Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, March 09, 1882, Image 2

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    tJUHzlnff tlio Hoff Pro(luofht Hlonic.
A portion of: the lolsufo UmoUuVlhg
tlio winter cattbtf 'very well BBcntupon
tho hoff product, liocim'so tliliPcarn bo
lono iitftprollC to tlio frtrrunnV UiJilor
tlio ustt.'irotistoni of marketing the hog
alive, curtnin men get rloh out of profits
mrulo by handling tho product. If il
wiih tho custom for farmers to work up
their own hogs, having no ono between
thomsolTCM and tho retailor; or at lenit
as now, with their poultry and fruits,
iiio ono betWOon them and the coinmis
.sion man, bottor prices would be real
ized from roarlnir and foedlnjr tho farm
1
..I,'- MM., t. 1 1,1 ..., ... !.. ,l,...lu
nil jliih null in nimi, mivi ii u.u tv
Iih hnm 1h cured and sold to tho con
sumer at fourleon cents to sixteen cents.
Ills nido meat, In tho form of brcakfitst
bacon (a dainty dish used upon the
moat fashionable tables), Is now retail
ing at eighteen cents. Hogs aro
.shipped to Chicago and other markets,
refuse and all costing alike in freigiit;
the product worked up nnjl shipped
back hundreds of miles, ami sold at
roilnd prices in tlio very localities whoro
tho hogs woro roared and fed.'
In the caso of shipping Wool lo a dis
tance that it may go into the hahds of
export manufacturers, thoro is n reason
able oxetlHo. Those who aro prepared
to m.ike salable fabrics from raw ma
terial do not live at tlio cross-roads.
Tlio. froii'lit on tljuwool, nlso, us well w
oigl
olo
on tlio oloth, in llirjit. Hut Willi the hoar
product tho ease is dill'erent. Men do
live at the cross-roads, and at most farms
between, who aro ontiroly competent to
pre von, the shipping of hogs to distant
markets, the product to doiiblo on tho
road; twoprotits being made In tho car
rying, two moro by commission men,
one at the shipping and the other at tho
selling point, another by tho'imbkor ami
urer, and a sixth by the retailer. And,
don't bo startled if wo add another, viz.,
n percentage to tlio commission man
who sells for tho curor.
.Wo havo practiced tho curing anil sell
ing of the cured product, to tlio extent
or fiO to 100 head, at the farm, and know
how simple and easy a task it Is. Not
hard work, like swinging tho ax or
maul; not driving work, like tlio rou
tine of harvest, but light, uudor-sliolter
;work, requiring no hurry. Cut up and
trim tlio hams, shoulders and sidu meat
neatly, using the trimmings for sau
.sago or to go into tlio ihrd kettle, or
partly for both. Cord tip tho hitms,
.shoulders and sides in tlio cellar, on
plank, using a liberal layer of sUgar,
salt and saltpeter on tho hams antl on
itho others if you 4iko. If you do not
,got through tliis chore in your leisure
, lioiirs of one day, tlio meat will keep,
, and you can linish during the next, or
the third. At about tlio end of each
week, shako tho layer off into a box or
. tub. Add fresh sugar, etc., to tho mix
rturo, and rub tills into the tlesh shhj,
.again putting On a liberal coating,
cording up as before. Four or 11 vo sucli
handlings will tit tho meat for tho
ismoko-houHo. This may bo a temporary
structure, made of iix-l scantling and
nine boards, covered with tlio same, and
if twelve feet square, will do for the
bams and bacon of thirty or forty hogs.
A small arched furnace, built a few feet
away, beneath Hie surface, with brick!,
will ull'ord a safe and economical mode
of distributing smoko to the meat. Wlwon
nicely browned, you arg ready to sup
ply your own tible, and sell llftocn-oont
ihog meat to tho retailer. Notliingcau
lio oiusior oi' more simple. As compared
to it, dairying is, in airy of its modus,
complicated. Working tip our wool
product, as stated, is beyond our roach,
but to permit sovon profits to bo made
off ono of our leading products, this
going, perhaps, across two or threo
Mates, where common, low-priced, un
skilled labor does what should bo done;
mpou tho farm at homo, should not bo
iso generally permitted. TJio selling of
this produot before our eyes, with the
seven profits added, is a rolleetlon upon
our modes. -National Live Stock
.Jo it ma J.
iHinorson's Tribute 'to' tho Fanner.
Tho following worthy tribute to tho
fanner is from the pen of Ralph Waldo
Kmoreon:
The glory of tho farmer is, that, ill
tho division of labor, it Is his part to
create: all trade rests at last mi liM
primitive activity. Ho stands close to
Nature; he obtains from the earth thq
bread anil meat; the food which was not
be causes to bo. Tho first farmer was;
tho (Jnjt man, ami all historic nobility
rests on possession and use of land. Tlio
farmer's oillco is precise and Important,
lint you must not try to paint him in
rose colors. You cannot mako pretty
compliments 'to fate and gravitation,
whoso minister ho is. lie represent-!
tho necessities. It is the beauty of tho
groat economy of tho "world that makes;
his comeliness. He bends to tho nl
of the seasons, tho -vuathef, tho soil,
and crops, as the sails of the shin bend
to tho wind. Ho represents continuous
hard labor year in and year out, and
tsmall gains. Ho takes the pace of sea
sons,, plants and chemistry. Jfaturo,
never hurried; utomjjy atom, llttlo by
little, slip achieves her work. The
farmer ties himself to Nature, and ao
qulres that livelong patltincu which bo
ilongs to her; ho must Walt for his orop
tto g?ow.
His entertainments,, his liberties and
his spending must be on a farmer's scale,
not a merchant's. It woro as false for
farmers to uso a wholesale and massy
expense as for States to uso minute
economy.
lie has great trusts confided to him.
In the great household of Nnturo tho
' farmer sHinds at tho door of tho bread
room and weighs oaoli loaf. It Is for
him to say if mon.shall marry or not.
JSurly, , Tnarritigog and the number of
births aro Indlssolubly connected with
.an abundance of food. The farmer is a
hoarded eapltal of hcaUh?lshe farm is
of wealth,. ini it is ffom him that tho
hoallh And poworf moral and Intellectu
al, pf thotuitics comojUTho city is al
'wayfl"rcdrultcd from the- country, Tho
mouMn cities, wholiro c'c'ntcrsof energy,
the driving-whools of ArAu!o, nttd tho
women of beauty and genius ;nro tho
children and grandchildren of tho farm
er, and aro spending the onprgics vhiph
tliolr fathers hardy, silent life ncuumu
Iutou in irosty furrows.
Ho is a continuous benefactor. Ho
who digs a well, constructs a stono
foundation, plants an orchard, builds a
double house, reclaims a swamp, or1 so
much m puts a stono seat by the way
side, makes tlio land so far lovely
and dcsirablo, makes u fortune which
ho cannot carry away -with him, but
which is useful to his country long uf tor
ward. f
Who aro tho farmer's servants? .Ge
ology and chemistry, tjio quarry of the
air, tlio wutor of the brook, tho lightning
of tho cloud, tho casting of tjio worms,
tluj plow of tho frost. Jong before ho
was born the suh of, ages ucoompojed
the rocks, mellowed his land, soaked it
with light and heat, covered it with veg
etable film,, then with forests, and accu
mulated the sphugrum whoso decays
mado tho peat of his meadow.
Tattrtoinjj.
Tattooing, or at least tattooing iw
practiced by uncivilized men, is an art
without a history. No one, as far as
wo are awitre, has mado it the business
of his life to study the development of
tattooing from its nido beginnings.
Wo havo nOt, therefore, tho materials
at hand for a really scientific discussion
of tho evolution of "moko," as tho Now
Zoatandor.s call tattooing. As science
becomes moro thoroughly differen
tiated, and as specialists ariso in this
branch of learning, wo shall doubtless
havo books written on Mokology.
This seems to iijost appropriate term
for the now study, because it sounds
tautological to. talkof tattoology. In
tho course of a few years Wo may be
lieve that conferences of Mokologlsts
will bo held in tlio larger and more In
tellectual provincial towns.
When Kngllshnicu lirst settled in New
Zealand they found that the older
women had ono side of their faces tat
tooed, so that from quo point of the
view they looked like men, whilo tho
other aspect of the profile revealed
them as women. Now tho women tat
tooed only the lines of tho lips and a
scroll depending from tho angles of the
mouth. They also draw fine' blue linos
on (heir arms and breasts. Tho prao
tico of this New Zcjilanders shows us
tattooing as no longer a torture on. a
kind of tradu-mark, but merely a form
of personal ornament,
It is In this shape that tattooing sur
vives amoii the savage and backward
classes of civilized peoples, among boys,
criminals and tho lower classes of sol
diers. This modorn tattooing has re
cently heen niado the subject of special
studios, both in Franco and Italy. Sol
diers aro often found tattooed literally
nil over their bodies. The men who aro
frequently under arrest find, in tattoo
ing, a help to kill time. Whole pictures
copied from illustrated newspapers or
tho covers aro often imprinted on tho
flesh by tho use of needles mid coloring
matter, Mottoes aro also engraved and
marks of trades, or religious and patri
otic emblems, aro very common. I'laces
liko Lorotto and other centers of pil
grimages aro also Centers of tho art of
tattooing. Snored signs are stamped,
for a small charge, on the bodies of tho
pilgrims, and this practice actually pre
vails in Jerusalem. In Paris and other
great towns there aro professional tat
toours, itml the cost of a really elaborate
design may reach 12f. oreven 20f. Man
kind Is naturally prono ,to relapse ,iuto
the barbarous customs of tho past, and
there Oan be no bettor proof of this than
the extent to which tattooing is prac
ticed in the armies and prisons of Franco
and Italy. Indeed those tattooed eivll
ized men havo sunk even below tho
standard of the barbarian of Now Zea
land. Civilized tattooing is mechanical
in method, and trivial or disgusting in
subject, while tho "iiioko" of tho New
Zoalanders is designed on sound princi
ples of decoration.
Tho recent French and Italian re
searches prove that tattooing in Kuropo
is chletly confined to men. -Kogor.Tich-borne
wished to tattoo Ids cousin, and
Mr: Payn tells, in the Jkhiravia Christ
mas number, a very moving tale of a
young lady of rank "who tattooed her"
arm with the name of "Tom." School
girls should remember that, howover
devoted they may be to "Tom" itt tho
age of fourteen, at eighteen they will
find tho indellblo token of this atl'oe
tlon rather inconvenient. But, if all
tattOoors woro as expert as tho Dyaks,
ladles who lovo bluo china might con
sent to bo tattooed. Tlio hands of a
Dyak woman in Mr. Carl Hock's "Head
Hunters in Borneo" havo tho most
beautiful blue ornaments, in tho most
oxquisito tmtu. We havo known os
tlietie ladles who tinged their nails with
henna; from thls.to tattooing a la Dyak
Is but n short step. Whether young
dandles should tattoo themselves Is a
question that may bo left to the culti
vated taste of long-haired lads who al
ready wear bangles and bracelets, Tho
first young mini taTioood in Nankin
blue will doubtless havo a success, but
Imitation might prove monotonous. U
is certain that Europeans Will find no
better teachers in this art than tho chl-na-collocting,
head-hunting Dyaks of
Borneo. London Saturday Jtevicto.
Sovon hundred and fifty-seven
horses have alreadv been entered for tho
.sixteen leading, events, of tho coming
honson.on thoiturf In Kentucky, an in
dicatlon that the liuul of .bluo.grasV pur
poses to maintain its reputation "for tho
production of good stock.
SoTI
Trlckajjof Mnglelnns.
of thcramfiikfiiagreat deal.' oil mofTey.
Tho Troy Opcra-IIouso Is owned by a
magician who says ho mado all his
money out of nine tricks. A magician
of considerable celebrity out Wept,
Prof. M- Williams, is a deaf mtitd. Ono
would-thlnk-it would bo tho last busi
ness In tho world for a man to undcr-
. t&ko wjio'eannot talk or hear, butj ho
nas a man to talk for liim whilo ho does
tho tricks. The last I heard of him ho
was at Loadvllle. The tricks shown
now aro mostly mechanical, as tho finer
slelght-of-hand tricks which demand
tho groatost skill aro not showy. Tho
DliccS Of tl'i(ku urn Ifiu' tn Arm.wivlu,i"
with what they hayo been. The time
has boon when as much as $500 would
be charged to teach a man the Indian
box trick, and now tho price of it is
only five dollars. Mechanical tricks aro
generally variations of a few pieces of
mechanism.
The nrofessor showed a small wooden
box, of a size convenient to hold jn tho
hand. To all appearance It was an or
dinary box, closing with a lock. Ono
way in which it is often used is for the
magician to borrow a watch, havo ono
person put tho watch in tho box and
lock it, taking tho key. Tho magician
hands it to another person to hold.
" Do you hoar the watch ticking?" tho
magician will ask, aud the person fold
ing tho box will hear it distinctly by
putting his oar to tho lid. Finally, tho
watch appears around a pigeon's neck,
or hanging to a chair-back, after a pistol
has been fired, or ono of many ways,
according to tho fancy of the magician.
Ono end of the llttlo box swings out on
pivots whan relieved from jts catch by
a sharp pressure at one end of thq bot
tom. It can readily bo manipulated
witli one hand, so that in tho interval
between tho depositing of tlio watch
and tho handing of the liox to some one
to hold, tho watch slips out into the
magician's hand, and a watch move
ment hidden in tho lid of the box koops
up tho deceptive ticking. Such a box
sells for twelve dollars.
, Tho Indian box trick, which is a fa
vorite trick with magicians, is just as
simple. In this a oig, rough box is
brought on the stago, and several gen
tlemen aro Invited to examine it. They
find an empty box, as roughly made as
a packing-case. Tho nails seem to run
through tho corners, tho onds clinched
in tho wood. Tho magician's assistant
is put into a bag. Its end is tied up
and sealed. The box is tied round and
round with rope, as well asloekod. Tho
bagged-up man is laid on tho ticd-up
box, and a screen is drawn in front for
a short time. When the screen is drawn
back, the empty bag is seen with un
broken seal lying on the box, which,
when its cords are untied and tho lock
Is opened, is found to contain the man.
Tho only difficulty is tho bag part.
There must be two bags, ono within an
other. The junction of their mouths is
concealed by tlio magician, who, with
great show of zeal, ties tho mouths
with his handkerchief at that portion,
aud then ipvites tho committee to tie
and seal tho protruding ends of a bag
which is really alongside of his assist
ant inside another oag, confined sim
ply by tho handkerchief. Tho nails of
tlio box are shams at ono end, being
simply heads aud points which do not
meet. Tlio end swings in Kko a trap
door when properly manipulated. Tho
assistant lays the sealed-up bag on top
of the box, creeps in tho end, easily
pushing past tho rope, and then re
turns the end to its place. Thus the
lid of the box on whick tho committee
expended their exertions remains undis
turbed. " Spiritual tricks," tho professor said,
"are taking well this season. Thoy
are worked by means of mechanical pad
locks, and require very little skill."
Tho reporter was shown some of these
padlocks. They seem to bo justliko or
dinary padlocks in make, but in soirio a
touch on a particular rivet throws them
open, and others have clockwork in
such a manner that they open of their
own accord in a fixed time. Bound by
suoh padlocks, it is an oasy tiling for
any ono to show spirit hands or fapes
through tho holo of a cabinet as soon
iis its doors aro closed, and bo found
sitting in the samo position as securely
bound when tho doors are opened N.
1", $un.
Cashier Baldwin's Punishment.
The swiftness, promptness and right
eous severity of "Jersey justice" nas
again, buou attested by the sentence of
Air; Qsgar L. Baldwin, tho Newark bank
default or, to fifteen years1 imprisonment
in tho State Penitentiary. No one will
qucstiou the justio,o pj such a sentence,
but many will bo surmised that ho was
punished at all. It has not boon the'
regular habit of tho courts to punish
men high in station or possessing money
and iulluoucc, though it is this very
class of men whoso crimes and pecula
tions are moro disastrous to society than
tho operations of minor criminals.
Baldwin's crimo was ono of no ordi
nary character. Desoriucu in pinm
wordsv Ijo stole $2,000,000, and yet ho
gets no severer punishment than tlio
urglar pc highwayman who robs his
victim of a hundred dolhirs. If Ids pun
ishment ,had been motod out in strict
proportion to the enormity and immensi
ty of ids crime, to its iuexeusableness,
to his degree of intelligence, ho would
have been secluded from spohity for a
still longer period. By hU crime ho not
only broko a bank In which th commu
nity had unusual confidence, but ho
broko business Wises which had deal
ings with it, ho robbed working men and
"jiyomon, of liard-onniod sayings, and
drove one poor woman to suicide, whom
ho had plungell Miito helplessness and
want, it was a crime wnich involved
Thofjp robijgreaV, many rcgula?
mngicns traveling aboutjl anil, wjiilo
buHineiS IrViiot whntilt uscdfto'tW nuitr:
Wither Crimea, aridj.tho aggregate of his
fcjiminalttBproAdrwant and misery far
ahd wide. To caUitby no harder namo,"
In) haslbeenTgullty of tho same crimes as
thb man-who picks ariolficr's pocket on
(ho street or breaks into his house and
steals his property.
There was no excuse in Cashier Bald
win's caso that could bo pleaded for
mitigation of sentence. He was a man
of unusual intelligence, stood high in
society, exerted a wide influcnco, and
commanded tho; confidence of thoso who
had IntruaUkll dni vith ktheir money.
Ho knew;1 thd extent of i his crime, and
ho knew tho catastropho .that -,imi9t
onsuo as its legitimate 'consequence.
Ho was not driven' to its commission by
any stress of circumstances, by fear of
Wftntdr by" hecessity' for money for any
purpose. Ho was amply paid for his
services, and lived in caso and luxury.
Under such circumstances as thoso he
deliberately committed tho crime, and
spread misery all about him. Tlio only
apology wlilc'h he would probably ofier,
if it were an apology', would bo that
others had done tho samo thing under
similar circumstances, and had not been
punished.
Tho consolatory feature about this
punishment is that it may set a prece
dent and help to do away with that
sentimentality in tho community which
always grows morbid and maudlin when
it is tho mirror in which tho crimes of
people high in station aro considered.
If tho sentence is carried out to its com
pletion, and if no pardon intervenes to
prevent its full execution, it may servo
as a warning to other mon holding
financial trusts in their hands not to
yield to tl;o temptation of theft. Chica
go Tribune.
Fashions in Perfumery. .
Ituskin has said of color that its true
beauty lies n, tho moderate , uso of it.
Tho same may bo said of perfume, espe
cially as applied to personal use. . The
unmitigated burst of some particular
scent with which our senses aro assailed
whon a vulgar fop or his equally vulgar
equivalent of tho weaker sex draws
forth and flourishes a handkerchief, is
an offense, and not to our noses only. It
is an infringement of thoso rules of po
liteness thatroquiro of civilized beings
that they shall do nothing to revolt tho
senses of their neighbor, It is, how
ever, an offense of ignorance. Tho
owner of the handkerchief, revelling in
tho pronounced qualities of his patchouli,
his cau do.cologne or other terrible com
pound, is of the opinion that saturating
the ntmosphoro with it is an amiable
action, and ono that not only gratifies
his own tastes but also those of his com
panions. Who knows? His grosser
sense may bo unable oven to perceive
tho suggestion of delicate odor that per
vades the garments of the woman of re
finement. Not for her the perfume a la
mode! Alphonso Karr says of a woman
who changes her toilet scents according
to fashion, that sho is a femme par
fummce, and of heif who remains faith
ful to one special perfume, that sho is a
femme adoriferatUe, liko tlio roso, tho
lilac or tho carnation. The distinction
is a nice ono, and infers a very decided
difl'cronco.
Perhaps tho most perfect odor yet dis
covered, in the sense of delicate, insinu
ating fragrance, as opposed to tlio over
f lowering, is produced from jwt-pourri,
oved of our grandmothers, but all too
raroly seen or heard of nowadays. Of
it the old-fashioned china punch bowls
could tell a talo. Diverted from thoir
original uso of holding the strong yet
mellow "brew" of tho "grog" that is
now displaced by claret, these bowls
loft tho diningroom and found thoir way
to tho drawing room. Every summer
thoy received in their capacious em
brace handfuls of dried and spiced roso
loaves; every autumn a fresh install
ment of the blue gray ears of lavender;
every winter additions of dried and
powdered cinnamon and olove; every
spring tho hay suggesting leaves of tho
woodruflb, with those of tho lemon
thymo and the sweet-smelling blossom
loss verbena. As tho bowls became full
thoir contents were drafted off" into
small cilken sachets, which lay cosily
tucked away among the laces, lawns and
linens of which tho chests and shelves of
old held such goodly store. Not only
articles of dross, but house and table
linen wero thus impregnated witli their
delicious, compound perfume. This is
attalnablo by everybody who cares to
devoid to its manufacture tho very
flight trouble necessary; and scattered
in,glovo-box, handkerchief sachet, lace
drawer and throughout tlio wardrobe,
its results will soon be" apparent in a re
fined delicacy of spice-like odor that
suggests itself to tho senses, and is nev
er impertinent or obtrusive, though al
ways present.
Among tho most successful of thoso
manufactured perfumes borrowed from
nature aro tho white rose, mignonette,
stophanotis and now-mown hay. Thoy
are, howover, very evanescent. Thoso
who lovo violets find it difllcult to obtain
a perfume tha,b (loos moro "than suggest
their favorite flower for a few fleeting
moments. To these it may bo useful to
mention that sllk'bngs of tlio best violet
powder, if placed among dresses, hand
kerchiefs and laces, aro much moro
effectual' and' more pleasing than any
liquid preparation from tho flowers, es
pecially when tho fragrance is called
forth by heat. It nover becomes exces
sive, but the contents of tho bags must
bo frequently renewed. Bunches of vio
lets, if laid away when fresh in the pock
ets or sleeves of dresses, impart a deli
clous odor of tho flower. Tho blossoms
must bo qulto dry, and should bo re
moved when thoy become scentless. It
is said that Josephlno's boudoir at Mal
maison Is impregnated to this day with
tho odor of 'violets, owing to tlio quanti
ties of that flower with whioh the room
was kept constantly supplied. London
Truth.
.VtEATHERV-OR hot.
' i T--cj y
t We adralro tho philosophy of tho unfortunnto
nanjnrho, whon everything hart been awopl
,awfty,naldj" Well, there'll bovrcathcr and tuxes
left, at any rate" Alas I weather la tho " yellow
dog" of all .tonbjccti; kcvcryono thinks It his
special right (o try' to, bctlcr tho weather, una
hurls his anathemas ncalnst " Old Probabilities,"
and all who endeavor to nwlst him In regulating
tho weather. Tho following communication Is
from 1'rof. Tico, of St. Louis, Mo,, tho renowned
meteorologist and weather prophet of tho Wert.
It doc not discuss tho woathcr but nomcthlng
surely of mora importance to thoso who RtifTor
wlt)ittmt painful mnlfldy holpcaks of: "Tho
day after concluding my lectures at Ilurllngton,
Iowa, on tho 21st of December Inst, I was seized
with a sudden attack of neuralgia In the chest,
giving mo excruciating pain and nlmostprevcnt
ing breathing. My pulse, usually 80, fell to 25 j
lntcnao nausea of tho stomuch succeeded, and n
cold, clammy sweat covon'd my entire body.
Tho attending physician could do nothing to re
lievo mo. After suffering for three hours. I
thought asT had been uslngST. Jacods Oil with
food effect for rhcumatlo pains I would try It.
Batumtcd a piece of tlaniicl, largo enough to
cover my chest, with tho Oil, and applied it. Tho
relief was almost instantaneous. In ono hour I
was entirely freo from pain, and would have
taken the train to fill an appointment that night
l;t a neighboring town had my friends not dis
suaded mo. Ah It was, I took the night trnln for my
home, in St. Louis, and havo not been troubled
sluec.
i ' i ii i S
A Good Family Remedy !
-STRICTLY PURE.-
Harmless to the Most Delicate !
nyltsfnlthfHlue'ONStJM;iTIOXIIAHnKEN
CUJCKD when other Remedies and i'hyalct&ni
iisre fnllcil to rftect a cure,
Jkrf.mtaii TVmriiiT, of Marlon Comity. W. Vn.,
writej ui that Ills wife hml 1'vi.mon'auv Consumption
and wiis-pronoiinerj ixotmAiiLK ujr their pliyilrttn,
whenthc ue of Allcn'i I.nniclUlmm kktirkly otmKfl
nun. Hr write that Mu and his nelKhbori think It tho
best mrdlclne In Ihu world.
Wm. C'Diooks, Meirliant ofl Howling Gre:n, Vs..
wrltri. AprlUth, 8H, ilmtlto want tti to kniwthat
thtiMiNu Bai.iam MAftCrtriKn ins MoTNr.n or Cote
sUMrrio.N. nftcrthi! nhyntrMn hml kIvcii hrrup na In
rurahle. HeM otlirr knowing her cmeluvo taken
the lllam and Iwen cured t li think all o afflicted
should KlvettH trial.
Dn. MxitKMTii. PriitNt. of Cincinnati, wan thought
to i c intlu'last STAumor CoNBUMi-ri .v and was In
ducrdhy hlafrlmd to try Allen' l.unsr Ulaui after
the formula wan thown htm. We havo his Inter that
It at onee cnirvd Ida cough and that ho wai able to re
sume h!a practice. ,
,J. A. Graham ACo.. Wholealrnrul.Zane
lllr, Ohio, write us of the cure of Muthlia Freeman.
a well-known etllren. who had been afflicted with
Brimqiimslntta worat form for twelre yearn Ths
I.unu Itslsum cured him, aa It has many othVra, of
Bronchitis.
jfi.S AIiSO
Consumption,
Coughs, Colds,
ASTHMA, CROUP,
All Diseases or tho TIIKOAT, MINGS aud
1'UI.MONAUY OlldAXS.
C. 8. Martix, Drugglat at OaVly. Ky.. wrltet thai
the ladles think tin ru l no remedy equal to I.uag Bal
sam for Croup and Wliooiluit Cough.
Mothers will find It a safe and sure remedy to eke thetl
children when afflicted with Croup.
It Is harmless to tho most dolic&te child !
It contains no Opium In any form I
Recommended by Physlclitns, Minister, unit
rtur.r. In fart ny everybody who has Riven It a
Bood trial. It. Never Falls to Ilrlns Hellcf.
Call for Allen's Lung Itjlsiun. and shun the use of
all remedies without merlrand an established reputa
tion. Aa au Kxpeetoruiit It hits uo Kquni I
sor.u iiy am. :mi:i)icinh dkalkus.
I
For the Cure of Coughs, Colds, nosrseness, Aathma,
llronehltU, Croup, Inlluenra, wliouptnEUouKti.IncIri
tent Coniumptlon. &c. frlcu only fe& cents a bottlo.
CENTS
HsM I I 'or tl,c tlirc" flrflt numbers of
tM n thonew volume of DeuoitEsT'p
U Monthly. Ten largo pictures
-Steel engraving ami Oil. The
best Portrait of thu lato Presi
dent James A. Garfield. Two pieces of music
Three cut dross pattern. Two hundred lllustra
tlons. Two hundred and forty paces of cholco
literature, cbe r"J,x lltf, or i pounds of elegant
printing, on tinted paper, post free, for fifty cents
to postage rtamiw. JENNINGS DKMOIIEST,
Publisher, 17 East tu Btrcet, New York.
DIPHTHERIA!
JOUNHOVH ANOUTNK I.IXIMENT will
positively prevent this terrible disrate, and will posi
tively cure nine rases nut of ten. Iuformatloiithat will
save many llres. sent free by null. Don't delay a mo
ment. I'rerentlon Is better than cure. I. b. JOHNSON
A CO.. BOSTON. MASH., formerly Banoor, Mb.
Taiisoks' ITruativk I'ills make new rich blood.
FRAZER
AXLE GREASE.
llratln tlio World. Get Ihn genulncu Kv
try iiucUuhb has our Trade. murk mid Is
uui ked tVuzer's. HU1.1I JCVtUI W'UEKK.
n
I
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