prevalent idea that the patient must be gradually weaned from the use of alcoholic sub stances, and founds his assertion on the fact that he has treated 2,500 cases of ine briety during the past ten years. He be lieves that a man who has been in the habit of drinking a quart of liquor per day will suffer more br being allowed only a pint, and gradually less, with in the 6ame lapse of time, than he will if he is kept altogether from the use of it The blood of such patients is, in his opinion, poisoned by the substances which alcoholic liquors contain, and he does not therefore, see the necessity of administering any more of such poison, even in infinitesimal doses. lie believes that nothing short of absolute abstinence will keep the inebri ate cured after he is raised up from his lormer life of degradation. The morbid desire for tobacco will be overcome with much less suffering on the whole by discarding the poison at once. The least indulgence perpetuates the dis ordered condition of the nervous system on which the desire depends. There is no safety for the patient until the morbid irritability of the nervous system is sub dued, and its normal sensibility restored ; and this can never be accomplished so long as the least particle of tobacco is habitually used. An infinitesimal dose the least quantity that the organic in stincts can appreciate is sufficient to prolong forever the shattered state of the nervous system; and, until this is re stored, the patient is not safe tor a mo ment. Until then, he can have no self sustaining will-power. Until then, the smell of tobacco, or the sight of a cigar, may reproduce the morbid craving with irresistible force. Much, however, may be done to miti gate the miseries of the sufferer during his transition state; and having had a large experience in the management of these cases I may confidently venture the following practical suggestions. For a few days the patient should be entirely quiet. He should abstain from business, and do as little thinking as possible. lie should take a warm bath daily; and whenever he has severe head ache, or feels distracted with restlessness, he should lie down, take a warm foot bath, and have warm wet cloths as warm as he can well ber applied to the head. He will also find it greatly advantageous to adopt a very simple dietary. He should, for a week or two at least live principally on good ripe fruits and plain bread ; and even eat sparingly of these. All overloading of the stomach will occa sion headache, and aggravate the general feeling of wretchedness. He should also exercise very moderately. These rules, adhered to for a few days, will emancipate the patient from . one of the worst of slaveries that ever degraded human nature. But if weeks, or months, or years were required, the victory would be worth all it cost It is rare, however, when the plan I have briefly sketched is A xti-Periodic or Fever s Tonic has estab lished KTo.mc! V . - -$sWU. i ) re. ii is uiuv an the real urn i " 0yytr''! able and harmless Chill medicine ILV n- Its efficacy is confirmed by thousands xttw tificates of the very best people from all parts of the country. It cures malarious diseases of every type, from the shaking agues of the lakes and valleys to the raging fevers of the torrid zone. Try it! It has never been known to fail. Wheelock, Finlat & Co., Propri etors, New Orleans. A Noble Enterprise. By a bold innova tion upon old theories, the National Surgical Institute, Indianapolis, Indiana, has achieved a name and work of philanthropby most envia ble. It is the great Bethesda of the nation. Thousands of the halt, lame and diseased, the paraiytic, those with deformed Limbs, Spine and Face, and those suffering with Files, Fis tula, Catarrh and Chronic Diseases, here find relief. Send for circular. The Magic Inkstand. Have you seen it? If not, you have missed the greatest curiosity of the century. It is a little factory, and makes its own ink, of all color, and enough to last one hundred years. It retails at only two (2) dollars, and can be bad at all station ers and booksellers, or by mail, writing to R. C. Root, Anthony & Co., New York, or J. M. W. Jokes, 104 Madison street, Chicago. Wi have seen it stated in various papers throughout the country that agents for the sale of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Pmoders were authorized to refund the money to any person who should use them and not be satis fied with the result We doubted this at first, but the proprietors authorize us to say that it is true. Johnson's Anodtnk Liniment is, without doubt, the safest, surest and best remedy that has ever been invented for internal and exter nal use. It is applicable to a great variety of complaints, and is equally beneficial for man or beast The best Investment SILVER TIPPED Shoes. Five cents laid out for Silver Tips adds one dollar to the worth of a pair of shoes. Parents try it. Thirty Tears Experience of an Old Horse. Mil. Winblow's Soothing Stjct 1i the prescrip tion of one of the best Female Physicians and Nurses In the United States, and has been used for thirty years with never-falling safety and success by mill ions of mothers and children, from the feeble infant of one week old to the adult. It corrects acidity of the stomach, relieves wind colic, regulates the bow els, and gives rest, health, and comfort to mother and child. We believe it to be the Best and Surest Reme dy In the World in all cases of DYSENTERY and DIARRHOLA IN CHILDREN, whether It arises from Teething or from any other cause. Full directions for using will accompany each bottle. None Genuine unless the fac-almUe of CUKTIS PERKINS la on the outside wrapper. Bold bt aix Mawcisra Duuu. Children Often Look Pale and 81c It From no other cause than having worms In the stom ach. BROWN'S VERMIFUGE COMFITS will destroy Worms without injury to the child, being perfectly whitb, and free from all coloring or other injurious Ingredients usually used In worm prepara tions. CURTIS BROWN, Proprietors, No. 215 Fulton street. New York. Sold by Druggist and Chemttu, and Dealers In Medicine, at Twxtt-fit Cents a. Box. Godey. The illustrations in the April number of Godey's Lady'i Book are : A handsome steel plate, " Tne Renewal of the Lease Refused ;" a beautiful Colored Fashion plate ; Alphabet for marking linen ; an Extension Sheet of the latest fashions in dresses, spring coats, shoes, and arti cles of every kind necessary to complete the toilet. There is also an engraving to please the jnveniles. The number contains several short seasonable stories and the usual amoant of other interesting reading matter. Much valuable information will be found in the different Household departments. Published by L. A. Godt, Philadelphia, Pa., at $3.00 per year; four copies $10.00, and a beautiful chromo to each subscriber. "NOTTII'VO BETTER, said Tr. JoTin Ware, of Boston, than Caller Bros." celebrated VEGETABLE fULMONAItY BALSAM.forColdsandConsumptiou. WHEN WRITIHO TO ABVKBTWERS Jrane say yoa saw the advertisement in thin panrr HOUSEHOLD PANACEA ajto FAMILY LEmiENT. HOUSEHOLD PANACEA AID FAMILY LINIMENT. Why Will Ton Suffer I To all persons suffering from Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Cramps in the limbs or stom ach. Bilious Colic, Pala Is the back, bowels or side, we would say Thx Household Potacxa ast Fajcilt Lxrorxjrr Is of all others the remedy yoa want for internal and external use. It haa cured the above com plaints In thousands of eases. There is no mistake about it Try it. Sold by all Druggists. ad ARMS. BatlsnaoUun Quay. ,ruWl. Pamphlat Piss. 'CHAR it- KVANR UumfMr. 19 Pourta Surest, - LOD18VILLB, XT. SPLENDID AND UNPARALLELED TRIUMPHS i OT TBI j TCheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine Co., 'r NEW YORK, Over Eighty-one Competitors, AT THX WORLD'S EXPOSITION, VIENNA, 1873, &c. 1. The Knlsrtit'a Cross or the Imperial Order of 'Francis Joseph, conferred by His Apostolic Mnji'Kty the Emperor of Austria Bpon the Honorable Nathaniel Wfccler. President Of the Wheeler & Wilson Sewlne Machine Compa ny, as the founder aud builder of howiug Machine Industry. ' .: - 3. The Grand Diploma of Honor, recom mended bv the International Jury for this Sewing Machine Company onlr, for their important con tributions to tne maierikl and social welfare of mankind 3. The Grand Medal for Progress, rwarded for their New No. 6 bewiug MaciUne. belnij for progresi made since thefarls Exposition of 1867, at which the only Gold Medal tor 6cwlng Ma chines was awarded to this Company. Hence the Vienna award marks Prooren not from a low level or inferior medal, but from a Gold Medal, the highest award made at Paris. 4. The Grand Medal for Merit, for ne de- velopment of Needle Industry aud excellence and superiority of manufactured samples exhibited. 5. A Grand Medal for Merit, for excellence and superiority of Cabinet work, the only award of the kind In this section. 6. Medals for Several Co-operators, of the "Wheeler St Wilson -Company for superior ability. 7. The Official Report, pnbllshed by the Gen eral Direction of the Vienna Exposition, signalizes the tuprenvicy of the Wheeler & Wilson Company for quantity and quality of manuiacture, and po sition in the Sewing Machine business, follows t OFFICIAL REPORT. VIENNA EXPOSITION, SEW ISO MACHISKS. &a. (GEOCP 13, BIG. 2, B.) " The greatest Pewlng Tf aohine Manufactory In ' the alone has brought already over 900,WiO of their Sew- . . . ii i . . . r i ..a a 1 ha fixtiin crp nm. ductlon of the parts by machinery Is so regulated that each complete machine may be used as a eauinle for exhibition. This firm produces 600 well-adjusted ma chines daily. - The latest production of this firm, nd which 13 the wonder of the Vienna Exposition, Is thelrnew So. 6 Sewing Machine. This universal machine sews the heaviest leather harneaa and the finest gauzes with a truly pearl stitch. "Wheeler & "Wilson have received the highest prizes at all World's Expositions, and at the ienaa Exposition were extraordinarily alaUnguisuea." Further Distinguished Honors. Nrw Tobk, Sept. 15,1875. THE GRAND MEDAL OF HONOR OF THK American Institute, New York, "Waa unanimously recommended by Judges of Sewing Machines for WHEELER & WILSON'S , NEW No. 6 SEWING MACHINE, as being ' a decided Improvement over all other ma chines In the market," and which " must revolution ize certain branches of industry, especially 111 Shoe and Harness Manufacturing." Baittmokk, Md., October 31, 1873. The Mahtxaitd iMniTTi has awarded Whkkl li A Wilsox the Gold MEDAtfor their Sew So. t ewing Machine. Other Sewing Machines received nothing. ' " Savanwah, November 4, 1873. At the Giobota 6tatk Fair, a Silvkk Medai tliahinhMitinil nnlr nremiiim for Leather Stitching. was awarded to Whkklkb : W1L6ON for samples done on their Sew So. 6 bewing Macmnes. Principal Office, No. 625 Broadway, NEW ii All the Principal Cities of tin Work DR. WH1TTTETI. "TJ "A"5 V m9m Lon rest augured, and mrmt cnmioI Phsiotoa f IM aS OoaaaUMtoaarpasiptitatlrMb OsUarwrttSk COUGHS, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Croup. As an Expectorant it has No Equal. It is comnosed of the active principles of roots ami plaru. which are chemically extracted, so as Jo retain all their medical qualities. THE FIKST VOLUME OF THE MURRAY HILL SERIES. Science in Story; OB, SA3I31Y TUBUS, TUB BOY DOCTOR, Sroiiie, tho Troublesome 2TIoiikey, Bv E. B. Toote, M. P., author of "Medical Common bouae ' uX'laia IXue Talk," etc.. etc This scries is Intended more particularly for they ounfr. An atomy, i'hveioloey and H plena are iuextficably mixed with a comic story of a physician s door boy and a mischievous monkey. Tho former is bent upon lcpmlnfr aU the Doctor knows, wl.ile the latter is invari ably turuiuR up in ttieniost in opportune manner, and puttins: everybody and everything tutoa complicated muddle. The series if intenaed tOHurprlsetheyouns mind with facts relating to tho human svsti-m and its needs, while at the same time it is sur prising the reader witft the un accountable pranks of an animal which understands nothing but mischief. The volumes will pi ve a general knowledge of the hu man boy its orgaus.f unctions and necessities, and will plant In the young mlinl sufficient inter estfu these important subjects to lead it to further Inquiry and One who have little or no knowledge of themselves, and no time forstudyUigtechnl cal books, will also find this se ries entertaining and kibtruc tive. Vol. I. now ready. It contains about 2;0 pages, square I61110.. tinted paper; over sixty pea ana ink Illustrations by Henry I iHepllvns; bound In extra cloth. Friee f l.M. The first voltrme will be fol lowed quarterly bv others (the series not exceeding five vol umes), contuinfiig about the same number of pages and Illus trations, and at the same price per volume. Vol. I. treats of Bones, Cartilages, Muclee, etc. Vol. 1L will treat of the Circu lation; Vol. 111. of the Nervous System, etc. Contents table sent free to any address. The series Wiilbesoldonlybysubseriptlon. AGENTS 'WANTED EVEKY TYHEKE. Experienced agents will flud these volumes just the things to sell these times, fiend for our circulars and you will bo convinced. Address MUIUIAY HILL. PUBiaSHIXG CO., ' HiO East 3StU Street, Sew York. a O n 3 S, cl 3 O- C Ti 2. 8 a S 2. 3-5 5 2 n P n S ? n B. 50 O S 3 w rryiOT- 3 3 -li:? B gar Q 3 S r n f-' -! X! 0 3 E r P -Z "Z. V ra V f -t ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. i 1 Tills Grrat Medicine was First Offered For Sale Ten Years Ajo. Its (rood uali ties were soon made known at home. and very soon its fame was noised farand near : now it is sold in nearly evcrv dru;r store in the t inted States. No similar medicine stands bttrher with tht people, it is well known on the I'acitlc coast, and even from Australia lue ord"-i are received for it And throughout Canai!-i it U "11 and favorably known, aud sold everywhere. Ministers and Public breakers, Wbo are so often afflicted with throat diseases, will find a sure remedy ti this libisxin. Lozenges and Wafers sometimes give relief, but this Balsam, taken a few tunes, will insure a permanent cure. Will all those afflicted with Coughs orConsumptlon give this Bulsam a fair trial? They will he nl-nse I with tho result, ano" confess that the SIRE llE-VI-K11Y IS l'OU.D AT 1.AST. READ THE FOLLOWING I "WTiat the St. Louis Journal has to say : Rrd and Kiflkct. To such as mav desire a rem edy for this curse of humanity. Consumption, Allen's &.UI1K raisiu Kiven iiie Hiiciior i none. Allen's Lung Balsam has been tried oy thousands, who give evidence, not only by writing testimonials, that they have been cured, but by their physical ap pearance. The recommendations this valuable remedy has re ceived Trom those who know the good it has done for tnem. place Allen s Lung liaisam in the front ruK or the healing and life-res to rir -emedioa of t liio ceut ury . CATJTIOV. Be not deceived. Call for AliLEX'S LUNtt BALSAM, and take no other. f2fDirecilons aecompany eaeh liottlf J. N. HARRIS & Co.. Cincinnati. ., l'ronrletors. For Sale by all Medicine Dealers. wMTED AGENTS PE sio :K DAY. To soil th IIOMK SIIITT1.R SFAVIKG M A t lllN'K where we are not represented. Header!! you can make money aellmjr the flfl.'I TLE" whether you are EXPERIENC ED in the busi ness or not. If you wish to buv aSKWixo Maciilnk for family use our circulars will show you how to save money. Address JOIISSON , CLARK & CO., Chicago, Ili Bovs ?55vGO an wild aiiki-ra silver MAKK.KK, for Linen, Cardr. Eorel- bent all complete wiui case for SLOOtsAUfPtrsJ It U beauu-r-""' T fully chased St'T) and beavil silver plated Wli.m arA ..... VW. ,7... , fill LOVEJOY'3 METALLIC WEATHER HOUSES CornMne an- elegant M.ntel Orna ment with a cor.-.-ct Thermometer and perfect Barometer; tell you when It wl'.l storm ; register beat and cold, bent prepaid to any ad dress, upon rt celpt of I. . order or registered letter, ior $2.00. ALVAN I,. LOVEJOV, Manufacturer, 'A9 Washington street, Boston, Masa. Liberal DiKount to Storekeeper. TXIM YOUNGr Housekeeper's Friend. By MRS. CORNELIUS. Prlae, $1.50. Interleave, $3.83. The most popular and reliable COOK HOOK and aruide for the duties of the household published. It will bo found of great valae to every housekeeper, and la the standard work on these subjects. Fiiwb Thousand now ready. For sate by ail booaVetfera. Bent by mall on receipt of price. THOMl'bO.M, BROWN CO., Publishers, Boston. willont! Truth Triumphant! Affenta. I1ril oiainuyouncmne mil It male, make Jllltllllill mor monov scilme our Freor-h and II II II llllSI American Jncrlrv. Bonicm and Grnnm, than ata:lvlhmireie. (i real rat induce ment to Agents and Purcher. rataincues. Terms, and full particulars sent free to all. P. O. Viraaar, Auiuta. Maiaa. TSf TTT1 YITITi i PEXTEPtMSNATOnS JSSTano insect POWDER FOB Rats. Miro. Koaehes, Ants, Bcd-bnea, Moths, ie. J.r.HEMtl, tl'UltAS Si CO., Y., Sole AgtaiU. saavhawlCMiTt lAltMmndtMw aaa Ok aaat mMr rniMiii psvm fj n&iu. and loot ctmsaCcztw- Ltj: :rhnrfc. tUttiwi t Ei4 I CI $30 Ban;our.ower $20 $1,500 per year made using these Saws. Bay where you saw this, and send for full description fo W. F. JOHN BARNES, liockf ord. W In neb ago Lo. ,111. BsaBsasst f TTA. AGrTHTS wanted la Cowa KS m I" I 1 Xuntr"to sell TEA, or pet m club or- IsBaarrderr or tie largest Tea Company In America. Importers' DrUea end Inducements to Aren's. "3end for Circtuer. Address . KCAEST WElifi.3 Va ey St.. f. Y. F. O. Id Vt& DR. WHITTLES, m" 2t:ZZZ.m Longest raracad, and mo snccaaafal Phraiciaa of Utm aca, CooaallaUoawpaaaphle-tfraaw CaU or write. WHY NOT. Send 25 cts. with addresses Of 5 t!n?ra and receive postpaid a Fine Cbroum, ixft. worth JM.50. and instructions tf)Clcr-fl 3 day. Plcmb & Co.. 10B bouth 8th St., l'M'a., Pa. S180 PER. WEEK guaranteed to Agents on a .Newlv-ratenieu atucio, eaiaoie as flour. For circulars address B. LATYTEK, Patentee FlttabuTgh.Pa. "5o M Issuisce for So M S.o:cy," STH LOU Insurance Company, A STRONG STOCK COMPANY. Assets, $8,000,000.00. Wants Competent Agents ia All Unoccupied Territory. Ireas the Manager of Agencies, ORIENT SAFETY LAMPS, Entirely of Metal, are the only Ia.mpa iianse which con neithrr break, Ira k nor tipiadc. Are or namental and cheap. Aaapteil to all household uses; also to stores, factories, chnrchos, etc. AGENTS HIKE $13 A DAT Selling these Lamps. AOKVT3 WASTED In every county ia the Unit -d Puues. Address C3 Chambers St., New York. aw. -- JL Ho! For tlio oi Wes tern TnnTn 1U 17 U. HOMES tii T2JEflEAn YEST! Better I.anl9 at Cheaper Pr!ep thn enn be fetnd 1 I . . I . .. . . ' . J" Hill IUlfk.ii.h Ail. A risrw Here. j in'ni tz vnt i .m i, .u - li: es of the Chicaio & Xortlmefternaiid Illinois t ei. Trat i.auways,in i uw :i. .Averujreereuit inre yyy mm j( per acre. Title clear. Jo fever anil at-'Ue. For Land Exploring Tickets, or a Map and Guide tflvinjr full descriptions, prices, terms, or any information, call on or address JOHN 1$. C ALIKH'N. Laxo Commissioned Towa Kailroad Land Co. Offices, IHJ Kandolph-st.C'hicaso, or Cedar Kapids.Ia. eiGHO-OUilM is as effectual a reined jf FOR FEVER & AGUE as the Sulphate in the sume doses, while it nffects the head less, is more palatable mid much cheaper. Send for descriptive Circular with Testimonials of rhiisiriana from all parts of the country. C!S Sample packages for trial, 25 cents. Prepared bv HILLINGS. CLAPP & CO.. Chemists, Boston, Mai. New York Olhce, 8 & 9 College Place. STANDARD LOTTA BUSTLE. Diploma swam eel by the Ameri can Institute each year, A. W. Thomas, Patentee aTd Manufac turer, for the Lightest, Stronpeet and most comfortable Bustle The Standard Lotta that can be worn. Sizes to suit every lj le ox Ureas. V holesale Depots : 91 WHITIS STRUCT, NEW YORK. 801 HACK ST., rillsAIJElPJUA. i -r in i i n itaaaSaanaaMiaJ PAYIMG EMPLOYMENT For a II having spare tiinc,in selling onr oIloolt. An fawy or trattueitt vork, but a necessity to all classes of people, aclually saving money to buy er. Jtunk AgTrtf-eklnK nouetliiliST useful ami rut- Ulna, aud all having any Bpare time for pleasant work, without risk, write at once for com plete 16-pntre descriptiveeireularandliheral terms to F. A. HUTCH IN bOS & CO., Chicago, 111. J2L I ia nua .ii.iiinw i $40, $50. $75 and $100. Good, Durable and Cheap. Shipped hii for Use, Manuf actnred by J. W. CHAPMAX & CO., AlADIBOJT, 1JD. r7Send for a Catalogue. AGENTS WAMTEDK-br YOl'JIAVS MICTION AKY of KYF.R1-U.4t HAM containing !40.tMK UKCBlP-rs (bona fide "u'nbielr- ware botma Imitation). Intensely inieretinsT. at tractive and useful to alt. clasps, savin uioney tai:y to every bnver. Selling faster than any othe: three books combined! OneAif. nt hns already sole over 2. Xi eopiei! lft-paee circular and terms iree. Address F A. Hctcui.nsos i Co.,Caiawo, MORPHINE HABIT srx-lii cured ly Lir. lirt'U's onlv t I- I I ...!.. tiu --vr ciiaiiok for treatment until cured. Call on or address DR. J. C. BECK, Cincinnati, O. liT VT HKUEP and A CiTU A li-tciicnl nic for the A O I rHilfi edy. 1 u f-re.i Uyears, not lyinj? duan for weeks at a ttiii'j.but am now ixiutLi cl kk'. Fentbymail on recen t of price. Si per box. Ask roiir lrujrgiat for it. CI1A5. li, HL'RsT. Itochvster. IWver Co.. I'a. JC AUTirU Il lWeealcomaniaorTrans n I r T 1 1 D ec f" PIcium postpaid for 50 "IV i UltUOa icents. .Heads, Landscapes, Flowers, Autumn Leivcs. liirds, Ai.imais, Iusects, Comic, etc. They can be instantly transferred to any article, so as to imitate the most "beautiful palntlncs. A variety of pictures, catxlotme aud instructions sent forlOeehta. Aornts Vantfi. J. 1 PATTKi. it CO., 71 line street, New York. J C'U -n-anted for tb- fr-enf KM tu"lik AllhAliCTCLOi'ESlA el TSTSSS VTCtt-H SHOTIS, Bill nr 2z mio WANTS tilirfhlEli. HTCEIPT FOR I VFM.THIV A book thar FTERVB 1T WAT frplendld fHR'iw1 FI4.r; tXIHAltKUs. Continental Pub. Co., bt. Louis. n ti V IsenuiHK us tne adrtryas ot ten per' na, nm it WFI I lets., will recetv,.rr.abei,uCfni Chromo anil naj r ilpstructious how to net rich. s-pjil. t it W I.V"er rv.. tO. ti.mih S'li-st.. '' 1 J ( I'EU n.lY Co.nmislon or S''" a wc-ek Rat try. and expense,. We off-r it and I wi.t pay It. Apply ow. Ci. Webber fc Co- Marion, u. nsPer Day euarartoednsteg-ew 9M .'per i5 IJrUJ- Catajwroe frra. Dr. J. Walker's California Vin PCrar Jli Iters are a purely Vegetable prepurttMon, mad chiefly from tho na tive horoa found on the lower ranges of tho Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without tho uso of Alcohol. Tho question is almost daily asked, "What is tho cause of tho unparalleled success of Vixegar Bit ters!'' Our answer is, that they remove tho'causo of disease, and tho patient re covers his health. They are tho great blood purifier and a life-giving principle, a perfect Iienovator and Invigorator of tho system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine boon compounded possessing the remarkable qualities of Tinkoar Bitters in healing the sick of every disease man is heir to. They are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation oj the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious The "properties of ,Dk. walker'?. Vinegar Bitters ure Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative, Nutritious, L.axatiye, uiureuc, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Altera tive, and Anti-Bilio'is. ru i. picro.i,r a co.. Drugrpists and Gen. Apts., SuivFrancisco, California, and oor. of WttKhintrtonlrml Charlton Sts., N. Y. Soll ty nil Irjg?rtsta and Ienlers. IMBORTEIt .PATTERNS. Fashions for Spring and Summer. Tram Smltb'i ratttra Bauar. I023 PLAINNTS3 b!ne a ryjTomlnent featare in ALL thm NEW co turn, tfa bor rait will have rreat favor es pecially a It ia becomln r to ry ttyla ol th-nr. Rrqaire 3 ydi. of -.4tDch gooda. Prica of pattern, wtih cloth modal. 24 eaota. mailed. 1800 Ovarastfrt for different kind af material t thm etralgM ids breadth U the prevailing feature in the new coetamee- It Is economical, require only 4 yard of 24-inch goods. Pat tern, with cloth model, iocenta. fW g r U the nam of the tnoet beautiful MaW M. Jm. Ifci-V tylih and EASY Polonaiaee wt have received thi season. It is filed with reflated shirt trinjr; by untying them the polonaise become a plain Sarqne without loop or gather. A grand thing for with rood, hy drawing th shirr string again it ia a polonaise with panniera neatly sod perfect'v djutad. We send a neat little CLOTH MODEL wsih patto.. Price of Put tern, with Cloth Model, $l.i0. Will be girn a p-Tnium to one anberriber. We give a perfect CLOTH MODEL, with every pat tern, which ahowajaat how to put the garment together alter being cut by the pattern. They are perfect Cuidet SMITHS Instant Dress Elevator THIS CUT .how how bmrati. fully i TON J Skirt It ebanrrd into a Straight Front Walking Vim by tb. IWtlU KI.H HUH. Vi.im raia. your .kirt wtril. naaafnfr a mud dy place and then let It fall, or you can keep it railed with the Kill. loK. IT k'p the akin frnn th. FILTH. IT LOOPS the Vkirt in a TASTFFI'L and FASHION AhLE MANNER. IT SAVES more tha TKN TIMKS it. CObT beide brine CONVENIENT. NEAT. and RA EU'L. IT can be chanted from ONE DP.F.SS to ANoTHEH ia LESS than TWO M TN UTES. YOU NEEI BUT ONE FOR A DOZEN MESSES. Pr.ce SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS each. Send .tampe for notace. Tti. aboTe Vt.V A'lOic will be friTen FREE aa PREMIUM to the peraon t.i fnrONE YEARS Smith's Illustrate rrunr-i Bazaar. EE3T sad CHEAPEST KA3AZI17S lata 7T02LD. FULL OF FASHIONS, STORIES, and '"'lOI.E READING. ONLY SI. OO A YEAR. Er.rT gnnwriber eeta a choir, of ONE of the followbi(r beau tiful OfLCHKOMOS FREE aa premium, Tii Whitter'a "Bare foot Boy." Hill in.; ' The U. leome Visitor," 1317 "The Pet Lamb." 14x17 in s "Liitle Siitera." Uil7 In. Endow S .tamp, for Po.trire and Holler.. OR ONE DOLLAR'S worth of pattern mav be rlecte4 from the " BAZAAR" in place of CHROMO. ANIENT WANTED. Beet OUTFITS to make mocey with EVER OFFERED. S.nd .'ampe lor circular. a'W IKrW - w'rOfk in GOLD to GETTEHS-CP filL)a3. JllUW CJF CLUBS. (Se. Bauar.) For GETTING 3 anberrihere w. a-We 1 Chromo. kot yetting g we eie ? Chromo. OR Skirt Elevator. Sample copy of Baxanr mailed fur Sseenta. South'. loatruction Book, beereta of Dree .making, 15 Cat4 Addree. very plain A. BlUDETTR SMITH, 914 BKOADU AT, P. O. Box 5055. New l'orh City. V.la. HV si-- ita Curo. WILLSON'S Carbolated Cod Liver Oil In a scientific combination of two well-known meili einrx. ltstlo'ory is first to arri"M the decay, then build up the aytem. l'hyaioiaiia find the doctrine ro reet. The really slartliag cares performed by Will sou's Oil are proof. Oirbolic And positirelit arrertx Derajr. It Is the most powerfuj autisepilc In the known world. Kn teriiisintothecirculnt1uii.it at once prapplea wilh corruption, aud decay ceases. It purifies the sources of disease. Cod Lirer Oil is Nature's best assistant la resisting Consump'l'in. Pat ii in large -wclcr n prfl bottlrs, bcnrintltr inventor'. ina1 u rr, ntl is oll by Hie bfMt Druggist, l'rcpared by J. II.1VIL.I.SOX, 83 Jolt n St., New Yorlc rVSTEE AOT 8. mcilAKDSON & CO- br. Lot 18. if fj' r Producfs Ink of tlie Best Quality for Evfry-Day Tie, ty Simply AJdinj Water. (This apparatus tonu'w a chemical product Hith erto unknown in the Aria.) " F'llt sai BT r. c. ittHvr. Avi'noxY & CO., 63 LlBFitTV Si r.KKT, X. Y.. ATD ALL STATION KK A .NO BOOKbaLLXBS. Bent postpaid on receipt of i. WT. JONKS, 04- & lOti Blncliion Street. CHICAGO. MILLIONS OF ACRES Eieli Farming Lanfls IIsT NEBRASKA, MOV FOR SALE VERY CHEAP. Ten Tears Credit. Interest Only C per cent. Descriptive TxtmplUets, vith Sectional Maps, tent Free. THE PIONEER, A handsome Illustreted Paper. cotalninthe TTm4- tuud Jaiw, mailed free to all parts of the world. Address 0. 1". DAVIS. Land Commissioner U. P. E. OMAHA, Mill. R- R. R.' RADWAY'S READY XL 33 Cures the Worst Pains ijt tkom ONE TO TWENTY HINTJTES. NOT ONE HOUI. AFTCB BBADIKO THIS ABTIBT1SKMI1TT Need any one Suffer with Pain. Kad way's Beady Belief Is a Cure fur every Fain. IT WAS tUM TIB ST A1TD It THE ONI..Y PAIN It KM EDY . . i..i . th. moat excrnelatlne Dalns. allays I'm. iii" ... " "j - - ... ... InfUinwtlons, and cures Congestions, whether ol tha Lunes, Stotrfwa, Bowels, or omer Kmuu or ui.aua. j sue application, IV FROvM OKE TO TWESII M1M its, bo matter how Tlolent or exertlrtatlng the pain tha ICIIKUMATIC. Ued-riddcn. Infirm, Crippled. Si roos, NenrtlKio, or prostrated with discs) may saner, RADWAY'S READY RELIEF MILL AFFORD INSTANT EiSE. LKFLAMMATIOX OF THE KIDXETB. INFLAMMATION OF THK BLALIUtlfc INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS. CONGESTION OF THE LUNGB. BOBE TIIKOAT, DIFFICULT 13UEATHING. PALPITATION Or THE U1AK1. HYSTERICS. cnOUP, DirHTHKIilA. CATAKUU, INFLUENZA. HEADACT1E, TOOTHACHE. NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM. COLD CniLLS. AGUE CHILLS. The application of the Itrnrir TtHlef to tha part or parta where the paiu or dllUculty exls will allord e"e and comfort. - ... Twnty drops In half a tnmhler of water will. In a few momenta, eure trampa, hpam, 'otir Momach. Heart barn, rick Headache, Diarrhea, Dvaentery, Colic. Wind tn the Howels, and alllniernol I'alnii. Travelers should always carry a bonis of Rnd Wendv Hrlief with them. A lew droiw In Water will prevent sickness or pains from change of water. It U better Uiaa French BmiiOy ur Biiuars as a stimulant FEVR AND AGUE. Fever and Airne enred for fifty rents. There Is not aremedml arent tn this world that 111 cure h cverauil Ap.and a"i Pther lalarloa.lUllon s. arl;t,Tvpii..ld. Tellow and other Fevers (aided bv lUr wa" Bl'lixak- so quica. as luvwAi Flftr Ccnle per Hoitle. -- j-7 cr"iita vc'nt-d. Send suuiif 5? I .O'to A. H. ULA'.U & CO .r-t. Louis. HEALTH! BEAUTY! BTKONO AND PUKE RICH RLOQP-I NCREASE OF FLESH AND WEIGHT CLSA AND BEAUTIFUL COMPLKS.'ON 6ECUKED TO ALL. DR. RADWAY'S Sarsaparillian Resolvent HAS MADE THE MOST ASTONISHING CUF.EB; SO QUICK. SO RATID ARE THE CHANGES TUB BOOT UNDERGOES, UNDER THK IN FLUENCE OF THIS TUL'LY WON DERFUL MEDICINIl, THAT Every Day an Increase in Flesh and Weight is Seen and Felt. THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. Every drop of the ff MtSAPARTT.T.IAV RESOl.V. ENT communicate, throach the MkKxl, Sweat, t rine, and other fluid and. Juices of the svajem, t he vlor of lile, Ior it repair, the waies of the body wirti new snd sound material Scrofula, Syphilis, CoiiHun.ntlon, Glandular DlKeiiae, Ulcers In the Throat, ilouth. Tumors, Nodes tn the Glands and other parts of tli syaiem. Sore Eves, Sirumorona dlclrtrres frrm lha eara. and thewsTvt forms of bkln di iise. LrnpiUins, fever bores, Scfd Head. Ring Worm, bait Rheum. ErvHipelas. Acue, Black Fbots, Wjjniis In the Heah. Tnmors, ..'sneers In the Womb, and aJI weakenlnp ami paint'uj dlRchwues, NlKht sweats, and all waanw oX the life principle, are within the curative runue of this wonder of Modern Chemistry, asd a few days' ue will prove to any person ufiiiu it for eilhci of these forms Of disease. Ha potent pqwer to cure them. If the patient, dally lecomlni; redm-d by the wastes and decomposition that is continnnJly proKreslnr. ("' ceeds in arrealine thiae wnnlea, smf repairs the aamo with new material made from healfhy blood and this the SAItSAI'AIClIXIAN will and does iwcurt a cura la certain ; far when once this remedy eomim-nces lis work of purities t Ion, and succeeds in diminlshlNK tha ltx-s of wastes. Its repairs will be rapid, an I every day the patient will feel hlmaeir growing briterand alrone er, the fool diirestinif better, appclko Iiuprovhig, and fleab and weiht increaslnit. Not only does the Sa its apahtt.iia?v Krsot.vfnt- excel all known remedial agents In the cure of chrome, t-cro-fuloua, ConaUtutionaland bkln discast i, but it is tha only positive cure for KIDNEY AND BLADDER COMPLAINTS, Urinary and Womb dieaaes, Gravel, lMalwtc, Drortayy Moppaae of Wafr, liuwintlnenee of I'rlne, IlriKht s Disease, Albnmitiurla, and In all cases where there ara brick-dnat depoaita, or the water ia thick, cloudy, mlxel with substances like th white of an e-'i, or thrrals like a hiie silk, or there l a morbid, dark, bilious ap tearance, and while loiie-du.t dcialt, and wlicn ihera Is a pricking, burninR atnaallon wlien pnaaine water, and pain in the small ol the back and along the loins. Tumor of 12 Years Growth Curod by Radway's Resolvont. IKICC 81.00 I'EIl IJOTTL.E. DR. RADWAY'S Perfect Purgative and Regulating Pills, Perfecllr taxleless, eleeantly coated lth sweet rttm, purse, reculale, purify, cleanse and urenirthcn. H wav's I'llla. for t lie cure of all rtlaorders of the S'oin a li. Liver. Bowels. Kldii-ys, Htaddcr, Nerv.Mia Jl' e. Headache. CoiiHpaiin, astlveiie.a, Iiv.nrestlon. Dyapepxla. Uiliouancss. iliiioua 1 l s Rod 1 5 P"'' Fevers, Inflammation of the ftowtli, l'liea. and ll de ranceni, ins of the internal Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. I'ur.'ly Vegetable. contal-Jntf no mercury, nUnerals, or deleterious drujja. JTObserve tire following symptoms resuming f on Dlsoraers ol the uigestlve Organs: Constlpstion. Inward Piles, Fullness of the Wood in the Head, Acidity of the r-tomach. Nausea, Heart f.nrn, DlHustof Food, Fullness or Veiybt In the Moniach. vour Krnctatlons, Hnklmr or rinitertr.s at tiie Pit . of the Stomach, Sw'nnninn of the Head, Hurried and Dlf fleuKllreathlng, Fluttering at the Heart, Chaklnc or suttocaiitil r-ensations when In a I.ylitK PoMure. I)lm neaaof Villon, Dots or Webs Iwfore the Msht. rever and Dull Pain In the Head. Heflelenry of ivrsplratlon. yellowness of the Skin and Fyes, Pain In the MSe, Chest, Limbs, and Sudden Flnshea of Hat , Purntng in the Fleah. A few doaea of KAliVVA 'S 1'I I.I.S wbl free the system from all the above-named disorder. Price Hi Centa per Box. fold br I)rn kkIsIh. READ -FALSE AND TRUE." Send one letter stamp to RADWAT CO.. No .Ti M srrcti ht., N. a. Information worth thousands win be sent jrou. TLTE GKEAT ALTERATIVE AND BLOOD PURIFIER. It is not a quack roetrnm. Tho intfredionts nre jiublisLetl on each Loltlo of zncdirine. It if4 tiPPtl andrpcommended Vy rbysiciana wlK'revtr it Ijbh fyi3 Ji poeitiTcly euro SOIIOFVLA lit, 1(9 -1 A I " " ' ' . ' ' ' MAT1SM, WJJTJJ AUV;. LJXG, GOVT, GOJTL'IJ, r.iiOXCiiiTis, xi:n 10 us DEBILITY, JNUJrJFXl mJVSrMl'TIOX.&ndBndiH- 3 eni-es eiifsii g fit m nn iinpnro COnullll 11 ui ii.e im i u. mi'" Tr.- ciirlJiHiATlAT.l.t A T.MANAC IVk AV1 r j which too will Lid ctrfifioHtf b frcm rf lioblo rrd tmRtwortDy rhysicians, Ministers of the Gotpel rd otLrra. f rlnl)PliiiMiiit iu'iniirf fr'rofma -J r ?TJ and other distasta with n.mh sstiBfao JM ml U tion. Til T n v-rV nf Paltlrrnre. recorrv- meiida it to 7l jersoi;s uflerinr with diM-seed Blood, sayiru it is surx-rior to ar v 1 rt rsratiou l.e I ta ever vnd. Eev. fcatney Xall. of Uie j sittanra M. . tonlJuie t-octh, snys be has teen to much ! m fin d l y i' ". u- l e cbeerftilly reroir ir:t ; H toaULia friends rd scqnsiclsi ct s. a. T Ti-in-itt, at flnrdnns- iravtu b(i- r. - - - - ---ville, ., ity 11 never liaafsiitd to give satiefsctifr. . , Eam 1 0. aaaeu, "inmr. , t... ...... .a it urcd him of J.heu- ir. .n.rn l.n all else failed. IHE BQSADALI3 IN CONNECTION WITH OUR jr" ir'fH will cure Callls and Frer, llvfr Complaint. Dys pepsia, etc. We iftiar-ntee Kosaulis superior to ll other Blood Purifiers, bend for Discnttive Circular or Almanac. Address CXFMENTS CO., B. Comincice 8 1.. Buff imore, 31t. BfWfwWne.tr'r' .i-,..rr,..r.,: 3000 Words. The Pronouncing Hand-Il.olc of Wors often Mis pronounced, aa Kiven by the best aiith'.ntlcs. Kent to soy auurebS 011 receipt of Sixty cuts. ' l.EK t bHKPAKD. ltoaton. BUY J. & P. COATS' BLACK THREAD for W HACHD.K I jr. '? SSPlTHEWiEGTAR vrlth t!ieCreen Tea fl:vrr. War rMiit"t to stilt r TI las ea. Kor-aie ev'irw'iJTC Ant. r:ile uhu'e Mo ctilv by tte (irt- t - Innt'.c & 1'. :-,iU: tei f'o.,3 snd .'i? Vcscy a: reel, N, 1". P. (. I'.ui SWfi. f .. i fr TinM Vcu-Ciiv.:l.tr OUR laloguo for 1874 will ne sent free to Apents on application. 1-.V IPS. 1 IIAItXS. ( IlllO- MO, Our new Maps of INDIANA. ILI.IVots onii v nna ir-iitj.ixr . . the best and cheapest published E. C. BRIDQMA1T, 5 Barclay Street. TsTew YnrV. . NEW CAT t"7f F.l ril MT'TIIC. Acenrs wanted. 1-artlco-,P I J lars free. J. WuisTH Ui Co., St. Louis, ilo. vnnv ftio "Tii fta5 PEIt DAY, cnKfia fSKAV ITTcKIPT BOOK. A Jeltt "an'tldU. cTryTV wn iy.l .'OTtfilK ftits, and Jv---r ... S iAUlK tUIUm r.VHerMl5ee-Keeper anS Sacoi.4, Recrlpt K; pti " "bl"hed, and .old by snbacript'.on 1 his , the bit-selllnit boos ever offered tojEents. It con ta n?6?eaeVprlnted octavo l-t-S75;K bound in cloth, and the price is Pniv TXS t r I, a It. Pamp'e copies sent POS'baM "pop receipt oflnce. Ko. 44 Jefferson Street, Toledo. Ob 1 44 School Teachers Wanted Toen(re.dorinirthpr1n- and nmtner. In a bnal ness In their own counties nsytnrfrl JOper rnoiitla. AaTarsss ZtEGLEB, MoCUKDY U).. Chlcaga.lU. A.K. K. 448-S. BP. rnHIS PAPER Is Printed with INK manufactured I bio. B- SANK & COfS I Dearborn 6t.,t hlcaKo For sale by A. N. Kklxom, 7 7 JscksoabW. Chltufl