Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Aug 1876, p. 7

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,Htm--, - MURDER WILL OUT. . SH* Mystery of Oen. Hiodman's Death [From the New York World.1 Murder will out. To that we have the testimony of the records, and the axiom has been formulated by the great­ est of American orators. Not only does the body of the victim, voiceless except through gaping wounds, ciy out for Christian sepulture from the depths of swamp or lonely copse where the mur­ derer has vainly hoped to hide the wit­ ness to his crime, but the wretch him­ self, hurrying from bloody act to blood­ ier and still more cruel deeds, reaches such a height of reckless daring that the blindest justice cannot help but close about him. Then the gallows comes, and then, with no hope for the future and a late repentance for the past, he tells the story of his crimes. Mys­ teries of blood at last are understood ; mayhap the memory of an innocent mail is cleared of stain, and one death is made to pay the penalty of many. In the newspaper of every day these coin­ cidences of fate are told. We have two of them before us as we write. With a prescience of the coming massacre be­ fore him, perhaps, a soldier of Custer's army wrote out the narrative of a mur­ der committed long years before, which, from the obscurity of the victim or the disorder of the tames, had never been traced to its author. Before the letter was read in the Southern town where the crime had almost passed from recol- . lection, the murderer lay in that horri­ ble ravine, retribution coming from sav­ age hands, but the criminal dying in brave company, and as one of a noble band whose names will be bright in history. But of those who went down to slaughter that fatal June day, we may suppose that to ope death was a welcome relief from the barbs of conscience. His crime drove him from the comforts of a home through fourteen years of wandering, and finally to a terrible death on the far-off plains. His uneasy spirit forced him to a confession of the for­ gotten murder, and at last the molder- uig corpse in a Tennessee grave had its revenge in a mutilated body in the lands of the Fioux. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman was a Major General in the Confederate army. Alter the war he returned to his home, near Helena, Ark., and, a few years later, the community and the entire South were shocked to hear of his brutal assassination while surrounded " by his wife and children. Sitting in ma library one night, a gun was forced through the window, and the soldier who had escaped from a hundred bat­ tles fell dead from his chair, his body riddled with bullets. The murder wtus commonly ascribed to a private enmity, and a reputable citizen of Helena has since borne the load of a terrible suspi­ cion, which the confession of the real criminal has but now removed. The mails bring us the account of a gallows scene at Rome, in Georgia, wherein, by the statement of the condemned, the mystery of Hindman's death at last is solved. Haywood Grant, colored, con­ victed of arson and sentenced to be hanged, and with the noose about to be placed around his neck, called the Sheriff to him and confessed to the mur­ der of two steamboat hands on a Missis­ sippi river steamboat, ten years ago; then to the murder of an Irishman ill Memphis during the same year ; and still again to the murder of a policeman near to the spot where the third of his murders had been committed, and closed the dismal catalogue by detailing the manner in which he had shot to . death the ex-Confederate General in his Arkansas home. No cause was given for the crime, and a moment later the wretch was swung off into eternity. Not so soon, however, but that an in­ nocent man was relieved of a suspicion which was not so strongly supported by facts as to bring him to the felon's dock, but which, except that the law had dragged the real criminal to his fate, would have followed him to his , grave and have been left as an evil her­ itage to his children. Justice, though tardy, had asserted itself, and the crime of the murderer had found voice. The manes of the murdered Hind­ man may now rest in peace, for the law of "retribution lias been fulfilled on the scaffold of that Georgia town. : Does a Bird Die a Natural Death! It is the opinion of some naturalists that birds never die a natural death, but come to their end by some murderous accidental means; yet I have found spar­ rows and vireos in the fields and woods dead or dying, that bore no marks of violence; and I remember that once in my childhood a red-bird fell down in the yard exhausted and was brought in by the girl; its brighl scarlet image is indel­ ibly stamped upon my recollection. It is not known that birds have any distem- • pera like tha domestic fowls, but I saw a social sparrow one day quite disabled by some curious malady, that suggested ^ disease that sometimes attacks poultry; ' one eye was nearly put out by a scrofu­ lous-looking sore, and on the last joint or one wing there was a large tumorous of fungous growth that crippled the bird completely. On another occasion I picked up one 4 that appeared well but could not keep its center of gravity when in flight, and so fell to the ground. One reason why dead birds and ani­ mals are so rarely found is, that on the approach of death their instinct prompts them to creep away in some hole or un­ der some cover, where they would be least liable to fall a prey to their natural enemies. It is doubtful if any of the game birds, like the pigeon and grouse, ever die of old age, or the semi-game birds, like the bobolink, or the " century- living " crow; but in what other form pan death overtake the humming-bird, or even the swift and the barn-swallow ? Such are the true birds of the air ; they may be occasionally lost at sea during their migrations, but, so far as I know, they are not preyed upon by any other species.--John £urroughsrin Scribner for August Caught at Last. John Collins, a talented London pick­ pocket, took an active part in the Moody and Sankey meetings, and after the de­ parture of the evangelists became a pop­ ular singer and eshorter. His piety was not questioned by his fellow workers, and his friends among the thieves did not expose him. Thus he was enabled to pick pockets with great facility, often taking the watches and pocketbooks of men and women while praying at their sides, or while explaining to them the way of salvation. Continued success, perhaps, made him careless, for, while taking part at the exercises at the laying of a corner-stone for a church in U x- bridge, he was caught stealing a watch from a woman who was sharing a hymn book with hinf during the singing. He was arrested, and then a great number of robberies were traced to him. & CURIOSITY OF COOKERY. The Dinner Served to a Party of South Carolinians by Mr. Baker, the Eccentric Massachusetts Millionaire. It is not very surprising perhaps, in view of the desire which so many rich men manifest to .preserve their names from oblivion by founding new institu­ tions of learning, that Mr. Baker, an eccentric rich man of Massachusetts who has a similar ambition, should make a gift for a college of cookery. Hef did not stop to think how much more good his $50,000 and his farm of fifty acres would accomplish if bestowed on some 'prosperous educational institution al­ ready organized for its work. It was enough for him to know that his new " college" will bear his name. There will be some curiosity to know how the new institution will be organized. Of what specialty will its President be mas­ ter ? Will there be professors of soups, roasts, and deserts, and tutors of hash, fries, and stews! Will the newly-ar­ rived students be required to eat their« first dishes ? Mr. Baker, wljo has made this odd gift, is the gentleman who last year in­ vited the Southern visitors to the Bunker Hill Centennial celebration to assist at the dedication of his " centennial pig­ pen," and who, during the present week, has been entertaining a large company of Southerners at his Massachusetts farm. His notion of a good dinner may be in­ ferred from the following bill of fare of a dinner wliioh he gave to his guests on Thursday : L'HOMME OK ANATOMICAL MENU. Soup--Potage a la Esau, with Anatomical Drops, Fish--Boiled Salmon, with Muscles, Sounds, and Soles (tbe brains of men), dressed with Aga»8iz' comments. Meats--Pork, Beef Tongues, Dressed Goose, etc., representing the poreineograph, forceful, and garrulous man. Entrees--F. F. V. Bivalves, Clinch Rifle Greens, Bay State Fish Balls, Palmetto Cabbagewnd Fayetteville Bull's Eyes, with Army and Navy Sauce. Vegetables--Dead Beats with Latin Tongue, the Art I Choke, Corned Dodgers, Small Fly Potatoes, and let- ua have peas-- but the Split Peas. Salads--Lobster and frog-leg, indicating the clan­ nish and spasmodic man. Moslem salad, with the great Saladin. Relishes--Chaw-Chaw, Lamb's Tongues and Pig's Feet. Desert--Saharah (for the sandwich is there where Ham was bred), M. T. Representative. Cocoanuts, Washington Pie, Centennial Oum Drops, Darwinian Surprises, Cream Ices, Sherbet, etc. Of Brandy flip and night-cap nip, Drink your share, but Punch with care* Each guest received a little China baby in his plate of soup, and a larger speci­ men of a doll baby was placed in each goblet, carefully wrapped in a Japanese paper napkin. The host's eccentricity was further shown by his announcement at the close of the feast that he proposed to introduce to the guests one of Dar­ win's friends. Drawing a slide from a wire cage which, covered with flowers, stood near him a large monkey sprang out. If Mr. Baker's large gift is a genuine one, and we have no doubt that it is, it is to be hoped that his amusing eccentricity will not cause it to be wholly wasted.-- New York Evening Post. A Scene in the French Assembly. The Versailles correspondent of the London Times describes an unparalleled row in the National Assembly in conse­ quence of a Jesuit professor having di­ vulged a competition problem. Leon Gambetta asked for an investigation by members of the two chambers, and said he was confident the Jesuit had knowl­ edge beforehand of the geometrical pfoblem. A Bonapartist Deputy inter­ rupted the Radical leader by exclaiming against the Republic. "Last year," continued Gambetta, "a similar thing happened and was passed over in silence." "It was before the Republic," cried a Bonapartist. "No," retorted Gambetta; "the Republic was, it is true, then not governed by Republicans, but France was long quit of Imperial putre­ faction." A terrible tumult arose on the Bonapartist benches, whence an irate Deputy shouted, "If it be said that the Empire was rottenness, it is al­ lowable to reply that the Republic is a dunghill." For over a quarter of an hour chaos reigned in the Assembly. Radicals and Imperialists left their seats and advanced with threatening ges­ tures towards each other, uttering invec­ tives, vociferating, bawling, and making the hall resound with their clamor. It was a sickening spectacle, and,as a Bona­ partist Deputy observed, it is not only the Republic which loses caste by such incidents, but the whole chamber. p, Tire Flight of Birds. A year ago last April, the pigeons flew for two or three days up and down the Hudson. In" long bowing lines, or else in dense masses, they moved across the sky. It was not the whole army, but I should think at least one corps of it; I had not seen such a flight of pigeofis since my boyhood. I went up to the top of the house, the better to behold the winged procession. The day seemed memorable and poetic in which such- sights occurred. While I was looking at the pigeons, a flock of wild geese went by, harrowing the sky northward. The geese strike a deeper chord than the pigeons. Level and straight they go as fate to its mark. I cannot tell what emotions these migrat­ ing birds awaken in me--the geese es­ pecially. One seldom sees more than a flock or two in a season, and what a spring token it is! The great bodies are in motion. It is like the passage of a victorious army. No longer inch by inch does spring come, but these geese advance the standard across zones at one pulL How my desire goes with them, how something in me, wild and migratory, plumes itself and foDows fast!--John Burroughs, in Scribners. The Slayer of Jim Fisk. Stokes, who has always had a pretty easy time at Sing Sing, could hardly be­ lieve it when he was told he must go to the Auburn prison, with its strict disci­ pline, especially as his term of imprison­ ment will expire in a couple of months. He was shackled to a notorious jail-bird, known in tho prison as "Jimmy, the Kid," and placed^ic the gang of fifty who were drafted. " A Prison thatHas Kept the Gallowp "busy. The last report of the Warden and Directors of the Connecticut State Prison shows 252 convicts in that institution, of whom 121 were received within the past year. The number last year was 236. Sixty-eight are of foreign birth. A reduction in the price of labor of the prisoners, who are engaged in cigar, shoe, wirework, and ride making, from Bixty to forty cents a day has so far de­ creased the income of the prison as to leave a deficit of $2,874. The more humane system of discipline introduced by Warden Hughes is maintained with satisfactory results. A striking com- iuculary upon the cruel discipline for­ merly in vogue there is the fact that in thirty years there has been only one hanging in Connecticut for crime com­ mitted outside of the prison, but that in the same period there have been four executions for crime perpetrated within it. ! A TOUNG French Canadian has accom­ plished the feat of walking on the water. He has a pair of very large canoe shaped shoes, which bear him up and enable him to keep his balance. He recently walked about a mile on the Ottawa river. As our request Cragm & Co., of Ph£tar delphia, Pa,, have promised to mnd any of our readers gratis (on receipt of fifteen oents to pay postage) a sample of Dob­ bins' Electric Soap to try. Send at onoe. Indisputable Evidence. ST. ELMO, 111., July 8, 1874. R. V. PIERCE, M. D., Buffalo, N. Y I wish to add my testimony to tlw wonderful curative properties bf your Alt. Ext., or Golden Medical Discovery. I have taken great interest in this medicine since I first used it. I wae badly afflicted with dyspepsia, liver deranged and an almost perfect prostration of the nervous sys­ tem. So rapid and complete did the Discovery effect a perfect cure that it seemed more liko magic and a perfect wonder to myself, and uince that time we have never been without a bottle of the Discovery and Purgative Pellets in the house. They are a solid, sound family physician in the house and ready at all times to flv to the relief of sickness--without charge. We have never had a doctor in the house since we first began the use of your Pellets and Dis­ covery. I have recommended the use of these medicines in seveial severe and complicated cases arising from, aa I thought, an impure state of the blood, and in no one case have they failed to more than accomplish all they are claimed to do. I will only lueution one as re­ markable (though I could give you dozens). Henry Koster, furniture dealer, of this place, who was one of the most pitiful objects ever eeen, his face swollen out of shape, scales and eruptions without end, extending to his body, which was completely covered with blotches and scales. Nothing that he took seemed to affect it a particle. I finally induced him to try a few bottles of the Golden Medical Discov­ ery, with daily use of the Pellets, assuring him it would surely cure him. He commeuced its use some six weeks since, taking two Pellets each night for a week, then one each night, and the Discovery as directed. The result is, to­ day his skin is perfeotly smooth, and the scaly eruptions are gone. He has taken some seven •or eight bottles in all, and wnsiders himself cured. This case had baffled tbe skill of our best physicians. Messrs. Dnnsford & Co., druggists, of this pli.ee, are selliDg largely of your medicines, and the demand steadily in­ creases, and they give perfect satisfaction in ever}' case, lieapectfully, \Y. H. Catvrusr, Agt. Am. Exp. Co. Hurst Hotel, St: Louis. European plan. Booms, $1 per day. Meals at all hours. Col. L. D. Watson, chief olerk. WTLHOFT'S TONIC !--UNFAILING AND INFALLIBLE!--This great Chill Tonic cures chills without the intervention of doctors . and, their bills. No consulting visito--no prescrip­ tions to be filled--no huge bills, entailing pecu­ niary embarrassments, added to loss of health. It is*the friend of the poor man, bccause it en­ ables him to earn a living, and of tbe rich, because it prepares him to enjoy his wealth. This great boon to mankind is cheap, safe and prompt. G. R. FINLAY & Cp., Proprie­ tors. New Orleans. FOB SALE BY ALL DBTTOOISTS. THE relaxing power of Johnsons Anodyne Liniment is truly wonderful. Cases are already numerous where bent and stiffened limbs have been limbered and straightened by it. When used for this purpose,' the part should be washed and nibbed thoroughly. Apply the liniment cold, and rub it in with the hand. MESSRS. E. MERRIER & Co., one of the largest producers in champagne, exhibiting at the Centennial Exposition their wine and complete apparatus for bottling it. have im­ mense cellars, 165 feet deep, entered by rail­ ways, for haudling their large vintage, amount­ ing yearly to 1,500,000 bottles. Mr. Alphonzo Faber. 3502 Race street, Philadelphia, their rep­ resentative. has come over especially to estab­ lish agencies for the sale of their champagne. CHAIPED hands, face, pimples, ring­ worm, salt rheum, and other cutaneous affeo- tioHS enred, and rough skin made soft and smooth, by using Juniper Tar Soap. Be care­ ful to get only that made by Caswell, Hazard A Co., New York, as there are many imitations made with common tar, all of which are worth­ less. A CROWD of "Horse Men," and others, daily throng the stores in country and town for Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders. They understand that horses cannot be kept in good condition without them, and with them can be on a much leas quantity of grain. JOSEPH LEWTEB, of Milan, Tenn., wrote Feb. 22, 1876: "I have sold Shallen- berger's Ague Pills, for twelve years, and have never heard of a case they have not oured." Have you chills ? Shallenberger's Pills will cure YOU for $ 1. Try them. ASK your druggist for Cameron's Blackberry Brandy for all disorders of the bowels. Address Home Bitters Co., St. Louis. $25 TO $50 PER DAT Can Actually be Hade with the SWell Auger i i t WE MEAN IT] Aad fere preparmfl, to demonstrate MM OUR AUGERS art operated entirely br HOUSK-POWEH. AMI will bore at the rate of 80 FEET PER HOUR. They bore from 3 TO 6 FEET in DIAMETER, And ANY DEPTH REQUIRED. They will bore la All kinds of Earth, Snft Sand and LtaM* •tone, Kit umiiioti* Stone Coal* v Slate Hint llaiilpan. And we MAKE Tli3i best OF WELLS in QCIOK» SAND. * GOOD ACTIVE AGENTS Wanted In every State and County in the United States. Send for our Illustrated Catalogue, terms, prices, to., pr*rto| our advertisements bun a fide. Addreu GREAT WESTERN WELL ADGER CO, BLOOMFtELO, DAVIS CO., IOWA. ni what paper you saw this advertisement. NO AGENCY IN THE WORLD OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY can oompare with Collins' V'nltnic Plaster for •very ailment ami disease for which A plaster may be worn. They never weaken or delude the pour sufferer. Tliey carry comfort »nd happiness into every afflicted household- Try them. LAME AM "PAINFUL BACK. I a DAYS IN HOSPITAL. MKSSRS. WEEKS & POTTER--Gentlemen: I have just, recovered from a lame and P't in !ul back through the uso of your COLI.INS' VOT.TAIC PLASTKKB. My back was so lumo and paintul that 1 could not stoop. walk or do duty of any kind, and wag placed in the hospital for l'J days without cure. I then asked permission of the Surgeon to try tho COM.INS' VOLTAIC PLAKTKRS, and in II few hours after putting one on was entirely relieved of pain and able to bend my back : am now perfectly well. 1 consider them simply wonderful. Respectfully yours. ALEXANDER JAMESON. Co. I, First Artillery, Fort Warn*. Boston, May 3,1876. "ARE DOL\G WOXDERS." MEBSR3. WEEKS & POTTER---Gentlemen: COLLINS' VOLTAIC PI_AHTEKS ate doing wonders. They work like magic, and those you sent last are all sold and more wanted. Please »»>nd nie three dozen as soon as you get this. Money inclosed herewith. I want them to-morrow Bight if possible. In haste, vonrs, „ „ T. 1'. PALMER, P. M. No. Fayette, Me., May 1,1876. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Sent by mail on receipt of as cent* for ope, $1.£5 for *1*. or $<• V) for tw elve,r«refuDy wrapped aiul warranted, by \VKllKS «St POTTKIt, Proprietors, lioston, Muss. B ^ " IG PAY to sell our RUBBER PRINTING STAMM. Terms free. TAYLOR A CO.. Cleveland, O. 25 20 Extra Fine MIXED CARDS, with name, lO oents, postpaid. L. JONES A Oo., Nassau. H.Y. per cent, paid to any one. Samples for 10c., post­ paid. Jesse Brockway, Nassau, Renns. Co., N. Y. tif\ a Week Salary guaranteed to male and female. Send fcl# stamp for circulars. E. M. Bodine, Indianap'lis, lnd. J££N Jil's. SPPNIFIFL Best la the World. Tri*1 tm, ASTHMAMLVIIIV, T. poi'UAM A CO., l#S.9thSt., Phils.,Pa. $5 to $20 ?,1" at home. Samples worth $1 sent STINSON <FC CO., Portland, Me. 1776 1876 "A Century of GOSPEL WORK." New Subscription Book. Ageflts Wanted. Ad­ dress N. D. THOMPSON £ CO., Chicago, 111. $121 K. A MONTH and traveling expenses paid „ __ _ for S A l,l'">E!V. No peddlers wanted, iftdress MONITOR MANUF'O CO.. Cincinnati, Ohio. VEGETINE meets with wonderful suc­ cess in the cure of cancer and cancerous humors. Schenck's Sea Wee* Tonic.-In the atmo* phere experienoed here during the summer months, tha lethargy produced by the heat takes away the desire for wholesome food, and frequent perspirations reduce bodily energy, particularly thoee suffering from the effects of debilitating diseases. Inrorder to keep a Mt- ural. healinful activity of the system, we must resort to artificial means. For this purpose Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic is very effectual. A few dosee will create an tPP®" tit* and give fresh vigor to the enervated bodyi For dyspepsia, it to Invaluable. Many eminent physicians have doubted whether dyspepsia can be permanently cured by the drugs which are generally employed for that purpose. The Sea Weed Tonic In its nature k totally different from such drugs. It contains no corro­ sive minerals or acids; in fact, it assists the re®'®_ * operations of nature, and supplies her deficiencies. The tonic in its nature so much resembles the gastric juioe that it Is almost identical with that fluid. The gastric juice is the natural solvent which, in a healthy condition of the body, causes the food to be digested; and when this juice is not excreted in sufficient quantities, indi­ gestion, with all its distressing symptoms, follows. The Sea Weed Tonio performs the duty of the gastric juice when the latter is deficient. Schenck's Sea Weed Tonic IK sold bv all Drnsrslste, (11] it. day at home. Agents wnnt«J. Outfit and 9l<i free. Address TRUE A CO., Augusta. Maine. gf VEKY desirable If KW ARTICLES for Amta. U SSaafaoVd by G. J. Oapawall & Oo.. Cheshire. Oona. Profitable. Pleasant work. hundreds now M- flored, hundreds more wanted. M N Lovell. Iris, r*. ILL. CATALOGU* OF ARTICLKS FOR iCCklTfi Free. BOSTON NOVELTY CO., Mass. HQCN I O FOKTl.'NK can be made without cost or risk. _ Combination forming. Particulars free. Address B. BURGES, Manager, Rawlins Olty, Wyoming. $444 I'erinontli, >fents Wtnted. JIUKIIH'M honor* able, lucrative, permanent. Particulars AddretM, A* O. Kettleton A Co,, Chicago, IIL g OutfitsPJ"OOTPRI!VTS of the AGES, Out 2? f Government and ^History. GooDSPEED'r Book, Biblo and Map House, CHICAGO. S3 WATCHES. A Great Sensation. SampU Watch and Ouyit free 10 Ag?nt*. Better than Gold. Address A. GOULTKR A CO.. Ohloago. S050 $77 AK.'i'itli.- A&iiiitswfcctsd. 2S best sell­ ing articles in the world. One sasuple free. Address JAY BRONSOIV, Detroit, Mich PKR WEEK GUARANTEED to Agents. Male and Female, in their own locality. Terms and OUTFIT FREE. Addrcsl P. O. VICKERY A CO., Augusta, Maine. $250 A MONTH--Agsnuwanted everywhere Business honorable and first elass. Par tloulars sent free. Address WOBTH S. (JO.. St. Louis. Mo OPIUM OPIUM nials Describe case. and Morphine habit absolutely and speedily cured. Painless ; no publicity. Send stamp for particulars. Dr. Carl­ ton, 187 Wushington St., Chicago, IIL HABIT CURED AT HOME. No publicity. Tim« short- Terms moderate. 1,(KK) textimo. DN. F. E. MABRH, Quincy, Mich. "TI7T7T T A TTf* TID I The best in the W jLiJuLi iiUU-JLlIt I world Send for our Auger Book. U. i?. Auger Co., St. Louis,Mo. LE A B f f T E L E l i i A P H % # "SUE BUST OFFER ever made young UV MEN and LADIES. Address, with stamp, W SUJCRMAtt TEL. CO., ©BERLIN,6. • MIND READING, PSYCHOMANCY. FASCINATION. Soul Charming, Mesmerism and Lovers' Guide, •howini and pw Stock-Growers Colony of New Mexico. Colonists wanted for second parly, to start Sept. 18th. First party <m the prounds delifhU'd with country. For Pamphlets,address I.'IO ., Chicago. PENNSYLVANIA MILITARY ACADE­MY. ( hrstcr, Pcnn., Reopens Septomber 13. Tiiornuifli Instruction in Civil and Mining Engineering, the Classics, and Knplish Branches. For Circulars, apply to COL. TUI XL. HYATT, Pres. P. M. A. P E N S I O N S . --Officers, soldiers and saii-ors. however slightly disa­ bled by wounds, rupture, injuries or disease in the trsL ss C. H. P< _ service, should apply before it is too late. The loaaofa finger or a toe entitles one to a p ARNOLD, U. 8. Agent, Cincinnati, Ohi ension. lio. REVOLVERS I! $3.00 • Whf feillW » m 8,nt wi.h luo f'5 |t J. FULL Nk-kri Fiart. Satiefactioa gusrantc^tL Illustrate! Catalogue FR«. Addreae WESTERN GUN WORKS, CHICAGO, IIL Ml! 1 day sure. Illustrated catslogueofour tine Chroinos, Crnyoiie, aod beautiful Picture Curds of noted men,women, and Presidents of >Visitinp, Reward, Motto, Comic, and Trans­ parent Card*. 186 samples, worth sent postpaid forSftcents. J. H. BUI FORD'S SONS. BOSTON". MASS. Established 1830. --Importer*' In America-- , continually in- cr?a6it!K-- Agenti wanted everywhere--beet inducements --don't waste time- send for circular to ROB'T WKLLS, $3 Vesey St., N. Tl P. O. Box 1487. rilTTl A C! --Tha choicest in tha world--! J. JZi/iOe pricea--Largest Company in staple article--pfaaae! ererybody--Trad• cont JL m £*> I Yonr name printed on A llVvBlc I T« 50 Transparent Cards, containing a scene when held to the light (SB designs), sent postpaid for 25 cents; 5 packs, 6 names, $1. No other card-printer has the same. Agent* wanted; out­ fit 10 ate. OABD-FKINXEB, Lock-Bos L), Ashland, Mam ABOOKfor the MILLION. MEDICAL ADVICE &SSS£SgS^S t̂ Gsterrli, Kupture, Opium littbii* S£NT a RKL OB at stam^ Uutti^Biipensary Ko. UN. 8th ft, St. Louis, Ma HALF A DOLLAR Will Pay forth* CHICAGO LEDGER For the Next Half Year. The I.KTKIER la a lame 8-page, ^column, independent Newspaper, which no intelligent family should be with­ out. The best Story Paperprinted. Try it. Addreu, TIIK LEDC ER. Chicago, 111. Hie Enemy of lliseii#, the Foe of Pain to Man and Beast, * Is tha Grand Old MUSTANG* L I N I M E N T , WHICH HAS STOOD TIIK TEST 0F40 TEARS. TIIEKK IS NO MiltE ITWILL 5i si A is s; LAr.:;rsr,ss IT will WOT cr HE, WO A€HK, RTO PAIIV, THAT AITUCTS THE IH'MAN BUllT. OB TIIK ROD7 OF A HORSE OR OTHEB W1MK8TIC ANIMAL, Til AT I>OE» WOT ¥IKI-l»TOITS KfAISIC TOI CII. A bottl* c<r»8tli««£ 'JMc.. Kit?* 01SI .Ott, Has ©ftem savad the Iff*-! cifii liuiiititi re®t©r«d t* IMa as»cl wmttim Imms as, valmRM® Diorae* "THE VIBRATOR" 1000 SOLD LAST SEASON WITHOUT ONE FAILURE OR REJECTION This la the famous Threshing macliino that has "swept the field " and created such a revolution in tha trade, by its MATCHLESS GKAIK-SAVINO AND (MO principles. • ' HALF A DOLLAR Will Pay for the CHICACO LEDGER For tli© Next Half Year; 11M LKDOKR is a larva&jp*c«, M-eohmm. MmaiMtaMI" Bwnpaper, which no intelBc«nt family should b* urttE The bast Story Paparprintod. Try it- AddMM, THE XXCDCMUK, Chicago, 111* *uii V'fff TH13 ENORMOUS WASTAQE of grain, so inevi/abfa trith other of Tlircshcre, can be SAVED by *M« Improved Machine, uifficimt, on every job, to more tha* pay all expeuses of threshing. FLAX, TIMOTHY, MILLET, HUNGARIAN and like seeds are threshed, poaarated, cleaned and saved as easily and perfectly as Wheat, Oate, Rye or Barley. AN EXTRA PRICE is usually paid for grain and Seeds cl eaned by this machine, for extra cloamitiMR. IN THE WET GRAIN of 187S, these were substan­ tially tho ONLY MACHINES that could run with profit or economy, doing fast, thorough and perfect work, when ofhas utterly failed. ALL GRAIN, TIME and HONEY wasting compUta* tlons, such as "Bodies* Aprons," "Raddles," "Beaten?," " Pickers," etc., are entirnl/f (Ufpeimed with ; less tha® ene-half the usual Gear*, Belts, Boxes, and Jounmis; easier managed; more durable; liglit running ; no cost* ly repairs; no dust; no " littering*" to clean up; not troubled by adverse winds, rain or storms. FAPMERS and GRAIN RAISERS who an jxufed tn the large naving made by it will not employ infe­ rior and wasteful machines, but will 4wM on this improved Thresher doing their work. FOUR SIZES made for <L 8, 10 and IS Horse Powers, ALso a specialty cf SrrAXATGHS, designed and made EXPEESSIY FOB STEAM POWER. TWO STYLES OF . HORSE POWERS, viz.: onr im­ proved "Triple Gear," and our "Spur Speed" (Wood- bury Style), both " Mounted " on/our wheels. IF INTERESTED in Threshing or Grain Raising^ apply to our nearest Deader, or write to us for Illustrfr tad Uireular (sent free), giving full particulars of Siaee Styles, Prices, Terms, etc. Ntcmi8< Shepard & Oo,, *\TTLE CREEK, MICH. The Wonders of Modern Chemistry"# Samprilliai aMIts Associates. Changes as Seen and Felt aa Tl»«y JDailf Occur after Using ta FewDoseiof • BB. RADWATO Sareaparillian Resolvent*. THE GSEAT BLO01> FtJSIFIEiL - 1. Good spirits, dlsappeaHbe* at weakness, laMieeil > nalanoboly; InoraaM and hardness of flesa ndvii cles, etc. a. Strength I food, no more gesttoia, calm and vigorous. 3. Disappearance of spots, blotches, pimples; the skte looks clear ar.d healthy, tho urine changed from'tstatt* bid and cloudy appearance to a c"/e»r short? or ambM color; water passe® fr»-ely trout the bladder through til* urethra without pair, or scalding; little or DO PwTiiaeaks. no pain or weakness. ~ 4. Marked diminution of quantity and frequency «f involuntary weakening dirci.».~ee (if afflicted that wayV with certainty of permanent i- - . Increased strength exhibited in the secretins; gUu. ad functional har­ mony restored to the several organs. _ _ 5. Yellow tinge on the white or iae eyes, the thy, saffron appearance of the skin changed to a clear, lively and healttiy color. <5. Those suffering from weak or ulcerated lung* er tubercles will realize great benefit in expectorating freely the tough phlegm or mucous from the lunps. aft cells, bronchi or windpipe, throat or head ; diminishing of the frequency of cough ; grnoral increase of strenstn throughout tho system; stoppage of night sweats ana pains and feeling of weakness aronnd the ankles. leflL shou|ders, etc. • cessation of cold and chills, sense of suffocation; hi»rii breathing and jiiiroxysmsof cough a® lying down or arising in the morning. All these distress, ing symptoms gradually and purely disappear. 1. As day after day the S.\RS.\PARILMA\ Is taken, new signs of returning health will appear: «s the blood improves in strength and purity, disease will dt> minish, and atl foreign and impure deposits. n»dea tumors, cancers, hard lumps, etc.,l>e resolved awayani the unsound made sound and healthy; ulcers, fever sores, syphilitic sores, chronic skin diseases gradually disappear. 8. I n cases where the system has been salivated, and Mercury, Quicksilver, Corrosive Sublimate, (the prinok pal constituent in the advertised Sarsaparillas, nssocisfc-. ed in some cases with H.yd. 01 Potassa) tiavo accumula^ ed and become deposited In the bones, joints, etfe, causing caries of the bones, rickets, spinal curvatura^ contortions, white swellings, varicose veins, etc., the 8ARSAPARII(UA\ will resolve sway these lie- posits and exterminate the virus of the disease from tlM lystera. 9. If those who are taking these medicines forthecu** of Chronic, Scrofulous or Syphilitic diseases, howavac elow may be tho cure '* feel bettor." and find their gea> eral health improving, their flesh and weight increMtng or even keeping its own, it is a sure sign that the cue m progressing. In these diseases the patient either gels better or worse--the virus of the disease is not inactive: if not arrested and driven from the blood, it will spread and continue to -undermine tl e constitution. As sooa as tho s I HSAPARILIIIAN makes the patient "feel better,"'every hour yon will grow better and in­ crease in health, strength and flesh. The great power of this remedy is In diseases thM threaten death--as in Consumption of the Lungs anft Tuberculous Phthisis, Scrofula, Syphiloid Diseases^ Wasting, Degeneration, and Ulceration of the Kidneys, Diabetes, Stoppage of Water (instantaneous relief at forded where catheters have to be used, thus doing awaS with the painfnl operation of using these instriisientai dissolving stone in the Wadd"". und in all cases of I# flammation of the Bladder and Kidneys, in ChronH ease; of Lencprrhea, and Uterine diseases. In tumors, nodce, hare', lumps and syphiloid ulcere; if dropsy and vener jal sore throat, ulcers, and in tubercle* of the lungs; in gout, dyspepsia, rheumatism, rickets; in mercurial deposits- it is in these terrible forms <of disease, where Mie human body has become a complete wreck, 1 nd where every hour of existence is tortura wherein This great remedy challenges the astonishment and admiration of the sick. It is in such cases, where all the pleasures of existence appear cut off from the unfort mate, and by its wonderful, almost supernatural agency, it restores tho hopeless to a new life and new existence where this great remedy stands alone in ifcB~ might, and power. 1 In the ordinary skin diseases that every one is more <V less troubled with, a few doees. will In most cases, and i few bottfcs in the more aggravated forms, work a pel» manent cure. Those afflicted with chronto diseases should pnrchai# a package containing one dozen bottles. Price S1W. per dozen, or !#.» per naif dozen bottles, or $1 per bop m Botttaf druggists. " YOUR own likeness ln-oll colors, to show our work, painted on oanvos, from a photograph or tin tape, free with the Home Journal.. $2.50 a year. Sample of our work and paper, terms to agents, Ac., 10 L~ L. T. LUTHJ£K, Mill Village, Erie county. Pa. RADWAY'S m- t'KNITS and a .'l-cent stamp for 50 White Bristol Visiting Cards. Piinted by a new process. No nicer ones ever eeen. Prices never before named. Largest variety ever shown. All other kinds correspondingly low. Circulars, H-cent stamp. Inducements never before offered to agents. Territory fast being taken. W. O. CANNON. Box «79, Boston, Mass. 10 ffOSSttUA ^.$40 TO $60A,yD the XQ8S WELL A UGRl DAY made opermtisg UGRB. Ror«s ft hole from 20 to 40 liicbes in di&me» t«r,100 feet a d-iv easy. Stad for Illustrated catalogue. Kleratet Ch6 dirt without removing tho shafting. O. MARTIN, Patentee & Proprietor, Bloomfield, Iowa. Bust's Sliding, Self-Einp'jrinir Well Auger. LATEST IMPROVEMENT. The filled .Auger tai^eu from the bottom of the well without lifting the shaft. Bores a 17 inch hole from 50 to 100 feet in one day. Can m~ko any size. Boulders and Quicksand ll.w.dtcd with ca^e. 'Complete Ri^fioo, Ter­ ritory selling rapidly. Send for Circular. O. RlTSTn Patentee, Macon, Mo. OTNTffllJL >||A HISTORY or THE n iho tmi.i Tho nutu LOSSINC * \roiiK, luur 1;; AUVII UNITED STATES to^^ihcf restJiittimT'r The only CfcNTfcKMAi.coHi'Hi t»y :m eminent author, or worihy to bo pub lifchcdin Ircfrtii Kiiglinh u.aid €^ertsii*n» Onelarqeand profusely III iistrut4'dv jot low-priced volume. Tit-ice tho contents ofanv other. Splendidly illustrated aceouut ofapm ach­ ing Grand Centennial Celebration. AGENTS WANTED! Fast growing interest everywhere in tho thrilling hi.-tcry ofr.-ur country: hcuoe. r<jr<5cha«< efor Ajteufa. Send once iw descnp- ttoa and ternu.toSCAMMKLL&CO.,Chicago,III. Korean's Wtll Angar bores 20 feet per hour, by one man and liorse, without liftingbhaftinp. Bores from 1 to i feet in width. The Auger is filledandraised by liorse and lowered by hand. Rights for sale. Circu­ lars free, A.W. Morgin, Glenn'a Bt'k Iudiauapolia. READY RELIEF WTLL AFFORD INSTANT EASflk; INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS, INFLAMMATION OF THE TU,AHT)TTR, INFLAMMATION OF TIIK HOWRLSr,, OONCKKTION OF THE LUNGS, SORE THROAT. DIFFICULT HRKM'HIMG, PALPITATION OF TIIK HEART. HYSTERICS. F RORP. DIPHTHBBIA*. CATVRUH, INFLUENZA, HEADACHE. TOOTH AC-HE. MUMPS, NEURALGIA. RHEUMATISM. GOLD CHILLS. AG UK CHILLS. The appllcadon of the READY RELIEF tottg part or parts where the pain or difficulty exists «• afford ease and comfort. Twenty drops in h.-ilf a tumb'er of water will, in a w , moments, cure CHAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOS ACH. HEARTBURN. SICK HEADACHE. DIAj RHEA. DYSENTERY, COLIC, WIND IK Tl BOWELS, and a!! INTERNAL PAINS. Travelers always earry & bottle of RAJ* I WAV'S KKIjIEI?* uith thuiu. A few drops in wat« will . cnt clckncss or pains from change of water. ' IT IS BETTER THAN FRENCH BRAtt&YOS BITTERS AS A STIMULANT. Price 50Cent*. Sold by Druggists. DR. RADWAY'S REGULATM PILLS How to bur him. How foaell him. How to train / I dm. How to tnll a trot tor. A NEW BOOK o: (reat Interest to Hurse win. Sent bj mail !b: •O canto. Addtess J. P. VINCKETF, lloz 58. OHicaao. lit, month*. GTIONS! Read the New York WEEKLY WITNESS. Largest Circulation in the Country. CAMPAIGN PAPER. SO CENTS, portage paid, for fbnr Send at once for free Sample Copy. U *la.u-<4 uu.l Ills |.ml„ius»i I V usii.« R, & f. f»»ic Itiirlr and tiquitl Extract 'f LU'rf. Pl.vsii'ians n ,".; nitinv cure* in Indigestion, mUimsmw.Coii-iti'.KUii.-,.. i-ii.-i. I,un«r, Liver, Bladder, Kidii'y and HI.*Kt •<. Ft-maU- Phvsi- cikDS »iu it uevi-Mails in FEMALE DISEASES •»» ' weaknesses, la a " (»od-send tu ferns!-.*." iioiuoo; a;h;e and Old School Physicians TVHirt: "It nn tr r.ii'j , thf I -ry irr.iicim for children and/'m*lea.4' " The nuly V 1,' • i Extract of Beef with Tonics and farhnrtic* we will nrrwerit.e." Vri.-e St I*r «»ttie. IICHAKflSM A TULLlCBf. CINCIMMATI. 0, DO YOUR OWN PRINTING? Perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet KOM, purge, rovulate, purify, cleanse and strengthen. RAI>> WAV'S PILLS, tor the cure of all disorders of the .Stomncli, LiVi-r, Bowels. Kidneys, Bladder, Nervoai Diseases. Headache, Oonstipation, <7ostiveness. Indise^ tion, Dy.tpcnsitt, Biliousness, Bilious i'evt r, Intlamma* tion of tin- Bowels, Piles and all Doratigements of tbe Internal Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Vegetable, containing no memory, minerals, or deleterious drugs. CtTOlwo'-o the following symptoms resulting from Disorders he Digestive Organs : Constipation. Inward Piles, Fullness of the Blood in the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea. Heartburn, Disgust of Food, FiilIuesB or Weight in the Stomacll, Sour Eru,-rations. Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Hia.i, Hurried and Dif1 licnlt Hi entiling. Fluttering at the Heart, Chokine or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lving Posture, llinr ness oi Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight. Fever ond Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration^ Yellowness of the Skin and Kves, Pain in the Sidj, C/h«sta, Limbs, and Sudden Flushes of Heat. Burning in tho Flesh. A few doses of RADWAY'S PILLS will free the system from all the above named disorder®. Price J4S Unla per Box. SOLD BV DRUUGISTS. Read "FALSE AND TRUE." 8end one letter-stamp to RADWAY & CO., Jfo. 35J tt'arn n Street, IVew York. Information worth thousands will be sent yon. A AGENTS WANTED FOR THE GREAT IENTENNIAL HISTORY It sells faster than any other book erer published. One Agent sold 61 copies in one day. Send for our utrm terms to Agents. NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO.. CHICAGO, III. wAfl yells« as a lemon" exoteaeea tl» ft* that jaundiCd has svi in. Tbe poor, iU-nsod Hw hm turned like the trodJen-upon worm" and asserted Mr right*. Use at onco , t Tarrant's Seltzer Aporieiit regularly, according to directions: get the system In prop­ er shape, and s<nm the bloom of yoiuh will return to the check and health b« restored. No nuniicme is better for ' 1 system than TAKKANT'S SM.T/KK 1 SOLD BY ALL DKUGUISTS. O. H. U. Ko. 30 UTHEN WRITINO TO ADVERTISERS, il.fi1!*** MrjroaaawtlM ndrattMaoJ J

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