Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Nov 1878, p. 6

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"*-/ "I ' ** -v, TTfw Wfx •**•'•• te„ Vsil <*« , ^ , , r ; _ ^ ~ , « . " ; - > * \ " r- ; - - . •* \y, ,,J S ' t * ' . ^ ̂ • %*?' • rxff* nt*jric*e*mr<7 irrjMr. ,r , ••J* •>- f.t "»• eattle on a thousand All to IheLord belong; - And to Hi* prtin who feeds theal 1!#e-il raise our harrest song. He clothes the forest* and the field* With verdure bright and (preen; And in the whitening harvests' yiell . Mfa goodness may be see* $Mjr Hie arowns the labors of our , Wl«*i P^nty and with peam; Mt by U» w»A of His etflhmand. ̂ Hakes all our goods increase., r J, * !" •He IDto oar garners to the full, 'tV I * Our store-house runneth o'er; gg$,g> i-M And for the blessings which He sen||l: ̂ ' ,y. • li " - -'>iM <i 1 llWI prmise ffltti mora andnxore. Ike early and the latter rain, W)uch brought us fruitful yields,) How easily could He withhold Aad leave but barren fields. - V Thealet us onto Hits retard A portion of His owa, "WKMB thus we meet to gin And praise for favors shown. * • • * • , K 1 AM as, through esoh succeeding "' vH ' " Bis goodness crowns onr days, To the Eternal Three in One ' "jb* ns ascribe all praise I «t WMW r*> REMAINED AT HOME," ' *. A-TBAKKSEMSRASTORY. ;•. . . , ' A,5!W BMgerfeys coming ..iiHe to •pend "Phanksgiviiig?" said Mrs. Netr tiaglej. " Not if I know it." Mrs. Nettingley was a close-flBted and was an express, and didn't stop at small places like E*add's depot, as Mrs. Nett* ingley found to her cost when ahe paid $5 for a hackto take her back to Lwid's depot. On inquiry, it was found that there were about a hall a doaeu fonulieH of the name of Jones at Ladd's depot: The first place towhich they drove, on Thorn street, was a tenement house, where they all had the soarlet fever. "Oh, my!" said Mrs. Nettingley. "Drive on, quick. This isn't the place P The next was a clergyman's house, where a full-fledged prayer-meeting was going briskly on. " This isn't the |>lace, either," Baid jpoor Mrs. Nettingley, waxing more and more in despair. And the third was a vinegar-faced old maid, who lived with her married state*, and never had heard the name of Feck- Held in her life. "What shall I do?" said Mrs. Net­ tingley. "Better go to a hotel, ma'am," said the hackman, who himself wad beginningto get out of patience. "But it costs so much," said Mrs. Net­ tingley. "And to-morrow is Thanksgiv­ ing day. Is these a tssin jjoes back to­ night?" ' ' '=>•« i . . . " To-night?"said thehaekmaiti "Why its past 11 a'ready! And my horses calculating matron, who lived in a hand- I188 <5°* epizootic, and I couldn't -V.' 't0i Jfe. . • f* -i-- vZK -#p. •ome house in a stylish neighborhood in New York, and was one of those who, ' as her maid-of-all-work expressed it, 44 would sjcin a flea to save the hide and tallow." Mrs. Nettingley liked to make » shofr* bat she had a deep-rooted'aver­ sion to spending money. And enter­ taining; company on Thanksgiving day KM one of the things that could not be accomplished -without the latter oon- eomitant. Mr. Nettingley, a little, weak-minded man, who viewed his big wife with re­ spectful admiration, looked dubiously •t her. " But, my dear," said he, " how are you going to help it? They've seat word they are coming." "Ill go to your sister Belinda's, np in Chmgatuck oounty." -Ilr. Nettingley felt of his chin. • **They haven't invited us," said be--- "that is, not especially." •OIM fiddlestick!- aaM Mre. Netting­ ley. "Belinda's always glad to see me the children. And as for staying at le to gorge Mrs. Badgerley and her ox children, and Mr. Badgerley's two sisters; I wont do it! Why, such a turkey as they would expect would cost $3, at the very least. Get me a time­ table, Nettingley. Send word to Mrs. Badgerley that I've gone away to spend Thanksgiving." Mr. Nettingley, who never dreamed of opposing Me wife's will in this or any other matter, wrote the letter accord-̂ ingly, and put it in his coat-tail pocket, where it remained. For he forgot &U -about it» Mrs. Nettingley packed up Tier owft things and the things of the Joor little Nettingleys, and took the af­ ternoon train to Scrag Hollow, in Sauga- lock county. "Manima," sAid Theodora Nettingley, --the juvenile scions of the house of Nettingley all had high-sounding appel­ lations--"it looks all shut up and lonely. I don't believe any one is at homc^" "Pshaw!" said Mrs. Nettingley,"peo­ ple in the country always live in the tank of the house." And carrying a heavy carpet-bag in IMT hand she trudged around to the rear 4oor, followed fay Theodora, Lavinia, JSvangeline and Gervase, each lugging slong a smaller bag. . - Nobody responded to her repeated woUey of knocks, but presently a little ©Id woman, who had come from a aeiglihoiing cottage to the well for «ster, was made to understand what was Vakrted. ' * Mrs, Peckfleld ? " and the little old Woman* in a high-pitehed, shrill voice, which so often accompanies deafness. •You're her cousin from the city, come fto spend Thanksgiving? Well, if that sia't too bad! Mrs. Peckfleld started this very afternoon for Ladd'sdepot; somie relations as lives there." " That's very strange," said Mrs. Net- Hsgley. " I telegraphed to her tluU; I mm coming." * " Couldn't agotthe telegraph, I guess," •aid the little old woman. But Mrs. Nettingley knew better that, for under the corner of the pi»gsm there lay a torn envelope of the West- sen Union Telegraph! And she knew that Mrs. Peckfleld had fled from her, just as she, Mrs. Nettingley had fled be­ fore the Badgerley family. 41 But I'll be even with her," said Mrs. Mettingley, grinding her false teeth. *3P11 go to Ladd's depot. What are the Mimes of her relations there? " The little old woman, after soms med itation, said that it was Jomes. At least she thought it was Jones. She wisnt quite certain. It might b$ Smith. Or it might be Thompson. But she &e- Ucoed it was Jones. And she believed they lived on Thorn street. It was a long walk back to the rail­ road depot, and the four little Netting- lays Were tired and cross, but they fort­ unately succeeded in reaching it before iward train started. Bat it keep 'em out no longer, not for nobody. But I s'pose I could take yon to the 12:30 night express, for a little extra!" And this moderate specimen of the tribe of hackmen consented to-be'satis­ fied with $8. ̂ "Ma!" whispered GemM, M1rt»re are we going?" "Home," said Mrs. Nettingley, pro­ nouncing the word as if it were a pea­ nut-shell she was cracking. There was one comfort, though--the Badgerley family would have been repulsed by that time; and, after all, cold beef was a cheaper way of supplying the table than thrkev at 30 cents a pound. It was 1 or 2 o'clock the next day when she reached her owfl door, having paid in hack and car fare enough to buy half a dozen ten-pound turkeys, and with jaded and fretful children, a vio­ lent headache on her own score, and one of the traveling-bags lost ! Mm stay at home after this," said Mrs. Nettingley to herself. "Eh! Par­ lor window-blinds open! People talk­ ing! I do believe Nettingley's got com­ pany to Thanksgiving, after all!" And hsr kssrt ssnt down isto soles of her boots. It was quite true; the servant-maid, with a red qhd flurried face, opened the door. "Abby!" said Mra. Nettingley, "who's here?" . • , < "Lots of people, ma'am," said Abby, looking guiltily over her shoulder. "Where are they?* demanded her mistress. "In the dining-room, ma'am." And Abby threw open the door, thereby disclosing a long table with three huge turkeys well browned and savory, a chicken-pie that was a small mountain in itself, and a glass reservoir of cranberry sauce, that set Mrs. Net­ tingley calculating at once as to the probable amount of dollars sunk in its crimson billows; while, seated in hospit­ able array around the board, were Mr. and Mrs. Badgerley, the two sisters, and the six children, Mr. and Mrs. Smithers, seven little Smitherse ̂and the ̂ Leon­ ards of Maine, second cousins of her husband--twenty-six in all---including her husband. Mrs. Nettingley and her children sat down and ate their Thanksgiving din­ ner with what appetite they might. Btit Nettingley had rather a hard time of it that night. My dea^" said the sacrificial lamb, * what was I to do ? - They didnt get BY XMIX.Y B. STKINESTKU ^ • The desolation brought upon com­ munities by the yellow demon of the South is not to be computed; individual histories, hoWevef, present: pictures from which we tan draw an idea of the mis­ ery resulting fr6m It--the of orphans and widows, the breaking up of families, the sudden slaying of pro­ tectors, the ruthless severing of dearest ties, A pers ̂ might draw soul-har­ rowing pictures if, every humane being did not give, voluntarily, the sympathy due suffering. Nearly every reader frill recall the time, aix years ago, when this horrible fever raged nearly ba fear­ fully as it has this year. At that time there lived, is a pretty place in the vi­ cinity of Red river, a family of five per­ sons--husband, wife, child and two ser­ vants, a colored man and his wife. The gentleman, when the scourge first broke out, suggested taking his family North; but, on deliberating with l»is wife, who was in delicate health at the time and disliked leaving her home, concluded, as they lived somewhat out of town, that they would be safe in remaining, if they kept aloof from all intercourse with an infectious atmosphere* Vain hope! One morning tjie husband was nnable to rise from kife bed; the wife, fright­ ened by his hourly-increasing Buffering, sent for aid; the physician immediately pronounced the case yellow fever, and advised her to leave, and save herself and child, and he would do all that a human being could do to dave her now- delirious husband. Any woman can guess her answer. She could die with him, but not desert him. But her child? Frantio with the necessity, she followed the doctor's advice and sent the nurse with her 3-year-old darling to a barge lying a mjle away on Bed river, with such instructions and prayerful blessings as only a mother's heart could utter. This barge was going freighted with fleeing human beings, who would find refuge in St. Louis and nearer points of safety. The colored woman knew where the child would find a kind reception frdai the friends of the af­ flicted mother, and, • trusting to the hitherto-faithful servant, the sorely-tried wife turned her heart to the duties be­ fore her. By night she was alone with her husband's corpse. The man servant had fled--with his wife, probably. The next day the doctor found her--not stricken with the fever, but a wild maniac, hugging to her breast the dead flmno head. He had he; removed 4oan asylum, the estate taken care of as soon as the terror in the country had some­ what abated, and then communicated With her friends and relatives in Mobile and St. Louis. None had heard of the nurse or child, Advertisements were inserted in a dozen different papers for t h e r e c o v e r y o f l i t t l e E d i t h D -- b u t for three years all trace of her was lost. In the meantime the poor, bereft widow was restored to reason, and with a little fatherleiB babe--born two months after her double loss--pressed, to a deter­ mined heart, she traveled from city to town and town to city^unting for hey other child. Every place where col­ ored people congregated she haunted, every child she eagerly saanned in pass­ ing, and who shall portray that woman's s and disappointment during nearly weary years of vain seeking? But, at last, at last! On the street in New York she saw that woman to whom she hqd intrusted her child. With the clutch of an insanely-delighted, almost- dying woman die held her arm. " My child, RutV, where is my child?" With a face blue and eyes like a hunted ani­ mal, the negro fell on her knees, unable to articulate a word. " Only tell me I shall see her agMn. IH forgive everything, ask nothing, nothing. Oh, Buth, for God's sake, is the letter. They said they had oometo ! die well? Shall I see her once more?" spend Thanksgiving, and of course I had to order dinner. What else could I do?" " Do?" repeated Mrs. Nettingley, in accents of the bitterest scorn. " Couldn't you close all the blinds and lock the front door and go down cellar and pre­ tend not to be at home? Fve no pa­ tience with you!" Three days afterward the three young- eat Nettingleys broke out with scarlet fever. The seven little Smitherses took it of them--the maid took it of the Smitherses, and Mrs. Nettingley had her winter's work before her. " I wish to goodness I had remained at home," thought Mrs. Nettingley. And the amount of thankfulness she felt that year was not oppressive, in spite of the Governor's proclamation. _ BULKY WOMMN. Every one has heard the old conun­ drum," When is a woman not a woman ?" Answer, " When she is a little sulky." Don't sulk, ladies. A sullen man is bad enough; what, then, must be a sullen woman, and that woman a wife, a con­ stant companion, a companion day and night? Only think of the delight of sitting at the same table and occupying the same chamber, for a week, without exchanging a word all the while! It is bad enough to scold; but sulking is far worse. In ten minutes the poor mother held to her breast the lost one, larger and older, to be sure, but her darling, every feature as if photographed from that loved husband's face. The negress had been kind to her, but the only explana­ tion she could give was that they had, somehow, been tempted to fun away with the money given her to see the child safely at St. Louis. And she "s'posed Jeff was ashamed 'cause he'd runned away, And 'sides we heard as how both you done died, anyway." if NOVEL CASH DRAWXM. At a late exhibition in Falmouth, En­ gland, a " patent check till" was exhibit­ ed, which is certainly remarkable, if it does one-half of what is claimed for it. According to the official description of this friend of the shopkeeper, " it will check every penny taken and paid bet­ ter than keeping a cashier and using check bopks. It occupies no more than the ordinary till. If an should take money of a customer *wd fail to put it in the till, it can be detect­ ed at once; if only pait of the amount is put in it, will show how much has been withheld* If any cash has been taken out, it will show the amount. The till cannot be opened without its being known, and the number of times. It will show how much money there ought to be in at any time. Any amount of change can be left in for use, and yet none can be taken away without its be­ ing known. It can be left any length of time without being cleared, and will show the amount there ought to be in without counting the cash, it can be used as a desk ̂or set cm a level with the counter top if required. It shows the number of customers waited nĵ on by eaoh assistant, sctd, if a line is drawn across the paper close to the glass every hour, it tells the number of customers at any given time." And all these ad­ vantages are wound up with the brief statement, M interest on outlay and cost of working, half-penny a day," TUB MULATTO FAMILY. " llany Americans seem to think the mulatto specially a native product, and largely confined to the United States. They who think so plainly have not traveled, fie is more numerous in the West Indies and Portuguese and Span­ ish America than he is here, and he is not uncommon in Arabia, India, Persia, Turkey, and on all the coasts of Africa. The people called the Grignas in South Africa aire mulattoes, sprung from the Dutch and Hottentots, and the inhab­ itants of Egypt and the Barbary States have been from early ages of mulatto origin. The Dominican republic--part of the island of Hayti--the oldest eivil- ized community in the Western hemi­ sphere, is composed almost wholly of mulattoes. These and other mixed races are not yet understood as to their phys­ ical phenomena, though it is understood that conjunction of individuals of differ­ ent races is generally prolific, and that their offspring is prolific likewise. Thence is deduced an argument in favor of the unity of the human family. Hybridity is a very interesting question, and little is known of it as yet, though we have in this hemisphere ample op­ portunity for observation. In North and South America we have, besides mulattoes, quadroons and ootoroons, mestizoes, the offspring of whites and Indians; chinoes, from Indians and ne­ groes ; chinoblancoes, from whites and Chinese; Zamboes and mamelucoes, from Indians and negroes; zambochinoes, from negroes and Chinese; chinocholoes, from Indians and Chinese, and many other mongrel varieties.--Exchange. y 9LIK8 . ' ' There is no question about it, the Of is utterly depraved, dishonest and of­ fensively familiar. He keeps all manner of late hours, and utterly disregards the laws of health and decency. He idles about dining-rooms, and partakes of iree lunches without the least sense of shame 'or degradation. He eats and drinks of everything that can be eaten or drunken, and always at the expense of somebody else, and without the lightest show of gratitude* Filth is as attractive to him as elegance and luxu­ ry, and he has a most repulsive habit of exploring every accessible mass of pol­ lution and straightway betaking himself to the unprotected cheek of beauty, or the delicious repast of the fastidious epi­ cure. He delights in tormenting man, and inflicts untold anguish upon him in the way of petty annoyances. He will return to an attack again and again with diabolical persistency. But though he is idle, dissolute, gluttonous, pestiferous and tormenting, he seems to pass his life gayly, free from care Or trouble, and defiant of all laws, human and divine. Betribution overtakes him through his appetite, when he is intrapped into sloughs of poison or intricate traps from which he never escapes alive. We be­ lieve it is a fact that he never dies a natural death. He is scalded in tea, drowned in milk, or smothered in mo­ lasses, and occasionally he is crushed or slaughtered as a penalty for his temer­ ity, but he never dies of sickness or old age. Barring accident or violence, the fly is practically immortal--a perennial nuisance. ' JUHKASK SfMJCAD BY MILK. Additional evidence that disease may be spread by impure milk is furnished by the experiences of one of the mid­ land counties of England. The gases and odors from a defective drain ascend­ ed and were absorbed by the milk in an adjoining dairy. This fact was discov­ ered when it was found that the intro­ duction of a strong disinfectant into the drain gave a bad taste to the milk. It was also discovered that the germs of typhoid fever were transmitted in this way, and, in a neighboring town, an epi­ demic was thus caused. Water is, con­ sequently, not the Only element with which milk may be adulterated. If milk dealers would be free in mind from the accusation of conscience that they have spread disease and, perhaps, death among their customers, they must see to it that foul air is shut off from all access to their wares. " I WANT to find out who is master of this houqe," said the man with the book under his arm to the vinegary-looking woman with a pointed nose and a very small top-knot, who opened the door for him. " Well, stranger," she said, with arms a-kimbo, "you just walk around into the back yard and ask a little spin­ dle-shanked deacon you'll find there fixin' up the grape arbor, and hell tell you if I don't boss this ranch he don't know who does. • Now, what do yon want with me?" joaswomiUiii • Tte first camp-meeting w*s, hejd in Kentucky in 1799. , In 1439 tapners were prohibited from being shoemakers; and 1562butchers; were precluded from r being tanners* ttnflera. penalty., following curiouslawwaieaiacteld1 during the feign of Richard I. lor the' government of his followers during the crusade to 'the Holy Laxtftt "He Who kjHa a man on shipboard shall W bound1 to the dead body and thrown ; into the sea; if the man is killed on shore, the slayer shall be bound to the dead body and buried with it; he who shall draw his knife to strike another, or shall have drawn blood from him, to lose his hand; if he shall have only struck with the pafan of his hand without drawing blood, he shall be thrice ducked in the sea." CorvKB is a native of Arabia, sup­ posed by some to have been the ohief in­ gredient of the old Lacedemonian broth. The use of this berry was not known in England till the year 1657, at which time Mr. D. Edwards, a Turkey mer­ chant, on his return from Smyrna to Lon­ don, brought with him a Greek of Ha- gusa, named Pasquet Bossee, who used to prepare coffee every morning for his master. Edwards' neighbors became so numerous as visitors at breakfast time that, in order to get rid of them, he ordered Bossee to open a, coffee-house, which he did in St. Michael's alley, in Cornhill. This was the first coffee-house opened in London. THE theory regarding the rotundity of the earth was strenuoosly opposed by* many of the great lights of the church. Many of the arguments grien to com­ bat and disprove the theory were not only very amusing, but several of them extremely ingenious, among these latter that of St. Augustine may be cited as an example. He maintained that the theory was directly opposed to the scriptures, which asserted that at the last day it was promised that the Son of God would descend in power and glory in sight of all the nations and peoples of the earth. This would be an impos­ sibility if the earth were round, as in that case he could only be seen by the people inhabiting one side of it, conse­ quently the fulfillment of the, scriptural promise required that the earth should be flat. < THE ancients were familiar with the elementary principles of optics, and Eu­ clid and Ptolemy developed them in formal trenUrieo. They appear akcto have been acquainted with the' use of convex and concave glasses; but the former do not appear to have been ap­ plied to spectacles till the thirteenth century. Boger Bacon, about 1250, de­ scribed telescopes and microscopes ex­ actly, and yet neither were made til} the beginning of the seventeenth cent­ ury, when one Metius, at Alkmaer, and Jansen, of Middleburgh, made them about the same time. Another Dutch­ man of the name of Drevel soon after made microscopes. Galileo imitated their invention by its description, and made three in succession, one which magnified a thousand times; and, hav­ ing with these discovered- Jupiter's moons, and the phases of Venus, tele- scopes soon became very popular, and were improved by Zuochi, Huygens, Gregory and Newton; and finally by Martin, Hall, Dolland and Hersetiel. The famous microscope of Lewenhoeck consisted merely of small glass drops or spheres. Prisms were first used in Italy, and their powers developed by Grimaldif The theory of the rainbow was explained by Descartes, and the solar microscope was invented by Dr. Hooke. ' RESULTS Or IlfTXHMAKRIACHS. Mr. Geo. Darwin, after searching in­ vestigation, concludes that the " widely different habits of life of men and women in civilized nations, especially among the upper classes, tend to coun­ terbalance any evil from marriage' be­ tween healthy, clbsely-related persons-" Mr. Darwin's views are in a measure sustained by Dr. Vorni's inquiry into the commune of Batz. Batz is a rocky, secluded, ocean-washed peninsula of the Loire Inferieure, France, containing over 3,000 people of simple habits, who don't drink, and commit no crime. For generations they have intermarried, but no oases have occurred of deaf-muteism, albinism, blindness or malformation, Mid the number of children born is con­ siderably above the average. . ! » / . SATISFACTORY BEttY* A man met a Burlington boy walking toward town on the Agency road, eating an apple. "How many apples have you?" asked the man. "One-half as many apples as I have eaten, added to twice as many as I am going to eat, less five that a beggar boy took away from me, divided by two-thirds of the num­ ber I dropped in the orchard where I saw the dog, plus six which I ate on the orchard fence before the man saw me, will equal one-fifth of all that I tried to gjet." How many apples did he have ? >--Burlington Hawk-Eye. Miss F&OBXNCB NIGHTINGALE is 60 years old, and lives in London almost a prisoner to her room by sickness. c U R V- and H to suit th atehss. Bond tarlVte <***%, cMnf fall and reliable information J. E. LOCKWOOO, t* <11# mirnewdeeeripttvecat- SgUsS:' * i&rii Addreaa • m. jRell X CUBED FREE I '"•Hs.tet."' : *af .. BOllMl JfpCKlfnO flOd fc' valuable Trettiiw emit to. dress. . • ;g BR. H. G. BOOT. l«3Pt»srl8tP9et. WewVork.' ̂ / H kiD HUNT'S REMEDY ^ N . T H E . C H E A T , K t f J N e y m e d j C I N L pSpVnid abvn^M cured thou*nd». £v«r» bottte warranted. E. Clarke, Providence, R.I., tor illurtratsd If roardfncfiit dont have it he will mm and back, free to tnuera. i as ̂apply to liWA COMUinr, Cedar asptds. wSk«i#i» Itmt. cS«gg». f 4 f * & ppwttf J! G ID SPRUCB MTKKKT, NEW YORK- (Pitatfag House Sqowa. opp. the Tribune BnlMic Newspaper Advertising Bur TOM AOKHTS FOB ALI. Kewspapers in TFCE UnitedJKste* and Canada. ADrramsMttKTt »o»WARDje» BAM Cm teesins*)" to ererjr section, fraqi NMrConndland to Tessa, and fromi Mqrfds te BrttSh OdhiimM*. Also New Vork O&r* Rles and weeklies, loasand Ne -- Thousand Newspaper* Lr. inspection by adrertiseri, including i from Boston to Ban Fraioisoo, ' wfcton. Fijbb. car AMERICAN NKWSPAPSR D1RKOTORT • kept regularly on file Car adlnx all the Kmi dailies 8, front Montreal to Gal. .no! §APONjFIE|̂ Is the Old Reliable Caussntratttt FOR FAMILY SOAP-1AKIK0,, Dtreotions aeeompanyins each can for making Bail, |h* (wl T»l|.( tinn (ftjlVli L V : tl IT IS f CLl 'WEIGHT AND STBM1TOTB. ' The market is 4ooded with (so-called) --'nteatA1,1 • live, which is adulterated with salt and row_ .̂<4 MS8K- s maktioap. 11 > SAVIC MOMcr. ANT* BUY TH* J... Sap61mifieR MABR BY THL ! Pennsylvania Salt Manufg ,0% PHDL.Anai.PHlA, men r$i.so to w.ooe.̂ 'SETH THOMA! JUntWILL. WV.BF HOOD U'• ' •nl < 'id '4 REDUCED. Ileuer Uiuii Krrr. I Your Wife lWanl® It. Full of Plain, Practical, Hetiable, PAYING INFORMATION for West. Kast. South, North. For every Owner of Cattle, Horses, Sheep, Swine, or a FARM, OHiden, or VII lotto l.of, tor ever v Housekeeper; for all Uoys iui(i Ulrls; OVER 700FINE ENCRAVINQa, both I'lciisiiiK HIHI Inotructlve. All the sbuve. and more, in the ;AmericanAgriculturis *Vo|. 3S.J From Novo up to 1830,po$t/^ee> [18W. ' Only #1 Each* . ,, • . , to Clubs of ten or inorp. 50A|Mes, fi.W ench; 4 copies. fi.Seaeh. Slaide suuscrlptionx, HJI0. Sinelc numbers IS cia. One specimen, post-free, 10c. RPtBNOIO PRESIIl'MS OIVKV to tliose sendinc Clubs of subscribers. I Issued in English & German at same Price. Try It-I'em'i! Like It-It Will PAY. I QMldrenl OBANGK JVDD COMPANY, Publisherŝ 949 Broadway. S. T. FRANK LESLIE'8 SUNDAY MA6AIINE. OOIQ>UCTKD BY | 0HA&LX8 VOBOS DKBH8, D. D. Pastor of the Ckarck of the Strasatt*, r > mora profaseiyiuiistntod, than any other similar peri,, odiosl published is Sarope or imma: and •oetToit ct" expense will be spared by the Editor snd PablUher t* the SCKDAT MAUAXIKK. Thispnsentaa favorableoppo% /A •• lunity for the commencement of new SobscriDtiona • anl TtalS foSJnttibSii« a bsmar ., r * ' . • . ' i : n ! • ! ' i i t : « v w > ' ! ^ • ( ( f , Thwe PoBsi-s par Anniam, • - Cseite p@r Single Mmabett. •• or f̂Uĵ SS18 *>• "rfwsd tb«i«b say BMftasUsr Frank Leslie's Publishing Housi 1: CIS, 55 St 57 PARS PtACS, NEW YORK. < - r f

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