Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Mar 1882, p. 7

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SMAtA BO^; m ha tonia and twUhlj?' I bow be persista i ratting hs heeia; ... v anew; he fee. a, ' *W~' • w.de-awuke bojr in < •v? • n fret, be tmsliw quite **t tine lady's bat, "B iNU'd tow in devotion, My a quick backward mntiea, Sliia re^t-ess fcm&il boy ia " 4 * i iW ||bra, earnest and atflL « 2'*'* w bile tbe »tory is told Of aouie old hero boad; Oar dear, thoughtful boy i 4DI oar R*«d anrprim 4; bin thoughtlu. ejrea & turned to despair Ae lie twitclu* tii> hair Ol h.x little i-iBi.tr in churalh 1], each naughty trick a look (r miie ryea his mother so dear, ho think* it be»t to nit er niircbievoua boy in iiiother trick comes T X«a. His linger he druma, Or his kcreh.ef if. apiead . AH over hi<! head, '.And htill we take Mm to i-telll fte's troublesome? ¥(«. That I'm bmnd to oo&feaa; ' But God made the boys, • %iih their fan and tbo r DOIMI / And He surny wants iheai In #uch children, yon know, JUnng long year- hgo . Did uot trouble the Lord, Though diccip.ee were bo rod; Jk> we still keep them near Hlia IB I AN AGRICULTURAL PAPER. Hark Twain'* kUperiencc ma tike Ed­ itor of One. I <*id not take the temporary editor­ ship of an agricultural paper without misgivings. Neither would a landsman take command of a ship without misgiv­ ings, Bat I was in circumstances that made the salary an object. The regular editor of the paper was going off for a holiday, and I accepted the terms he of­ fered, and took his place. The sensation of being at work again was luxurious, and I wrought all the week with unflagging pleasure. We went to press-, and I waited a day with some solicitude to see whether my effort was going to attract any notice. As I leftrthe offioe, toward sundown, a group of men and boys at the foot of the stairs dispersed with one impulse, and gave me passage way, and I heard one or two of them say : " That's him !" I was naturally pleased by this incident. The next morning £ found a similar group at the foot of the stairs, and scattering couples and individuals standing here and there in the street and over the way watching me with interest. The group separated and fell back as I approached, and I heard a man say : " Look at his eye!" I pretended not to observe the notice I was attracting, but secretly I was pleased with it, and was purposing to write an account of it to my aunt. I went up the short flight of stairs, and heard cheery voices and a ringing laugh as I drew near the door, which I opened and caught a gliuipse of two young rural-looking men, whose faces blauclied and lengthened when they saw me, and then they both plunged through the window with a great crash. I was sur­ prised. In aboni h<uf as bom* an old gentle- man, with a flowing beard and a fine but rather austere face, entered, and sat down at my invitation. He seemed to have something ou his mind. He took off his hat and set it on the floor, and got out of it a red silk handkerchief and a copy of our paper. He put the paper on his lap, and, while he polished nia spectacles with his handkerchief, he said: " Are you thenerw editor f"r n ** "I said I was. • : " Have you ever edited an agricult­ ural paper before?" "No," I said; "this Is my first at­ tempt" "Very likely. Have -yon had any experience in agriculture, practically? " No, I believe I have not." " Some instinct told me so," said the old gentleman, putting on hfe specta­ cle and looking over them at me with asperity, while he folded his paper into a convenient shape. " I wish to read yon what mast have made me have that instinct. It was this editorial. Listen, and see if it was you that wrote it: "' Turnips should never be pulled--it 1'ures them. It is much better to send oy up and let him shake the tree.' " NoV, what do you think of that-- for I suppose you wrote it Z" "Think of it? Why, I think it is rood. I think it is sense. 2 have no ioubt that, every year, millions and millions of bushels of turnips are spoiled in this township alone by being pulled in a half-ripe ooiiditiou, when, if they had sent a boy up to shake the tree-- " Shake your grandmothers ! Turnips don't grow on trees 1" " Oh, they don't, don't they ? Well, who said they d d ? The language was intended to be figurative, wholly figura­ tive. Anybody that knows anything will know that I meant that the boy should shake the vine." Then this old person got up and tore his paper all into small shreds, and stamped on them, and broKfe several things with his cane, and said I did not know as much as a cow, and then went out and banged the door after him, and, in short, acti d in such a way that I fan­ cied he was displeased alxmt something. But, not knowing what the trouble was, I could not be any help to him. Pretty soon after this a long, cadaver­ ous creature, with la iky locks hanging down to his shoulders and a week's stubble bristling from the hills and val­ leys of his face, darted within the door ami halted, motionless, with finger on lip, and head and body bent in listening attitude. No souud was heard. Still be listened. No saund. Then he turned^ the key in the door, and came elaborate­ ly tip- toeing toward me till he was with­ in long-reaching distance of me, when he stopped, and, after scanning my face with intense interest for awhile, drew a folded copy of our paper from his bosom, and said: ' ° There--you wrote thi&t. " Head it ttt EHt 0 quick! Believe me--I suffer.'* 1 read as follows--and as the sentence fell from my lips I could see the relief come--I could see the drawn muscles relax, and the anxiety go out of the face, and rest and peace steal over the features like the mericiful moonlight over a desolate landscape : 'The guano is a fine bird, but great care is necessary in rearing it. It should not be imported earlier than June, nor later than September. In the winter it should be kept in a warm place, where it can hatch out its young. " It is evident that we are to have a backward season for grain. Therefore, it will be well for the farmer to begin setting out his cornstalks and planting I his buckwheat cakes in July instead of August "Concerning the pumpkin. This berry is a favorite with the natives of the interior of New England, who prefer it to the gooseberry tor the making of fruit cake, and who likewise give it the I preference over the raspberry for feed­ ing cows, as being more tilling and fully fsa satisfying. The pumpkin is the only Vescnlent of the orange family that win thrive in the North, except the gourd and one or two varieties of the squash. But the custom pi planting it iu the front yard with the slirublK^ry is fast go­ ing out of vo>rne, for it is now generally oonoeded that the pumpkin as a dude tree is failure. "Now, as the warm weather ap- proaohea, and the gandeaa begin to spawn--" The excited listener sprang toward me, to shake hand*, and said : " There, there--that will do ! I know I am all right now, because you have read it just avl did, word for word. But, stranger, when I first read it this morning I said to myself I never, never believed it before, notwithstanding my friends kept me under watch so strict, but now I betteve I am crazy, and with that I fetched a howl that you might have heard two miles, and started out to kill somebody, because, you know, I knew it would come to that sooner or later, and so I might as well begin. I read one of those paragraphs over and over aga>n, so as to be certain, and then I burned my house down and started. "I have crippled several people, and have got one fellow up a tree, where I can get him if i want him. But I thought I would call in here as I went along, and make the tiling perfectly certain; and now it is certain, and I tell yon it is luoky for the chap in the tree. I should have killed him, sure, as I went back. Good-by, sir; good-by. You have taken a great load off my mind. My reason has stood the strain of one* of your agricultural articles, and I know that nothing can ever unseat it now. Good- by, sir." I fait a little uncomfortable about the cripplings and arsons this person had been entertaining himself with, for I could not help feeling remotelv acces­ sory to them; but these thoughts were quickly banished, for the regular editor walked in ! [£ thought to myself, " Now if you had gone to Egypt, as I recom­ mended you, I might have had a chanoe to get my hand in, but you would not do it, and here you are. I sort of expected you."l " This is a sad business--a very sad business. There is the mucilage bottle broken and six panes of glass and a spit­ toon and two canulestieks. But that is not the worst The reputation of the paper is injured, and permanently, I fear. True, there never was such a call for the paper before, and* it never sold such a large edition, or soared to such celebrity ; but does one want to be famous for lunacy, or prosper upon the infirmities of* his mind ? My friend, as I am an honest man, the street out here is full of people, and others are roosting on the fences, waiting to get a glimpse at you, because they tiiink you are crazy. And well they might, after reading your editorials. Why, what put it into your head that you could edit a paper of this nature ? You do not seem to know the first rudiments of agriculture. You speak cf furrow and harrow as being the same thing ; you talk of the moulting season for cows, and you recommend the domestication of the poleoat on account of its playfulness and it* excellence as a ratter. " Your remark that clams will lie quiet if music be played to them Was su­ perfluous--entirely superfluous. Noth­ ing disturbs clams. Clams always lie quiet. Clams care nothing whatever about music. Ah, heavens and earth, friend, if you had made the acquiriugof ignorance the study of your life you could not have graduated with higher honor than you oould to-day. Your ob­ servation that the horse chestnut, as an article of commerce, is steadily gaining in favor, is simply calculated to destroy this journal. X w«w,t you to throw up yonr situation and go. I want no more holiday--I could not enjoy it if I had it Certainly not with you in the chair. I would always stand in dread of what you might be going to recommend next. It makes me lose all patience every time I think of your discussing oyster beds un­ der the head of ' Landscape Gardening.' I want you to go. Nothing on earth could persuade me to take another holi­ day. O, why didn't you tell me you didn't know anything about agriculture?" "Tell you. you cornstalk, you cab- bage, you son of a cauliflower ! It's the first time I ever heard such an un­ feeling remark. I tell you I have been in the editorial business going on four­ teen years, and it is the first time I ever heard of a man's having to know any­ thing in order to edit a newspaper. You turnip ! Who write the dramatic crit­ iques for tbe second-rate papers ? Why, a parcel of promoted shoemakers and apprentice apothecaries, who know just as much about good acting as I do about good farming, and no more. Who re­ view the books ? People who never wrote one. Who do up the leaders on financed Parties who have had the largest opportunities lor knowing noth­ ing about it. Who criticise the Indian campaigns? Gentlemen who do not know a war-whoop from a wigwam, and who never had to run a foot race with a tomahawk or pluck arrows out of the several members of their families to build the evening camp tire with. Who write the temperance apptials and clamor about the flowing bowl ? Folks who will never draw auother sober breath till they do it in the grave. Who edit the agricultural papers, you--yam ? Men, as a general thing, who fail in the poetry line, yellow-covered novel line, sensation line, city editor line, and final­ ly fall back on agriculture as a tempo­ rary reprieve from the poor-house. * " You try to tell me anything about the newspaper business! Sir, I have been through it from Alpha to Omega, and tell you tiat the less a man knows the larger noise he makes and the high­ er the salary he commands. Heaven knows if I had been but ignorant instead of cultivated, and impudent instead of diffident, I could have made a name for m* s If iu this oold, selfish world. I take my leave, sir ! Since I have been treated as you have treated me, I am perfectly willing to go. But I have done my duty. I have fulfilled my contract, as far as I was permitted to do it I said I jcould make your paper of interest to a 1 elapses, and I have. I said I could nin> your circulation up to twenty thousand copies, and if I had had two more weeks I'd have done it And I'd have g:ven you the best claps of readers that ever an agricultural paper had--not a farmer in it, nor a solitary individual who could tell a watermelon from a peach vine to save his life. You are the loser by this rupture, not me, pie-plant AdoisI" OHIO takes the school-ma'am coke. The teacher in what is called "equality school district," in the town of Rush Creek, described as "a sprightly young lady of slender form and almost effemi­ nate appearance," drew the reius of government a little to tight too suit Gome of the big l»oys, and one day nine of them--great strapping fellows, some almost young men--undertook to pick her up and carry her out of the house. But she didu't pick np and oarry worth a cent. She took a big stick and fought with desperation, broke the ringleader's head and thrashed the whole crowd back into their seats. That school district just now holds the most popular girl in all the county. Bistobicac* Koran was written about 610, THH A. D. THE whale fishery first sprang up In the Bay of Biaeay, In the twelfth cen­ tury. THB cut was first domesticated in Egypt The Greeks and Romans did not possess it. ONE hundred and ten monasteries were •oppressed in England by the order of Henry V. THE original name of the city of Al­ bany, when founded by the Dutch, was Beaverwick. PABACETsus is said to have cured a leper by keeping him for sixty hours in a bath of hot mud. AN inventor named Cools, who died recently in Sagitoga, used to boast, when a young man, that he was master of twenty-.-ix trades. c>. THE ancient PueblOs were the only aboriginal people within the limits of the United States who possessed the aft of glazing their pottery. CAESAR was one of the best judges of pearls that ever lived. He could at once tell the weight and value of a pearl when he took it in his band. THERE is a fairy mythology, similar to that of Europe, among the native tribes of America, which embraces ev&n the superstition of the changelings. IN the reign of Titus 3,000 men were compelled to fight as gladiators, and 10,- 000 daring the reign of Trajan. Both Emperors were noted for their clemency. ACCORDING to Spanish historians eight centuries of warfare elapsed, and 3,700 battles were fought before the Moorish kingdoms in Spain submitted to Chris­ tian arms. PHILIP STBOSSYI, when accused of the assassination of Alexander L of Tuscany, killed himself through fear that torture might extort from revelations injurious to his friends. IN THEIR general bearing toward so­ ciety and in the nature and minuteness of their scruples the early Cliriatains bore a greater resemblance to Quakers than to any other existing sect THERE was a question among the early Christians as to the propriety of wearing, in military festivals, laurel wreaths, because laurel was cahed after Daphne, the lover of Apollo, the heathen god. IN 1596, David Black, a Protestant miuister in Scotland, delivered a sermon in which he said that, as to the Queen of Scotland, they might as well pray for her because it was the fashion to do so, but no good would ever come of it As a consequence he was thrown into prison. IN PERU, as soon as a death occurs, ashes are strewn on the floor of the room and the door fastened. Next moniiag the ashes are carefully examined for foot­ prints and the soul of the dead is said to have passed iuto the body of whatever animal the imagination traces in the' ashes. ONE method used by the Anglo- Saxons for ascertaining the intentions of fate was to take slips of wood from some fruit-bearing tree, mark them, and after a solemn prayer, shake them together I and throw them into a white garment- spread for the purpose. The number of marks lying uppermost decided the greater or less degree of fortune to come. IN438H Nicholas Lillington, Abbot of Westminster, then nearly seventy years old, prepared himself with two of his monks to go armed to the sea coast, to assist in repelling a threatened invasion of the French. One of his monks is de- sciibed as so large that when his armor was.afterward offered tor sale tao one could lie found of sufficient size to wear it. Stories A boot Blind In. Three men, two of them blind, were drinking together one night, in the room of a public house, and as is too often the result of such convivial meetings, one of the blind men quarreled aua came to Ldows with the man that could see. Here was likely to be a battle not by any means on equal terms. But the other blind man was equal to the occasion. That the man who could see should have no undue advantage over his less fortu­ nate opponent, up jumped the blind friend and turned off the gas, and so they pommeled each other in a harmless way tor a time. We have given an il­ lustration of the warlike passion. As an offset we could give many illustra- trations of the gentler passion, love, for the blind are eminent disciples of Cupid and Hymen. As a rule a respectable blind man has no difficulty in getting a seeing wife, and very often with good looks to boot And when we consider the delicacy of touch in the finger-tips of the blind, the latter is not to be wondered at. Blind men, however, do uot always marry wives who see. We kuow of finally instances in which both husband nnd wife are blind, and have managed to rear families - without the occurrence of any serious mishap either to themselves or the children. And the cases are rare in which the latter are dc - fective in sight. Only lately the marriage took place of a blind couple somewhat advanced iu years, she l>eing his second wife, and he*her third blind husband The marriage was not wanting iu the- elements of romance, for in their young dags they had courted, and parted, blind in a double sense. We will conclude with a courtship, but ih this case will not vouch fur its truth. A blind man lifri several occasions met a widow, who was not, however, like himself, blind, atld' latterly concluded that she would mate him a good wife. He resolved that he would "pop the question" without loss of time. Accordingly, one evening found hime in the widow's house for that pur­ pose, when his suit was entirely success­ ful. But so elated was he with his suc­ cess that, on leaving her door, he forgot he was up a flight of stairs. The stair­ case window being very low, and hap­ pening to be open, he felt the air on hia heated brow, and at once stepped out without thinking where he was, and so fell into the court below. The widow, hearing the nqjse. ran down, greatly alarmed, but was fu ly teassured that rto bones were broken by his remark: " Maggie, ye hae a big step to your door !"--Chamfjcrs' Journal. Zealots in Love. Beaconsfield wrote : " Instead of love being the occasion of all the misery of this world, as is sung by fantastic bands, 1 believe that the misery is occasioned by there not being love enough. What a myetery it is ! All the necessities and habits of our life sink be!ore it. Food and sleep, that seem to divide our being rs day and night divide time, lose all influence over the lover. He is a spirit­ ualized being, fit only to iive on am­ brosia, and slumber in an imaginary para­ dise. The cares of the world do not touch him; revolutions, earthquakes, the change of Governments, the fall of empires are to them but chidish games, distasteful to a mauly spirit Men love in the plague, and forget the pest, though it rages about them. They bear a charmed life, and think not of destruc­ tion until it touches their idol, and thee they die without a pang, like zealots for their persecuted creed. > A man in low wanders in the world as a somnambulist, with eyes that seem open to watch him, yet, in fact, view nothing but their own inward fancies." Most people will give a ready He should do his best to dis- mie owner andvre8tore the lost rty tik Him,' Bbt, this' standard of dutyjmMg invberfe^ly r^cogsked le liw, ^t wiu f»© interesting to p on mm xo ao n, out it ne does you bm-n woou Mr. Haggles?^ J r©- 1^ fosseswpn, then be-^itfkted^a IJtald Wfr.lwUfe up to%»rm Kite & depository, and is bound:to ktep ; them * • 7 7 The Law «f Loat Property. What ought the finder of a lost article to do? answer. He s cover the owner and ̂ restore the lost property moral by the ^t win be interesting review the decisions on this subject 1. The finder need not take charge of the lost property. There is no legal dj^ty on him to do it; but if he does ****• it 'for the owner and restore it to him when known. How long hp vr^st>tecp it, or what efforts he should mak* lo'flud the owner, have not been laid down. 2. If the finder does not restore the property upon discovering the owner, does he commit theft ? This depends on whether he knew, or had reasonable means of knowing. wb<ythe owner at the tifatfnf ttil&lpg. It has beei| held that the tinder*of a prtcfcetl>ook, having the owner's name legibly written cm it, thief if 6e ^fSlicealft miil appropriate? tile toon eyr but if there is nothing to indicate the owner, he does not become IJHIef *11 law^y*&><5cldi§g. Ji The owner ihav at auv time reclaim .. ;̂V-*A HEW FTOPL. Jon Whs II aa a San 'fUatr •a Hi* F««i Kwppi ffcehane*',] The smartest man I've met in Iowa is a farmer near Fort Dodge. His name is Bill Ruggles. He has a 400 acre farm, a splendid dairy, a coal mine under his fa^m, and a fine belt of hard timber within sight of lps lu<u*% r ,, % Vifhen I went hi to iftr.^Rnaples' JWrge sitting-room I notice^ a fery large stove. | It was the shape of a parallelopipedon, 1 about lour feet long, three feet high, ! and the same broad. It heated the sit- ting-room and hall very nicely. "I see them. " No, sir; I can't afford to burn wood;, mtfch^trgnbl# ft>,r«ut K'* Jf r" i • **Theji coal, I suppose? " I com inued." "No, sir--too much trouble to dig eoal. I'm burning something that beats ooal or wood--cheaper than either of them, though I have both ooal and wood on my farm." . "What «« von fcttni cHgtpefMhan wood orcoalf*'I stokec^ desir$igtq£oive the puzzle. 7 I burn corn stalks, sir. Corn* are the cheapest and beat fuel tm earth. It is ten times as easy to gathw . otxflks end tie them into/hnn(j3«P fcs / i§ i* to out down thme tiws., Whyi: The Treacherous laliet*,,, ,v Hie south wind is sighing softly among the sturdy oaks, whose* leafy branches shield from the pitiless rays of a July 6un the velvety-soft lawn that stretches away to the eastward in front of a lovely Du Page county villa. On the veranda stands a girl, lovely beyond comparison, to whom a mao^- one whose sunny locks tawny golden hue tell S«xon blood that flows in talkiug iu au earnest manner. There is a loving look in his solft blue eyes, *nd he speaks with a tender earnestness that shows he is trying to get, there. The girl is tapping lightly with a croquet ; mallet the pretty toot that pfeps out half tim dlv from beineath the pretty morning dress ?vf soft, blue doth, with two rows of ruffles np the back stretch and a polonaise that never ooet less than $22. " Well, Bertrace, have you c mcloiled to shake me ?" says the man. The sunbeams flicker erratically down betwd&i the h avefe, making little lights and shades on the veranda ; the grass­ hoppers sing among the red clovers : the A Good Family Hemedy. STRICTLY PURE. Harmic?*M to the UleM Dellcatat i faithful M CaiHanp'lM km kwK _ wben other Remed cn and PUrs ciana bav* (ailed to effect a cure. hie property, and if the findfer refuses to 'jto Rom wiihtwo f:nen give it lift, bp it or thelvabpelof it from h'im. But" as'agsinst any one but l .Tr? y lunlse all wihter. " • the owner the finder's title is good. j . . ni,e 80t;>v!m J1]1* ®°me corQ stalks 4. When is a thing to be considered m« „ stove, I said. as lost? It has been said in several cases . Mr. Ruggles stepped to the door and that mousy or other propertv laid down I Ul '\ u |e J?Pro about fi fgrgotleTrjKT^^^ ̂ W sense ; J"*®. the%^Obl^Jp5<*r of HLhop, ; y yeighed left is the I t*ThAi, fcfrtng*tlrt? proper person to take charge of it, and j , ? stove, he laid them in npon those who pick up the propertv have no • » e 8*owm8 embers and closed up the - • ' front damper. " How long will they burn ? " I asked. "Three hours. I don't let them burn right to keep it On the other hand, it has l^een held that where a conductor found money in a railway car, whose ownei\could not be ascertained, he had a good title to the monev. o. Is the finder entitled to be paid for his trouble and expense ? He need not take charge of it, and ft se< ms that if He does so he must loftlfc «nly>to.tho/graf~ itude and good feebfla of -the owifer lor reward. far. 6. What if a reward be offered ? There is no doubt that any one who, seeing the has the iili$sfn& article 111' his possession when the reward is offered, or has with­ held the property in the expectation that a reward "iouid be offered, the rulfl is the opposite. Health aad Strength. When you wish If renew yomr%»lth ; when the v&rionf otftaiiof life ifr weakened kyijaptr raftering wnd liitrweftlieileek tuedicihe tmS will net in yerfeot harmony with the entire sys­ tem. Use a medicine that will build up without, tearing down. Use a medicine that will create, a healthy appetite. Use a ntedieine that will strengthen every part of the body and remove all blood impurities, thus giving di«ease no op­ portunity for reaction. Such a remedy is Dr. Onysott's Yellow Dock and Baroap&rilla. It is a true Rtrengthener. a mire reviver, a perfect en- richer of the blood. It contains notuing hurt­ ful to tbe moat delicate constitution. It s prin­ cipal lngrodieitsvare 1'eUow Bock, BaB-xaparilLa, Junipw,' Bucku# CVitfaya Baflk iJd welery. Try oi£ bottle. Its effect is charming. Pre-Kmptlons. The pre-emption law requires, in ad­ dition to residence and cultivation, that payment for the land at the Government price shall lie made^^aid on this acoouut is not so liberal in its' operations. The Kre-emptioii privilege m re«H*tctcd to eads of families, widows or single per­ sons ovef the age of 21 years who are citizens or who have declared their in­ tention to become citizens. It also ex­ cludes persons who own 820 acres of land in tftoy•{Stlnte/fr Tfen-itopy, ajnd those who ieavw theft- own tend in the sfimo State or Territory to move on to Gov­ ernment Jmula.~ .The cigiit of a settler attaches from the time settlement is made, and when he files his declaratory statement the ^jlate ff such seftiimieHt must lie given. | The^ declaratory at|te- ment is a preliigiiiuiry pfrper tijpfc must be filed wifli the land officers, and the fee required to be paid is $2. It is required to be filed within three months from date of settlement if the land was surveyed, or within three montiis after suryey, 41 the land waf uy- surydyea atftlie time of * settlement.- Thirfr ytofttBp thtere^ter are allowed ill which to "prove up" and pay for the land. Actual residence for a period of six months at least is required, with cul­ tivation and improvement of the land, and the proof submitted must be simi­ lar to 'that required under the home­ stead law. claim, nor is there any established amount of labor that is required to be performed. The sufficiency of residence and improvement is a question of fact to be decided from the circumstances of each case; and the Government only re­ quires satisiactory proof that the claim­ ant has acted in good faith and done what he was reasonably expected to do. This is so under both tne homestead and pre-emption laws. MIL JOHN N. MOÎ XIU.AND, of AshlkUd, Kv., writer: " I will say of what sickness 1 was cured. My back ached HO, I could hardly bend it. My kidneys were weak and inactive. My ' liver and (stomach gave sue great pain. My bowels were soinetimef loowrnw M0Uiet!^4 con­ stipated. I was vei>_- nerv ous, 1 cojM net\ sleep well nights. weffe tawTtbfe,' My memory was bad. My whole system was run down and my blood seemed poisoned. 1 t6ok no pleasure "in eatiog. I fouud no joy in living. Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Ssriapa- nllat cured me of all my distress. I think It is the best medic ne m the world." The Development of Taste. In the natural growt4r-rrf the* •world, taste has been rapidly developed, and the people of all nations are now produc­ ing each its own peculiar nud wonderful treasures. Who can/remember cp (de­ scribe them ? Who tan tell the extent of the riches or the beauty of the golden, jeweled ornaments now admired aud worn by a thousand million people? • What pen can descrilie all that is seen in cultivated gardens and^parks«dorn«ff with trees, shrubs, plants, ana flowers ? Where can we learn, in lx>oks or else­ where. the names of all that is bountiful that blossoms from the whole earth ; all that is beautiful that the brush produces on canvas ; all tha^ the weaver's shuttle and loom. priidjuce { all that the skilled * haiuln tl<e <jal,ver on wood, stona, and marble »ri)dik*o ; Jnjll that the eofnbined colors of the xahlbkjw have produced, as' shown in fabrics, of silk and satin, and cotton and wool ; all that is beautiful in architecture, and in the adornments of the world's moat - IMofrned eatheflrate, and beautiful in all its famous kingly palaces ? But life is too short to search out and see all that is beautiful. We can only get a glimpse, now and then, at some of the world's greatest treasftire?. The most favored season for such sight­ seeing is Christmas. -- Thr Independent. u Ta more brfy# to live than to dis.** There­ fore don't ft slfeMCohgh dsfrelops it­ self into consumption, but secure s bottle of Dr. Ball's Cough Syrup at the email outlay of with a flame. My stove closes airtight I let them burn slowly without flame. I get nil the heat there is in them. * The stove is large, with an immense radiat­ ing surfaee. Jtdoeati't have to be very hot" j ! "Nffw.P saitlMq Ruggles, "five such bundles a day keep my sitting room warm, or 600 bundles for the winter. I can bind np (500 bundles of corn stalks in two days myai UL , I oouldu't ehpp little foot which h%s suspended its move­ ment during the delivery of this inter­ rogatory, resumes its occupation. Adel­ ine's gas** ia still fastened upon the pretty face that looks slyly down, Itrat the smile has fi d. - No answer comes. ; ' A moment longer,1 and the loot-taps cease ; one or two irresolute movements of the body, and then the white arms, gleaming ctat of the loose sleeves, are around his neck, and the brown locks and the golden beared are mingled, while the little head goes ('own ou hia shoulder amid a storm of sobs.--Chi­ cago Tribune. . On TWnf lMif Trteik The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., will send tUgr£lscU-o»Voltaie £«lt« aod other F.les- trio Anpnspcqs tm ir s-tl for thirty dave to any perwfignictad with MerVous Del" Vital tv ana kindred troubles, ootnplete restoration of vigor and manhood. Address at above without delay. N. k-So risk is inoorrsd, as thirty Ian' trial Is allowed. fatarrii of the Blarfdcn Stinging, smarting, irritation of tbe urinary passage*, diseased oiBCliatgo-, cured by lluciiu- pioba. $1 at druggists. Prepaid by express, 6 tor £5. E. i>- Wi;i ls Jersey City, M. J. ashes for the wood to warm this stoy* ip a we«$C Then in the spring I have a load of strohg ashes for my w]ie|t field, w^ilo my neighbors fave to «it up the wftnd ocftn stalks in the spring to get them away from the harrow. It makes me smile when I hear about those idiots up ih Minnesota who have fifty-acre corn fields and still go cold or buy coal. Why, I would rather burn corn stalks |han cut .maple %ood vithin sight <J| the CURED A 30 YEARS' IKVALID. Xo. 4'22 Eutaw Baltimore, Maryland. --rDr. B. V. PIEKCE, Buffalo, N. ¥.: Dear Sir-- Ky wife was a hopeless invalid for nearly twen­ ty yeara. Yonr "Favorite Prescriptionn has cured her. Gratefully, R. T. MCOAT. FITTON was in great force. I got him to refresh my memory with his story of A Dublin professor, who said tohS« el§ss: meriir no in tlh? urotld. WM. <!. DKWFR, Merchant, of Bowling Organ, Vt, wri'es Apr j 4tu, 1881. fh I h« wants C^okn^w that ilw LI~NG BALSAM HLAS CI:HEI> KSS MOTHER OF fViwgrnt*. T1«>N a!U*r toe Un ha<1 g h*-r up incur He others KNOWING her CHSM? HRV© RAK- N tiu? TTMIWM and iieen cured; hw thinks ni! m t«<l should fti« it atrial. Im MI HEMTH, Dentist,of Cinc^nnaH. was tbonffht to be m STAOKS OF CONSI'MFTIOK wa^induced by his* Irienri- to try Allan's l.tinjr KaUam a^ter the for- miiln «h«wn him. We b ye mt letter that it at >mcm cur^a h* cough, and da! hewaa sb e to r^ame baa pr -t oe. Wu. A GRAHAM A Co., Whcfcaale Dnunrft«. Tm flii*, Oaio, wr t'-t asof theci-nof Mitts a^ Pr^eoiaik,a well-known c t sen, who haa lie-N AFFL'ctfti wi«b BROS. CUITlS in iia wont to m for twelve year* Baiaam«oi*d him, «ait baa nnfe? utban,of! ----AS A1SO Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup, AU WwiSiH el tkeThrMt,LoRgaaaC Palutaaarjf Bi|nii C. S. nraarist, at Oak);. KJJ, wtHm Out tk* l«d think theie i® no reniedjr ecjuit to Luog fialWi for CROUP and WHiMiPlKf? fXlUGH. ibUity, Lost guaranteeing IEW AMI rnOM'G V.l KEU OF iE*rr cs |jr tGGB roriTUIHja ^ Masunotu Pearl* MiMcnnm B nam (Amt-m. *nl, BoUs, WUto Klepaant, Beamy « ilubroti, and otfean. Hw.» •r prtoe-l.Bt. BKN. F. HOOVKB, O^tesba**. 10. KEM'l!GD FKOJf I>KATR. WUlluo J .Oouahlin.of 8om«rriIf«, MIH., uty*: lath* (Ul of 1(78 I wm taken with btoadlng c-f tti* lmicm, fol- lawad br>MTer»eo«eh. I lo«t my appotiu »nd flaah, sn<i w»« Confined to uij b«d. In 187" I «IU> sdinitted to the hospital. The doctor* uid I had a hole in m; hing u bift a« a half dollar. At one time a report went aronnd that I ww dead. I (>n up hop*, but a friend told me of Da. WILLIAM HALL"* BALSAM FOR THE LCXM. I rt a bottle, when, to mj rarprUe, I oommenoed to feel bet» tor, and to-dar I fee! better Uiaa for three yean paat. 1 write thia hoping everr one afB cted With diaeaaed lnnc* will take Da WILLIAM HALL'* BALSAM, and becon- Tlnoed that coNstJMPTios CA» BB CURED. I can poel- ms it has done more (ood than all the otlter m«di- Sm> 1 have taken ainoe mj aiokneaa. Mcthers will find itasnfeand SUTO remedy to (ftTe thab " children wen iifflict d with t;n>up. It is hansless ts the most delicate cMM! It contal t no Opium in aa| M IVRcMnnmM by Phy«'riaa«, Wlalitfn aaf ; K arwft. Li fact, oi- e\ who ha* g ven it a jaurf trial. It Sit«r FaSS« tu iarii>( Kollcf. '• '•'•if: ' As ill EXPECTORANT it lias Ha EwL SOU) BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS. FREE 10« HFXFCTIOm tar Auto«ra»k, Aibnnis, 1 s>; Tnnapamit Carda.1 pk {pk Kacort Oarda.1 pfcrifcUkg b'oM «.• Act i met a* Ptctnrea, 1 Star Pu'iie.3 Chemical l*nxsk>s. and an «cht-p^a>| literary paper on trial 3 months. All the above Mot om ; FnnOar»1s tton Carde, UTninwifp of F,b' rece.pt ot lie.in c jrer |wrt>(r, Ac. SDAI. * OO, B<«t >n. PRACTICAL BOOKS FOR FARM AND OARDKII<;; "-. . ,.i American ltotanist and Florist. By AIJPHOSSO WOOD. ' Hanuftl ot Scientific a crfcaltnro^ ** By E. M. PBNDLKTON. ^ Either of th« torogoiiut wiil te sent to »nj BB' tî id. on rece nt of R A S. BARNKK * \X).L j K Fsbuaaaa, IU k IU WutaH St, Haw York. * | ̂ the wefst CH - jnsnres comfo |«blert<*i>;«ffoctiio«prswheiealo:her»ifalL 41 lir»al conrirtres the fm\.f *•"/>: i cat. Price oOc 11.00,«f Umsprii'H or 1>\-mail. S-'inpV • FI om ami). l)a.H. bCHIFFMAN.St. I-aul. 1 l-' I'll! I'llU mate Ntw Blooii, aiul wiU oooipk'telv obanRC the bU>od iu th«t it entiro Ristpm in thrvo months. Any who!:., , * will tako our )iiU «•»<*)! itlf^ht '••'in 1 to 14 weeks mar 1m. r»stori'il to somul health, it Mich a thiiip be v^-'siblo. Sold ever' where or sent by mail for ^ letter stami*. I. JOHNSON & CO., lltiHtsn. .HUM., V fonn. rly Hoiiuar. ,hr. from which, says Fitton, his pupils forked out the conclusion that chemis- try an«i the Earl of Cork were first oousms.--Is'iit r of Sir Chan. LyeU. I TO CflTSWHlVB^ <a> aifcSS #ith wwlk lungH, *f blood, bronclntin or kindrad affeotioaa of thro«t or langg, ^end two stamps for Dr. R. V. Pieroe'a irtsaS.wo on these maladies. AdOross tbe doctst, Bufltdo, is. y. WHEN Jay tiould secured control of the Iron Mountain railroad he cat dovm the wagegi of ull "the iBeh employed, opa jftrnow to hire wntelimen rffld offer rewards for the detection of dis­ contented laborers who set fir&- to freight-houses and wood-piles, and dis­ place switches. It was a pour move for econfaf- _J_ I I ; , ( 8ri»-r* SMITH b<ing ip, Ifsfhysfbian advised lil« to "take a walk upon at* empty Itouiach." '• Upon whose?asked Sydney. 8tifl tielter slept to take would be the purchase of Dr. R. Y. Pierce's " Golden Medical Discovery " and "Pleasant Purcative PelletB," which are espe­ cially valuable to tho#e wlio are obliged to lead •edentary lives, or who are afllk-ted *1711, -- . .w ckron^dî e^pe of̂ he «toĵ Lch^oi| bowels ̂ By MKK/.OFINTI," tlie wonflorfnl Italian linguist, who knew sixty-four aud talked forty-eight languages, turned his atten­ tion to language because, when a young priest, he found a foreign sailor dying, who wanted to confess, but could find no priest who could understand him. Kn v )%«*»»» PORTIANK, Mich., Aug. 25, 188L H. H. WAUXEU & Co.: airs--I most heartily r«oommend your 8afe Kidney and Liver Cnr® to aJl sufferers from urinary difficulties. I ows my present existence to it« use. J. & MATHEWS. ht is a singular faot that one of the earliest English theaters had a monk, Oeofrey, for its manager. v Wht suffer longer from the torment of an selling back ? Kidney-Wort will care yon. The most fault any one has to lind with Rhode Island is that its milestones are.Jtoo far apart Eiis'S? DP BULL'S COUGH S Y R U P WIIIOM OMBPODBD or pm* 00D LIVEBI " HD LIME. T» ( aiikMaptlvtir -Uwnv hiivc hren Imopv tojtivp t'l.t^rf^ttm .nt n f.it'orof the n*> of " »'» i'urr ('ml r.ii •r Oil and / Kxxerie CP liif proved It to l>e a viiltnble r-'ine fy tnr Con'mni'tion, Afithina, Diphiheri .and all di*« s •« of tho Ttiront nnd I >11 wa. M.ititit:i<:t;ired < n!y by A. B- WlLBOIt, CUimist, Boston. So <i by a4i^ra>y«i«. SIIOIITIIAND Pfrfpc(f4. 2fin wort's a m'nnte. Olr- ralat6|«^|«SMilM. U. W. Dtthildce, T .uneat^. Pa. A BOOK on the proper treatment of the Threat and 21.f<ui)«a0>*] ' -- WATCHES weak In mar own tows. Teratt and oulflt fOv fraa. Addraaa H. HilXItt k Co., Poi-tiand. Ila qjtrcrs JOHNSON'S ANODYNE I.IM1MKNT positively i revent this terrible disease, and will tivelv cure nine eases out of ten. Information wiU save mauy lives, sent fri»e bv mall. Don't delay momp"4, Prrrcntic.;; is better than cure. 1.8. Ji BUN 4 Co.. Boston, Muat>„ foruMsrly Baagor, " OTer Half MIIUm ACTM Tor Bale by the 'maR.R.LandU Mir Rspkit. lows. •j.. i s; nl 11 r t hJ i t. 'Hi' G Hi L A1 FAM 11_ >' ^ f* IV \ . , A cN-ftr;; 1 6..SAl.T MF G.CO,Phi; t H lltuttor^l J>.1(JS State St .Chicago, ftt A WTCEK. •ttftfita. fUadajrathomeaaallytnade. Coatly •ddnaa THDJE A CO., Ausuta, Ma. cttatags# Aainw, Btaaaaia Aawrieaa VauhCe. J>iiwka>ih,ra. merehrera. Oaialaoe ftea. •raat Wan. Oaa Werka. ritubenh. IV 11 Warranted. Ei>rMa nu, 111., Doc. 16, 188L dl'istiV to, ill our ensto- 'act,' itkii-raiU every bottlt; ; and are glad to nay it gives entire satisfaction. We think it the best cough remedy in the market. / JJROFTNLTACK BBOS. Hopkln« Mowerw. We call the attention of our reader* to the advertisement, in this isgue. of the Hopkins Mower, which has come rapidly to the front, aud is popular wherever known. EVEBY HOME should contain Eilert's Extract of Tar and Wnd Cherry. Ttiis «elebrated remedy will sun ly cure Colds, Coittha, Crotjp, Catarrh, Cbpsnuiption and »ll Ifonc.iial complaihts. Common'Cold; neglt ctedf ait the c|use of one- hali the d atlis. Don't wait for sickness to come, but this dav take home a bottle of Eilert's Ex­ tract of Tar aud Wild Cherry, for it may save the life of a loved one, when delsv would be death. Sold by all Druggists. * • + f %•--fnr~ 1 MEVSMAN S PEPTONIZED BEEF TONIC, tbe only preparation of beef containing its entire nutri­ tious properties. It contains blood-making, force-generating and life sustaining proper ties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debihtv: also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether remit of eihaustion, nervou* prostra­ tion, overwork or acnte disease, ptrtimilurly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. C^s>-. well, Hazsrd & Co., Hfw, lofk. Sold ty drtiggists. ' . i *> - NATCBAI, petroleum, deprived of its color and disagreeable odor without distillation and the aid of acids or alkalit s, is what the Carbine is mads fiosi. • Ari now improved and perfected it u a beautiful preparation, and performs all ia claimed for it as a hair restorar. UNCLE SAM'S CONDITION POWVEB prevents "disease, punfief the blood, impreveS the lite, gives a smooth and glos-y coat of bairand keeps the animal in good condition. It cures Distemper. Coughs. Colds, Fevers and most of the diseases to wliioli Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Hogs and Poultry are subject, and, slioui^. be ntted oy every one owiiiuii' orhavtog the«4r<|of Stock, gold by ail Brugglatd. FBAZEB AXLS OREASE continues to lead all , large majority. For asle by Competitors, by alar sitantea. Ask fori (Ck. (QA per dar at home. Baniptea worth It free. 9010 vaU Addieaa STINSON A Oo., Portland, Ma, VnBNfl MFU " r°° to learn Telesraphy la a IU91IB mi.ri few months and be cert iin of a all. uaU«|, addre^a VAI.BSTINK BROS., Janesvllle. Wto AA£|¥i * MONTH -AGENTS WANTE0-M bssl OTONE'n IIAKOT Rl.itf'KHKItRY. hnrdiest In eult'V ti.in. For description and audraaa I. N. bi'ONF. Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. Good priest paid for fralt-growant' iui>;estoaenafru t>p ck».'eciic«lar to. N.I).BATTKKSON,Buffalo,N,T. Wi,A PIUNTS took" and '* flow to Procou ENGINES^ K.S. k A. P. LACKY, MRI Solicitor*, WaahinKton, D. O. Oar "Scientific Record H«»4 Book" and flow, to Procora Patents" tnt^frm*. ' .. [Tracti'm rf Portablc)t<m nurm.N^wMill k Plan, 'tation Foe pricen.eta. write TBE A^ULTMA* k TAYL-OR CO. MBMMMK II.M <iTR %TFft i'.tTA f.OOl'R FI8KE. Beantyof Hebnm, Mnmin itU Pearl and Lady W;.ah- in t'<n.$2.5tl |>er hu.; Whit«' Kleiihsnt, igl; on • pound eiieh $l.by muil. JJray and Ozier Willow and LonilMtdy p.ipliir cultin .s, by mail, -Jm:. per 1U0; Weepjnii Wdlow, V£-cbilT" "i"; CONSUMPTION! I have a positive remedy lor the above disease; by itei •ae thonaandiof caw ol tbe worst kind »nd ot loii£ •tandiiu; l ave beet! cured. Indeed, to strong ia my fwitn In its efficacy that I will send TWO BOTTLES !• ItKK, tojeother witu ••> VALUABLK TREATISK on ttiis dis- #ae« to any sufferer. Give Express and P O. aiMreae. BR. T. A. SLOCIUM, lsl Paul bt. New Y<>:k. PAGEfvTS WANTED FOR THE ICTORIAL HI^TORywraWnRLn Km^raclnir full jind n nttiBntlc accnnnt.i of evmy n*. ti n *'f ancient .ind modern t. me-, nnd inolnri n» » tife-.w r lory of tbe ri»» "nd tall f the l«r»ek nnd Romania, Kmpires, the middle afre*. the cioaodea, tbe feudal tem. tne ref r-n ttion, the discovery and settlement of~ . the New World. eU\. etc. t It oon'atnsHT" tine historical enKTavin.es, and Istharii ? m<. at complete H ahny of th« Wor d ever pub' she&ttl. K 8end fo spec men p ie s nnd ox ra term* to Atrents. Address NATIONAL PUBLISHING C0.,Cto cago, " BlOUm PROLIFIC" COR* ^ •as produced over 110 batbela per aere; «ioaa twe MCI sir wrs <<n a stalk; one stalk had 7 KM. ; moat ptod wh ' Ot m in the world, till) gtuina, 8®c. •, S,0M gnfaia, paid; bushel, $S. "MtMMOTH Vim POTATO Will yield #>• nnd 80S bu^ieSs per arfa. Meat papi Potato in the Union ; new hoi ow. smooth, maa 7, excellent keepers; pown to • fast for tbe boaa. 1 It.. Iks.,(l prepaid; pe W. $1; half buahei.SI 7S M fw in prizes to para in sera, and SBe.lnaai Particolars and eircul«i-3 of other aaada free MW: this w ll not Kpnear aealn. k. B. TEAGARBEN k SONS. Davwpart, Iowa. CHOICEST WORKS of the MOST POPttUlt AUTHORS^ THREE CENTS EACH If1" Aak Your Sfwxleakr for The fc L1ISUBI HOUR LIBRARY !l Enek Xaaiker Cnatalaa as |- Compiete FiKi^Class Novel bjr a CKf.KBRA TED AMERICA X or gVKOI'EA S A UTSOK J9o. Tlw1 follow»nir oumb^ra are now rpsdv: Priem. L F.noch Aixien and Other Poem*. By Alfred fact* j nyson .Sct«. I t. Ketr bution ; <»r, Tb - MjBtejry of the MULL Bjr I Blotint 8. Captain Alick'n Lesley By If. T. C*ld * Seta. 4. Blue Rye.-' and Uoiden Hitir HyAnoitfTbomu.S^i. ; ft. B 11 ton. By George Kliot 3eU. (. Htmy Arkeli. By Mrs Henry WihkI ...Sets. ( 9, The i^aurel Bueit. By Mutock Seta.. ; your n«ws:iea!er for The Leisare Hour I«>btm 1 and t-ike n<> others If he hat* n«>t k t it, h« net it ' for you. It oost« leti tb^n luilf the price ot ottwr linilir public tious. and is nut excelled i>y .uy. "JUaT LIT MI SHOW TOII" DK, t-'OOTTS HAND-BOOK OF HEALTH HINTS AND KEAD¥ ItEC'lPBS. Worth IflS. Coat B5fc Bjr theaotheref >ruu Hon tiL«" an -Mwii COAAOX SE«SB." „ „ "1 »)Q PAGKs of Advice alioat I>ailjr I iO llabita. aud lwc:pp« for Cure of COIIIIIIOD Aliments; a *a.uable Book of PENSIOJ An dua AM. KOI.llIERN wi holly or P 1 ae man .ili^Ma ab ed bgr wounds, injuries or diaei se reenvpS w cna tr. eted ;n tlie t.T.S. m-ivu-h in line of duty, reusii m. at* l»aid for Kmsof finger or toe, chronic di.tribea. dicei^eeot urt;n. heart or »je®. rupture, varictiee ve n». totAl Of psntal deafness, etc. Widows, Orphan Children and JJtipeiident PureDle entitled. Thoueunds of pensonoia are ' ntit ed to Ificria. tJ Kates. Arglrctfi and t'lnimo taken npand collected. For blanks and infi>rma- fcoti address It. € . WKIKIIT, IN I IANAPOLIS, lM> Reference, Indianapolis (Indiana) Natknal Bank. Eeft-ienoe for «wr/family, tmly '£S t«4 The lland-biHik wntau»ehaptewon U>'- ? . - cleue for at! eeasoius. Common . eose m. "-j i:i#§ Common IIv«ienicCiifatlvcMeasure*, Kuacka Wortli tLnowing, Itinla on KatUtng. S on Nursing Uie Sick, ou Kwersencks, to- getber with soma of the Private Ponnul* 01 l>r. KiKira. and other i^ysicuuis Wfh . . „3, repute, slid forprepartng food for Invallua. * $$$•? ' * " • «4-AU».NTS wETSD. „ , , Murray Hill Book Publishing C* ̂ ̂ 12$ k.m ssbb StasB.' haw Yoaa on * 'i TRUTH SDsmfb P Wifcst-1 for "D c«e?s »««. rcioy nf eves, and Iwh <»f h*i», wii I Cv* Hcto&b of T'-ur future tfr w«f«. p&ehet&f, --J cteJ vitb un:« an l of &e94'Oi:. _ C.1I.O. •MrHEN WRJT1HO f» pkaw hj jaa a (• tkla Palter. A eomttmmtUm of fw- toccide of IroHfTtruviam BarfcoxdnaifkMiMto a txHctaile farm. A* onltf prrparationofiratm JfAafMWtwf Narferalk* I teeth, m eharrirristie of \otht-riron prfparatiom. SKXtliEMEN: I HAVE USED Hit. llABTESfi iBOJt TOMC In ii.V prafjlw, anfj,1*"'9* twenty-Sve vears in medieiru", huve never^pnnd anjthlnp^t^ the results that Du. aARTKB S iitON 'fasiodou>. In many caw s of Nervous poverlBhed condition of the I Uasea that have baffled some able remedy. I prescribe it as DB. IXAKTKE'S IBON TONIC _ ST It ffioememlorto the blood? natural healthfiU ton* to tAe digestive organs and nervous system, making U applicable to General MWfy, XOM of Appe­ tite, Prostration of Vital Powers and ImpoteneeJ | •aaMM«aarna£aa»WH DB. /mm/c. M|Ufi| Ko 8 TO ADTEKTIKKKS. stnulon, Femi'-le 1 >l.<eaaea. Dyspetisla, and an lm mmm

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