I. i 1 I 5 it Tr . ;: i 'if: KK -! . SPEAK 3TAE ILL. Oilier people have their fanlU And jm have ye as. well. Bet all ye chance to see or bear Ye have no right to tell. It ye canna Fpeak o good. Take care, and see, and feel Earth has all too ranch o" woe. And not enongh o' weal. Be carofal that ye make nae Ptrlfe Wr raeddllns tonsrne and brain For ye will And enongh to do It ye bat look atbame. If ye carina (speak o'good, Ob. dlnna speak at all. For their is Brief and woe enongh On this terrestrial ball. If re should feel like picking flaws, -. better go. I ween. And read the book that tells ye all About the mote and beam. Dlnna lend a ready ear To j?oslp or to strife. Or. p-rhap-. 'twill make for ye Nae funny thing In life. Oh dlnna add to others woe. Nor mock it with yocr mirth, But giv ye kindly sympathy To suffering ones of earth. THE CONNECTICUT BOttGIA. The Confcailon of 31m. Lydla SJicr mnn She Acknotrlrdcs to linve Polinncd Three Ilualmud and Four Clitltlreit. The main point of confession made by Mm. Lydia Sherman, the prisoner who was sentenced to the penitvnUa- iy for life at New Haven on riaturdav i have been published. It is a fearful Ktory of crime. Mrs Sherman waa arrested Jn June, 1S71, at New Bruns wick, N. J., on the charge of having murdered her husband, Horatio N. Sherman, at Derby, in 1371. She was altio charged with murdering two of hi children, but waa only tried for the firrft crime. Besides these &he was said to have poisoned two other husbands and several of their chil dren. The trial occurred in March, 1872, in New Haven, and was notice able among prison trials for the very clear testimony of Prof. Barker, of 3rnle College, who had examined the remain1; of the first mentioned vic tim. The trial resulted in a verdict of murder in the second degree the jury uniting In considering her guilty, but allowing that the circumstantial nature of the evidence permitted of a reasonable doubt. Since she hns been imprisoned her mind has been fieriously troubled, and recently she ban made a full confession of her guilt, and expresses herself as much relieved thereby. Oi the 23th of December she began her story to the jailor, Capt. Webster. Mrs. Sherman is a very ignorant wo man. She can scarcely write at all. She Is unable to remember dates with any degree of accuracy, so that part of her narrative is vague. Mrs. Sher man's atory is as follows: She was born in New Brunswick, N. J., in 182-5, and was early left an orphan. At the age of seventeen she joined the Methodist church, and at a love feast there she met Ed ward S. Struck, whom shesubsequently married. Mr. Struck in time became a policeman at Yorkvllle, one of the suburbs of New York city. One night there was a row in a saloon on his beat, and a de tective was killed. Struck was off without leave ; he was reprimanded and disgraced. It troubled him very much, and weighed so on his mlrr' that he became crazy, and had a soft ening of the brain. He then wasdis charged. When he recovered, it was only to be very feeble physically, and unable to get any work, so that he was only a burden to his wife. One day a male friend of hers sueges ted to her that she could get rid of the man by poison. She took kindly to the idea and gave him some arsenic in his food, and she also, with poison, killed their two youngest children, so that they also should not be burdens to her, and should not have, as she Hays, to grow up to Ufa's cares. She was not Buspected of this murder, and hood, after she went to Litchfield to live. Here she met one Dennis Hurl bun, and married him, but she didn't get along satisfactorily to herself with him, and so she poisoned him. Soon after his death she was told by a friend that there was a man In Durby named Horatio N. Sherman, who had plenty of money and had lost hi3 wife, and that by skillful manage ment, If she wanted a third husband, she could probably get him Accord ingly she went there and applied to him for the place of housekeeper in his family, and he engaged her, and subsequently she succeeded In mar rying him. He had two children Ada and Franklo and these she de termined to poison, and did poison ; but she did not plan to poison Sher man. She intended to employ the arsenic upon rats in her house as well as to kill the children, and she pur chased it in New Haven in Peck' drugstore, with the first mentioned object. She took the package home and put- It on a shelf beside a similar package of salaratus. Mr. Sherman used to drink a great deal of cider, into which he would putsaiaratus to make it foam. Thiswas his favorite drink. The salaratus and arsenic on the shelf became mixed in some way. This was not, therofore. such a clear caso of murder as the others. In fact, she merely neglected to warn him of bis danger. It is curious that the only deatli for which she could be held accountable, according to her Btory, should be that for which she has beon convicted. MURDER. AVILL OUT. Assassination In Benton County, Indi ana, Eight Yearn Afro-The AssasHln In Custody. Lafayette Courier, Jan. 29. In 1SC5, a worthy young man from Wisconsin, named Morgan, respect ably conneoted in Grant county in this State, where his parents now re Bide, started overland with a pair of horses and an ordinary covered wag on, on a visit to Indiana. His father, in Grant county, was advised of the time of his departure from Wisconsin, and day after day awaited his arrival. A month went by and no tidings. Fearing the worst, the anxious father instituted an investigation. Ho found that his son had left Wisconsin at the nppointed time, in company with two men from Tippecanoe county, living near Stockwell. Tho father came to Lafayette and hunted up the two men. They told a straight story. They had loft Wisconsin in company with young Morgan, and came with him as far as Eastern Illinois, where they left him and came on by rail. They stated that they loft him in company with a man named McCollough, from Henry county, Indiana, who had In tended to go with him tho rest of the journey. The father went to Henry county, and found the man McCul lough in possession of the horses and wagon! He gave such contradictory statements as to the possession that he waa arrested and taken to Illinois, where ho had a trial on the charge of grand larceny and was sent to the State prison. The father never doubt ed that this man McCulIough was im plicated In the death of his son, but was content to have him in the State prison for a term of years until evi dence oould be obtained. Meanwhile ho wrote to the Coroners in all the counties west to the Indiana State line and beyond, making inquiry if the remains of a murdered man had been discovered. The Benton county authorities.,, among the rest, received such a letter. It was filed away and well nigh forgotten, when one day, some years since, a surveying pa3T on the west side of the county, north of Hiokory Grove, came across the skeleton of a human being in a dry slough. The skull bore marks of vio lence, having been split with an a-. It was also perforated with a bullet hole. Some shreds of clothing, an ax, some wagon-bows, bits of wagon-cov- er. and a pair of boots were found with the body. An inquest was held , at the time, but nothing divulged. Thefekeleton, however, was carefully preserved, and with the other articles t found, is now in the possession of the Benton courry authorities. Ti-e let ter of inquiry from Mr. Morgan was ; called to mind and tie was made ac quainted with the facts, but was awaiting the expiration of McCul lough's term of service in the State prison before bringing him to trial on the charge of murder. Recently it came to hi3 knowledge that the sus pected murderer, probably in antici pation of hi3 arrest and trial for hl- life, had obtained a pardon and wa out of prison. An indictment was at once returned and officer? placed upon hi- track. It pems thar after leAvinir Jolit, he went direct to Henry coun ty B'ain. The sheriff of that county, provided with a warrant for his ar rest, took him into custody and brought him to Lafayette yesterday, thence to Oxford where he is in jail awaiting his trial. There Is irreat ex citement in Benton county over the j aflair. The discovery of the skeleton ciiot-ia v.a altiio stvotttAfi a nrnfmiMfl i ruic jentn cuv. ,.-.i-.. . -. -..----- enation. All tiip circumstances and surrounding." the cleft skull, the ax. the wairon-bows, the wagon-cover clearly indicate an assassin ; and if it be shown that McCiillouirh. who wa la seen in company of the murdered man, had possession of the team and the wagon 'which he sought to di trulsf by the removal of the bow; and the coven, It will make a pretty strong case of circumstantial evidence against him. - Sam Patch's Last Leap. Eli Perkins writes: While in Rochester I met Mr. Ilibbard, an old resident of Gfiieee county, who saw Ham Patch make his famous jump oil' Genesee Falls, 30 or 40 years ago. He ays that jump day was a great day in Rochester. The people gathered for miles around to see this intermittent American jumper, as lie performed his last feat. I shouldn't say intermit tent jumppr, but chronic jumper, for Sam whs all the time as crazy to jump down a water-fill as George Francis, our chronic candidate for the Presi dency, is crazy to run for the White House. Sam Patch had previously jumped over Niagra Fulls. Then, saying, "Some things can be done as well a others." Ho slashed around, like Sergeant Bates, til rough the western part of the State to back up his prov erb. Before his last jump he bought a big black bear of a circus man, and led it over the turnpike to Rochester. Sam was a queer philosopher. He had a theory that each new genera tion had more knowledge, and could do greater deeds than its predecessor. He often said his father knew more than his grandfather, and that he knew more than his father. 'Why, thunderation ! Sam, by your arguefying, your grandfather must have been a darned fool," interposed a by-stander ; but he only timed around and commenced talking about something else. Sam was a great talker. His tongue was always "on the run," and his body "on the jump," and all for no toriety. Sam himself said he once came home tight, washed the face of the clock, wound up the baby and 3et it forward 15 minutes. But about the great jump. The morning of the day came. Sam had arrived in town with the black bear, and the crowd rushed into Rochester from miles around. Twelve o'clock was the hour to jump to jump a hundred feet down down the terrible fall into the boiling caldron below. A staging had been built over the water, anil Sam appeared on it dressed in a sailor's fancy jacket. His friends now took up a collection on shore while Sam swung his hat. say ing that after jumping lie would re turn and throw the bear over. Then, amid a death-like stillness, he ran a few steps and gave one leap into the air and fell, cutting the mist like a lead sinker, 200 feet Into the seething whirlpool. As he left the staging his body assumed an oblique position, his head foremost, but above his feet. As he struck the water there was a dread ful silence, while the populace await ed, with choking breath, his reap pearance One minute two minutes three minutes and no signs of the daring jumper. Then the people sent up a loud wail a long murmur of sorrow. This was the end of Sam Patch. They say he had been drinking du ring the morning, and failed to keep his feet together and his body perpen dicular, as on previous occasions. So, whon he struck the water, tlfe breath left his body, and he was knocked senseless. A month or so afterward they found his body away down be- Inrxr Tinlocfoi', drifted upon tho rnpka He never returned to throw the bar in, or claim the money collected. I believe In the doctrine of trans migration of souls, but on looking at the almnnac nobody was born during the whole of that fatal day but George Francis Train. A London reporter has recently died who for thirty years devoted himself to tho single department of writing up fires. It is to be hoped he wont be called upon to follow out the Spiritu alistic theory of indefinite progress ion in his business in the other world. NURSERY STOCK. SPMIKG Til ABE, 1S73. FURNAS NURSERIES, Brownvillo, Neb. Furnas, Sons & Ferrand. Furnas & Sons, Brownvillc, Ne braska, and E. Ferrand, Detroit, Michigan, hare consolidated their stocks and will hereafter conduct bu siness at Brownvillo, Xeb., where they offer the largest and most select general Nursery Stock ever offered in tho West, consisting in part as fol lows : 20.000 Choice 3-year old Apple Trees. 100,000 2 " " 500,000 " 1 " " " 50,000 l, 2. 3 and 4 year old Pear Trees. 40,000 " 2, 3 and 4-year old Cherry Trees. 50,000 " land 2-year old Peach Trees. 20,000 " Tluin, Apricot and Necta rine Trees. 4.0(X.OOONo. 1 floney Locust Hedge Plants. 2,000,000 " Osage Orange " 5.000.001) Forest Tree Seedlings. 2,000,000 Evergreens, in variety. 100,000 each Blackterries. Itnspberrles and Strawberries. 50,000 each Gooseberries and Currants. 20.000 Perpetual and Climbing Roses. 10.000 Flowering Shrubs. 10,000,000 Willow Cuttings. Cooler's Early 'White, and Sanford Cora. ITft.IiI-A.3T BEES. BERKSHIRE AXD TOLAXD HOGS. 2Correpondenee Solicited. Send for Catalogue.-& W. T. MOORE fc CO., Commission Merchants, SHIPPERS, AXD DEALERS IS GRAIX ASD COAL, 72 Slain Street, Browiiville, Nebraska. rt K. R. TIME TABLES. Steel Rail! DoubleTrack ! BILMflOHiOy. Is the ONLY ROTTTEby irhich holders of Through Tickets to Xew York and Boston are enabled to visit the cities of Haltimove, JPh ilailelphia, NET7 YORK & BOSTON, At the cost of a UcVet to Ne York or Boston only, with the privilege of visiting FREE CITTT Is the ONLY ROUTE from the TTF.ST TO WASHINGTON CITY, Without a lon and tedious Omnibus Transfer tbroo;b Baltimore. TIIE ONLY LINE RUNNING MAGNIFICENT DAY CARS. AND Pirn's Fakes Be ni:g Res and Sisc-piif feiss From ST. LOUIS, LOCISVIIXE, CirfCIXXATI ASD COLUMBUS, to BALTIMORE & WASHINGTON. WITHOUT CHANGE. Tickets forsale at all Ticket Offices in the South and West. L. M. CO LE. W. P. SMITH. Gen'ITickrtAjjent, Master Transpor'n B&Iliciore. ld. Baltimore, Sid. SIDNEY B. JONES. Gen'l Pass. Ag't Cincianatl.O MIDLAND PACIFIC EAILWAY. Takes effect Sunday. Xov.10. 1ST2. Trains daily except Sunday. WESTrAKJ. SZZ STATIONS, fee EASTWARD Xo. :i. 2.iXo.4. p. jr. -wo 5:10 r,-M 7:57 8:10 A. M. 7:30 7:5-.! 6: fcao ir.V) low.: lfcs K'JO P.M. 3 15 2 53 236 2 19 1 53 1 43 1 21 1 M 12 43 12 23 12 15 P.M. 12 35 12 11 11 43 11 26 10 55 10 5 10 10 9 -W 9 f7 8 40 8 30 . Xebraska City.. Talbot .Dunbar.. Arlington Svracuse Unadlila . I'a!mrra Bennot Cheney's -State Prison LIncoin. The time given above Is that or Lincoln, being 37 minute-! slower than that of Chicago. M. A. SJIOU'KRS. J. X. COXVEKPE, Train Master. Superintendent. Burlington & Missouri Eiver E. E. IX XEBRASKA. PASSEXGER AXlTjIIXED TRAINS, RUXXIXG BETVVXEX PIaUsmouihand Lincoln. To take Effect Wedncnday, Dec. 2 3b71. WESTWARD. STATIONS Train So. :i. Train Xo.l. PASSKSOKK. l(fc)a.m. leave. Ifc25 I(h50 115 11:20 ll:45.. .... liffl 12:12 p. in 12:30 p.ni.arrive MIXED. 00 p.m. leave.. 235 il IX ED. 3:30 p. m. leave. 4.-20 5:10 ,'7:2S ! PlatUmouth Omaha Junction. JjOuWvilie South Kend A Mi land .. itn-enwood waverly Xewton Lincoln . j. 6:15 p.m. arrive II :0)a.m. leave. 9-.20 lOrtwa.m.arrive. I.inroln.... Denton Highland Crete Djrchester 3rf... 330 4:l0p.m.arrive. EASTWARD. STATIONS Train Xo. 2. I'AbSESBER. Trnin Xo. MIXED. Plattsmouth Omaha Junction.. Louisville South Bend Ashland (t reen wood , Waverly Xcvton- Lincoln 1:50 p.m. arrive fcO0a.m. arrive 1:25 si ia5 12i ,1230 12:15 . 7:4) .17:20 ..&40 -IfclO . 15:50 ,i 12.-00 1I:4S ...MO.. 11:T0 p. m.ieave'5:00 a. m. leave i, MIXKD. 1 11:05a.m. arrlve,4:15 p.m. arrive. 10-.35 1 -t:i5 10:05 . 3:15 , 9:20 CT0 Lincoln Denton Highland Crete Dorchester i. 9-,50a.m. leave. 1 3:30 p. m. leave. The time given above!? that of Omaha, being 33 minutes slower than that of Chicago. TilOS. DOAXE, Cfttff Enairvcr and Sujrintcndent. Kansas City, St, Joseph & C. Bluffs, time table Xo. jg. Tu take rjTccl Sunday, July Ittli, 1571. GOING NORTH. STATIONS. OMAHA HAIL AND EXP. EXP. Kansas City . East Leavenworth. St. Joseph......... PILELPS Hamburg . Council BIuH's 11:15 P.M. 1230 A.M. 2:45 5:40 0:30 6:45 7:40 A. M. 9:15 11:40 2:45 P. M. 3.-20 5:35 GOING SOTTTH STATIONS. ST. tOUISlMAlLAN'D EXP. EXP, Kansas City East Leavenworth St. Joseph PHELPS 11:15 P.M 4: 10 A.M. iteior. M.t 32a 8:00 ! 1.-05 5:15 !55 Hamburg 4:10 9:40 Council Bluffs 20 I 7:15 Tickets lor sale at all the General Ticket Oillces. A. C. DA1VES, A. L. IIOPICIXS, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Oen'I Superintendent, St. Joseph, Mo. St. Joseph, Mo. Kansas Pacific Railway. Short, Favorite and Only AJJL.1L. RAIL KOUTE! TO GREELEY. CHEYENNE, GOLDEN CITY. CENTRAL CITY, VILLA LA FONT. EVANS. SALT LAKE CITY, DEXVEIt. EKIK, KKW 31J-.31l'IUS, IDAHO SPKIXGS, GItKEXCITV, ELKO. MAP.Y-SVILLE. GEORGETOWN, LONG MONT, KAi;il A M t.? I U, COLORADO SPRINGS. SAX FRANCISCO. And all points in Knnsan, Colorado, t lie Territories, antl tSie Pacific Const. 18S 2L0 MILES the Shortest Line from Kansas Ci ty to Denver. MILES the Shortest Line to Pueblo. Trin idad, Santa Fe.and all point in New Mex ico and Arizona. Bemember that this is tlieGreat Through Line.and there Is No Oilier All Rail Route to any of the above points. There is no tedious omnibus or ferry transfer by this route, as the Great Rivers are all Rridged. FULLIUAX PALACE CARS, run through from KANSAS CITY to DENVER Without Change. Passengprs by this route have an opportunity ot viewing the tine Agricultural DMricts of Kansii. and can stop over at Denver and visit the rich mining, agricultural and grazing dlstrits of Colora do. Close connections made at Kansas City with all trains to and from tl.e East. North and South. He sure to aU for TSrIietfc via. Ivnnsar, City aixl the Knni.n Pnciflc Railway. EDM'D S. BOWEN Gnl Suiit. BEVERLY It. KEIM. Gen'l Ticket Agent. GEXEUAL OFFICES, ICaiiKa Clty,2Io Great Through Passenger Route THE OLD RELIABLE HANNIBAL & ST. JOE, AXD Council Bluffs R. R. Line, VIA ST. JOSEPH AXD QUIXCY. TWO FAST EXPRESS TRAINS Crossing the Mississippi at Quincy on Bridge with PTJLLMAX SLEEPIXG PALACES, FROM DROWXTILLE TO QUIKCY. Without Change of Cars. TniS IS TIIE BEST SHORT LIXE TO QUIXCY, ST. LOUIS, CAIRO, Memphis, Xew Orleans, Jacksonville. Spring field, Decatur. Tolono. La Fayette. Indian apolis. Cincinnati, Louisville, Nashville, Chattanooga, Lexington. Columbus, Wheeling, Parkersburg. Balti more. Washington, Richmond, .j.m j .host ni: humble '.roctjs To FL Wayne. Toledo, Crestline. Pittsburg, llarrlsburg. Philadelphia. Xew York, Boston, and all points, south: a.3srx east. Passengers taking other lines east or west, shooi by all means take this in returning, and see a new section or splendid country. Buy Your Tnronen Tickets Via. St. Joe and Qixiney, For "sale at Ticket Offices St. Joseph A Council Bluffs R. B., at the Star Hotel, Brownvllie. Stev enson fc Cros3, Ticket Agents, and at Phelps station and other stations on line of road, at as low rates aa by any other route. Baggage checked through to nil points east. All connections via Qalncy are direct and perfect. B- G,RS,AT- GEO- -H- XETTLETOX. Gen'lTicket Ag't. Gen. Supt. STOCK PUMPS. FOB SALE 'oih:e.dp i TISDEIi & IH0HABI8; f- imiw mmmmmmmmBmtmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmammammmmmmtcmmam HARDWARE. ! i TR.flCrE"RTES. - -ww. H m Tl i Jj IE II, -stho:lssale and bjgrytiajiai DEAXERS jeo, jMBl. k. tzxL. Mm fH f wm ifa ? a r m& e& u 3JaJES.3F3S:,,X!'S, GXX CLOTHS, nyr.TTiisrc3-s. Having determined to reduce our stock of Dry Goods, Notions, &c. and haiing on hand a very large and extensive stock, we will commence on Monday, the 15th of November, and will sell our en tire stock at such prices as will insure a speedy sale. Our only object is to get mon ey, therefore we will sell for cash only. To secure great bargains, call early, with the cash, and be as tonished at the low prices. tfEBAftiiit LAilfatSf SiBCAIDIIAKE THE LOWEST PRICES. PHOPEIETOB uisrioiLsr ioTsi 88 Sz. 90 JVE-A-IISJ- STREET, BEOW3STVILLB. 2Tw S3 te--2a tsxa Dirrnii! IllijJ aliu 1 di iilol .S.VS C.J.J C5i 6T-Z tCj?' IS tt-iera No. 70 Main Street, - - Brownville, Nebraska. Largest Stock in the Market. Great Inducements Offered. THE BOTTOM PRICE ON ALL AKTICLES SOLD. 4-ly HARDWARE. HurraJh. ! Hurrah. ! Now is the time to get your ywBBwmiml33CMMaimrii 131 MIIS -.. -.-. - . ara?" We have Just received a full and complete stock of PRESSED AND W AT)!? JAPANED V T AiilL BI3?ir CAGES, jPfiSJ AXT CARRIAGE t a full and iiinnunnr GENERAL LINE OPnMnU W Hn t Tersons desirous of purchasing will SHOIKc:ditosfc AXD m STOCK EXAMINING our BE FORE ELSE WHERE REMEMBER THE PLACE. Sign of the Red Store and Plow. No. T4, McPherson Block. TISDEL & RIC1UKI S. PATENT WEATHER tOfc Tie best for excluding JJ p WIND, 3JUST, OR RAIN, J"3 4 from under doors. c j "I For sale by Tl Swan & Bro. &-1-&V PUjCBW DET GOODS. .w - " - ""-v. I k CO. retatl UN" asata n E2SJ ea dt'3srJ liOTXERIZS. Gift Enterprise "1 in . Jcf Lable Gilt I) ri tioti In the Count 100,000,00 IN VALUABLE GIFTS to be distributed In L. D.y LITE'S 40tn SEMI.ASXUAL GiftEnterprise 1 o be drawn Monday, March 24, 1S73, ONE GRAND CAPITAL PRIZE, $13,003 IK GOLD i ONE PRIZE $5,000 IN SILVER ! a Prizes, 1,200- r onrraiRi nun o rnzes, 500 iu-IHttimUtt 10 Prizes, 100 i One Horse and Bn?w, with Silver-mo oted ar- ness, worth few. One Fine-toned Rosewood Piano, worth 500. Ten Famllv Sewing Machines, worth f 1 eac Five Gold Watches and Chains, worth fc Oeach. Five Gold American Hunting Watches, worth 1125 each. Ten Ladles' Gold HuntlnpTVetches. worth ?75 each. feOOGold and SilverLeverHuntlng Watches. (In all) worth from 20 to 300 each. "Whole Xrtmljcr Gifts, 10,000. Tickets Limited to 50,000. Agents wanted to sell tickets, to whom liberal Pre miums will be paid. SIXGLE TICKETS !2: 6 TICKETS 10: 12 TICK ETS 30 : 25 TICKETS :W. Clrenlars containing a full list or prizes, a des cription of the manner of drawing, and other In formation In reference to the Distribution, will be sent to any one ordering them. All letters mnstb addressed to Ii. D. SINE, Box 86, Cincinnati, Ohio. Offlce.lOlW.SthSt. 3-ly 8UBSCRIBE forthe "WeefclrAdvertlser. Old cTPr in th9 State. 8k MEDICAL. &r' illliJ bLUMiuliuO W rrw 0 jb i - Vineear Bitters are not a vile Fancy DrlnK. made of Poor Knm. Whisky, Proof Spirits and Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called "Tonics," "Appetizers," " Restorers," ic., that lead the tippler on to drunfc ennes3 and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots and herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Greal Blood Purifier and a Llfe-givinjr Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying on all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition, enriching It, refreshing and Invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt in their action, certain in their results, safe and reliable In all forms of disease. So Person can take these Hitters accord ing to direction?, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and tho vital organs wasted beyond the point ofrcpair. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Headache, Pain In the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness. Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Bad Taste In the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of me neari, innammauon oi tne-Lungs, rain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the orrspnngs of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it ha3 no equal, and one bottle will prove a bettor guarantee of Its merita than a lengthy advertisement. For Kemnle Complninfa, in yonnij CT Old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or me iurn oi me, inese ionic liitters display so de cided an influence that a marked Improvement 13 soon perceptible. For Inflammatory and Chronic Tthcn matUm and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bil ious. Remittent an 1 Intermittent Fevers. Dkeases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Such Diseases arc caused by Vitiated Blood, which is generally produced by derangement of the Digestive Organs. They are n Gentle Purgative an well as a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of act ing as a powerfut agent in relieving Congestion or inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs and in Bilious Diseases. For SL.I11 Discnqes, Eruption. Tetter, Salt llhcmn. Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carbuncles, Ring-worms. Scald-Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Dlscolorations of the Skin, Humors and Diseases cf the Skin, or whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system In a fchort time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convlnco the most incredulous of their curative effects. Cleanse the Vitiated Hlood whenever yon find its impurities bursting through the f-kia hi Pimples. Eruptions, or Sores: cleanse it when voit find it obstructed and slr.CTLsh in the veins: tiMnsn ii wueu i. a iiiui ; jour iv lings win ten juu when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow. Grateful Thousands proclaim ViveRak Brr teks the most wonderful ImigoratA that eer fcus taincd the Finking Fvatein. Pin, Tope, and other "Worms, lurking In the system of so many thousands, are ctfectually destroyed and removed. Savs a distinguished physiologist : There U scarcely an individual on the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms. It ii not upon the healthy elements of the body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and Mimy depoit3 that breed these living monsters of disease. Ko svstem of medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics, will free the system from worms like thcc Bitters. Mechanical Diseases. Persons engaged In Taints ami Minerals, bach as Plumbers, Type setters, Gold-beaters, and Minera. as they advance la life, are subject to paralysis of the Kowcl-. To guard against thl3, take a dose of Walkeu's Vi.n egak Bittem twice a week. Bilious, Rcuilttrnt, and Intermittent Fevers, which are fo prevalent in the vailevsef our great rivers throughout the United State, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois. Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkansas. Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Tear!, Alabama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, and many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country daring tho Summer and Autumn, and remarkably so daring seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are Invariably accompanied by exten sive derangements of tho stomach and liver, and u.uwi uuuuim,u lisvcra. in ineir treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upon these auuu3 ur;;ai.i, 11 csocuwaiiy nccc.-vary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to Dr. J. Walk er's Vinecak BrrrEia, as they will spcedi.7 remove the darfc-co!ored viscid matter with whi-.i the bowels are loaded, at the same timcstiniulatin the sccretloas of the liver, anil general!? restoring the healthy functions or the digestive organs. Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swelling". Ulcers, Erysipelas. Swcdcd Keck, Goitre, Scrofulocj Inaammation?, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc., etc In these as in all ot!er constitu tional Diseases, Walkc.i's Vinegar Brrn-inhav shown their great curative powers in the mo3; obstinate and mtractab.e cases. Dr. Walker's California Vinegar Hit ters act on all these cacs in a simar uuur. By purifying the Blood thy remove the cau.M. and by resolving away the effects or the innaiamatioa (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure Is effeetc J. The properties of Dlt. Walksk's Vineoar Bitteks are Aperient, Diaphoretic, Carminative Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative. Counter fcTltant, Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious. The Aperient and mild laxative propenica of Dr. Walker's Vinegar Bitteks are the be,t Fafo-guani in cases of eruptions and malignant fevers. Their balsamic, healing, and soothing pro perties protect the humora of the fauces. Their Sedative properties allay pain in the nervous sva- tem, stomach, and bowels, from inflammation wind, colic, cramps, etc Their Counter-irritant lnuaenro ex tends throughout the system. Thtir Anti-Bilious properties stimulate tho liver. In the secretion of bile, and its discharges through the blllarv duct3, and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of Billons Fever, Fever and Ague, eta Fortify the hody aealnst disease by purifying all its fluids with Vlnegar Bitters. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Directions. Take of the Bitters on going to bed at night from a half to one and one-half wine glassful. Eat good nourishing food, such as beef steak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, and vege tables, and take out-door exercise. They aro composed of purely vegetable Ingredients, and contain no spirit. R. H. MeDOSALD fc CO., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco. CaL, & MZ-otYrufoiDZttm and Charlton Sts., N.T. OLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS A DEALERS. For 1873. TTlthretall'Priced Descriptive Catalogue or Seeds. VTOW READY, and will be mailed FREE to all Xi applicants. Wholesale prices of all kinds of Seeds furnished to Dealers. Address. PLAT SEED CO., 9ra2 ST. LOUIS. MO JOB PRINTING, OF ALL KINDS, Neatly and Promptly Executed. AT THIS OFFICE. REMOV TISDEL aire removed their stock of Hardware from the room for merly oooupied bj helienberger Drug Store. iv w ... v AGRICULTURAI. IMPLEMENTS. The AULTIAN & TA1T0S !aX3P.3E3S3E3e!. x 1 " Thresher X to "AULTMAN 3 O O -j - c . 2 S 2 B DC O IT O M o ri o - -z " J 'JL'idCE BS. Threshing Machine VtttK 8 AXD 10 U0RS3 aiountod mdXo-co-ixIo-oo-xi. Jtuix nr xns wxli. saowx ATJIiTMAIS" & TAYI.OB IL'T'O CO BSonsflelcI, Oliio. The TsrUllant success of that Imprntd Grain-Saving, Time-Saving and Honey-Earning Thrtxhiny EttablUhmenU U vnparaXUUd in the annalx of Farm, Machinery. Largely increased earnings are reported by Thrtshermen who have purchased A great saving of grain by Farmers who have emphyed Thru years introduced and proven Fully Es tablished Ao experiment In use in 400 Counties in 16 Stales by 1700 purchasers Endorsed by forty thousand farmers who have employed them Grain SavIngJjfcA&M "separating" principle They shake thegrain out of the straw Xo Beaters, Pickers, Raddles or Endless Aprons Xo clogging or "wrap ping" in Flax or Wet Straw "Ovirblast" Fan Sieves have over eleven square feet of surface M any kinds of AVorlc Great "capacity" in IVheat, Rye, Oats, Barley, Buckwheat, Pros, Beans MiOet, Hungarian, etc Unapproachable in Flax Unri valed in Wet Straw and Grain Unsurpassed in Timothy Tlme-Saving Ab litterings to clean ttpXo detention from wet straw, high winds, putter ing, clogging or bad weather Quickly set and moved Simply CO-mMtrnctetl-Easilymanaged-Benark-ably light draft Very durable Cheaply kept in order only about owx-halp o many Belts, Gear Wheels, Boxes, Journals, Shafts and Pulleys to clog, wear out, add to draft, or to keep in repair as in Endless Apron Machines More conveniences and less to annoy AU Vie latest improvements-31oiiey-3Xlcliig-.Faster threshing Leu detention Choice of jobs Extra Prices for work Farmers wait for weeks and months Elegant Finely Finished Salable. Znvostlgato I Call on the undersigned, (or send your name and post oflce address), and get a Factory- Prico Uat and Descriptive Pamphlet (free) con taining 60 illustrations and letters from hundreds of purchasers. "Complete Threshing Es tablishments," as well as Horse-PoTrera "alone," and Separators "alone." FOR SALE BY H t! e. 1 13 P to 3 s M B 2 fi o rs a 05- to C3 tl K S t c c r; " nc fl 1- - - 0 c -j c t, 5l u. -Z o a - 1 W O gj C J b S - w T o 2 rS ? es o &. to M c 61 eJ x x s O !- i i 1 M mm, ? 5 -S s 2 o if ""' X. 1 ? i s to " 2 o 60 1-, o F. A, TISBEL, JR.,& C07. "We sell the STUDEBAKER AND WHITE WATEl TS&? SBSSSSSSSWBffBfBBSSfSSSSSSSSSSSSSiSSS&. BIB?BSBSSSSSSSBSSSsWBvv'9aWtSSSSSl fc AH. C tH rSr S -m-S'm AND BUGGIES If you want anything, come and ask for it- WE KEEP XOTHESG BUT FIRST CLASS GOODS, KD GVT TEE ALL OUK GOODS TO BE AS RECOMMENDED. I HIOHAEBg reitmey&r - - - m - ., - -w ww rv I 'l'M"m 0 0 of the Period. THX &. TAYLOR" 1 r 3 &? opposite Oitf M TtT "llftf" OP ALL KINDS. j j, e i J i 0- .; .