Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 May 1887, p. 10

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'l- * t SUPPLEMENT. WEDNESDAY, MAT 11, 1887, Railroad Time Table. $n and after Monday, June tl,| Train* will fi|a Mcllenry Station as below: QOTHO BOUTS. Lake (isneva Passenger...... Lake Geneva Express Lake Geneva Freight Lake Geneva Passenger raoitfo <roaTn. Lake Geneva Freight .. . Lake Seneva Passenger ..f:M A. M , .8:28 " . *:<)» P. H •• U>c Jtoneva Express. • •11 a. M ,10:«7 * .4:5*r. v « Geneva Pa«*en*rr * Stops only to leave Passenger*. B. Brn, Aw l[«n«arr n^^fil Doing Hfe Dut^i X 'tw Everyone has heard of the tttfitag- man, whose business it was to keep order in the meeting-house, but few of our readers ever saw him. Nowadays no one is supposed to need watching in BUch a place, partly because the chil­ dren too generally stay at home, per­ haps, and partly because many things are now looked upon as quite innocent Which formerly would have been, ac­ counted sacrilegious. ^ Here is an anecdote which illustrates how, in the olden time, one tithing- man at least magnified his office. General H was the great man of Hie town. His daughters were sent to Boston to be educated, and one of them came home with a Boston lover, who Is now a merchant in New York. He "Wipnt to church with her. But Boston manners and New Eng­ land country manners and ideas were not the same. When the hymn was given out, Mr. IU--- found it, and handed the book to Miss H----; she bowed, and took it. The old tithing- man looked and frowned, but did not qaite like to offend General H . But he thought it over and over, and his conscience accused him of being a ••respecter" of persons, and that he thought a very fearful sin. Therefore, ne took his seat in the af­ ternoon resolved to do his duty fear­ lessly, whatever 'might be the result to him. The hymn was given out. Mr. R found it, and handed the book to Miss H ; she bowed and took it Rap, rap, rap, went the old man's Stick. Then pointing to Gen. H 's pew, "You, you--I mean Gen. H 's gal and her Boston beau! None of jur carryings on here, I say."-- Companion. A White "Colored" Person. Pf.'i." ••• Medical circles and • curiosity mong­ ers generally are excited over a singu­ lar case of an Ethiopian changing her skin which has recently come to light here. Her name is Nora Brown, and she is 40 years of age. She weighs 240 pounds, and has never been sick. Borne seven years ago her wrists be­ gan to turn white. The change spread 4tp her "&¥ms, and attacked her body With the exception of her neck and fin­ ger-tips. She is Aow entirely white. She says it never troubled her beyond a little soreness and itching. She was born of jet-black parents, and has had eleven children, all of them blacks. There is some Indian blood in her. Her complexion is very clear and she has red cheeks. Her head bears the •egro wool, short and kinky. Her lace is of the negro type, but not pro­ nouncedly so. Seen upon the streets §|he would be taken for a middle-aged JBerman woman. No physician has Jbven been able to find in her any sign «f disease. She is not an Albino. The facts are vouched for by Col. John S. #ord, better known as "Rip," in irhose family Nora has been a servant. , is further vouched for by several of respectability who have Jtnown her for years. Taken all in all ihe case is a singular and most com­ plete one. Doctors who have exam* led her say that the change bears no Relation to the milk skin or Albinoism. -~Sa» Antonio ( Tex.) Letter. A New York lady who wears a beav­ er hat tellB a correspondent how she Seeps the nap so smooth and shiny. the says: "First brush the hat thor-ughly, so as to get all the libers Itraightened out in one direction. m*hen take a silk handkerchief and Ijjour into the middle of it about a half itoaspoonful of salad oil. Rub the handkerchief in your hands until the >il is thoroughly distribute* through |t. Then go over your hat time after ime with the silk thus prepared. Lay "le handkerchief aside, and use it every day upon the hat, without, how- •fever, replenishing the oil more than " once a week. The hat in this way will be kept in perfect order, and even an wetting will not disturb it. fjwdwary. A Story of Van Djrck. & Van Dyck's first visit to England, under the protection of the "evan- Selist of the art-world," Lord Aran-el, was not very productive, nor, we may be sure, very satisfactory to the young and ambitious painter, who was emulative of the magnificence of Ru­ bens. The reign of Cornelius Van Jansen was approaching the end, but the times were not yet ripe. In the spring of 1621 Van Dyck was again in Ant­ werp, and in the autumn he started for Italy, stimulated to this memora­ ble enterprise by the generous coun­ sel of Rubens. It was this joyous setting out from Antwerp that led to the historic ad­ ventures at Saventhem--as charming and idyllic as the sentimental voyager •could desire. The story suggests a pretty picture; the gay ana chivalrous painter on his high horse, the gift of ; Rubens, with all the world before him ; like an open paradise, riding into Se- 1 venthem, and falling a victinwlo the beauty of Anna Van Ophem. The episode is like a page from the "Wan- derjahre" of Wilhelm Meister. It is a pity to spoil so delightful a story, but, as M. Guiffrey observes, with the philosophy of a critic, it is better to know the truth than to cling to error, however sweet and alluring. Van Dyck did not, for his love's sake, present two pictures to the village church, but received a good round sum for the "Holy Family and a "St. Martin," on which last we had a rem­ iniscence at the Grosyenor in Mr. Holford's "St. Martin Dividing His Cloak." By November 20 he was in Genoa, and visited Venice, Rome, Pal­ ermo, living at Rome with Cardinal Bentivoglio, whose portrait he painted --the picture now at the Pitti palace, and one of the glories of Florence. Magaxine of Art. Eastern apples are retailing at ten a pound in California. Mid Japanese DelicaoM®. Walking through the Chinese mar­ ket in Saiv Francisco, says a writer in Youth's Companion, one sees some very queer articles of food offered for sale; small pats of soft cheese varnished am­ ber brown and stamped with Chinese characters; well-peeled chestnuts, with tiny slices of white cocoanut wrapped in heat little cornucopias of glossy cabbage leaf; forty kinds of dried nuts, fruits (whole or sliced), roots, and barks. Then there are living turtles and frogs; fowls and fish, alive, freshly dressed, and smoked or dried; meats half cooked in the carcass; wreaths of dried oysters strung on bamboo splints; abalones, like black moilols for dolls' hats; shro<)s of whit« cuttlefish, and a hostof other edible curiosities. A stranger might suppose that they were simple curiosities, like the ancient sticks of barber-pole candy exhibited in the windows of a country grocery, or like the ham elaborately decorated with geometrical puzzles in jelly,--to be admired, but on no account to be carved. Not at all. They are re­ garded as eatable, and are eaten. In fact, the Chinese and Japanese eat everything that comes out of the sea. All the fishes are good to their taste, and are caught with great skill, seaweeds of several sort are sent far into the interior, to be used in thick­ ening soups, gravies, and puddings, and are highly prized because they give a relishing flavor of salt, which is a luxury beyond the reach of most Chinese peasaiits. This use of seaweed is almost iden­ tical with the very common use of Irish moss by Americans in making toothsome dishes. But, indeed, fishes and seaweed are eaten the world over, but surely no other people eat the tide- flat animals swallowed by the natives of Yesso. For example, the most simply organized of the class of ani­ mals to which shells belong are called ascidians. They grow sometimes sin­ gly, sometimes in clusters, and are rooted immovably to the sandy bot­ tom, subsisting on what the currents may bring to them. In Japan there is an ascidian (Cyn­ thia) which is as large as one's1 nst It has no shell whatever, and is a gray, flabby, tulip-shaped sac, supported on a short stalk. But in spite of its for­ bidding appearance, the Japs pickle it in vinegar and use it as a food. Another animal growing between the high and low watermarks on the Japanese coast is a mudworm called Sabella. It occupies a hard, limy tube of its own making, and gets its food, when high tide comes up over its hid­ ing place, by thrusting out a head bushy with tentacles, and sucking in currents of water loaded with minute particles of nutriment. Out of this wriggling creature the shore people make a soup which is true vermicelli, not a paste imitation of little worms, and it is said to' taste as badly as it smells. A better dish is made from the soft interior parts of the sea-urchin, or echimus, large numbers of which lurk along the rocky shores of the Japanese archipelago and the coast of China. I nave seen the Haidas and other coast Indians of the Pacific shores of British America devouring raw sea- urchins with great gusto, crushing them in their fists, sucking out the orange-colored cluster of eggs, which constitute the only edible part, amounting to one or two tablespoon-* fuls, and then throwing the horny easel aside. The minute eggs taste much like oysters, and have been a favorite food of the natives of the bleak coast of Alaska for ages. On many of the islands of the Al­ eutian archipelago you may see spots close by the beach where the grass is always noticably greener ana more luxuriant than elsewhere. When the surface soil is removed at these spots there is found underneath a layer of what seems to be greenish sand over­ lying the stony or clayey soil of the rest of the island. It is not sand, however, but the powdered remnants of sea eggs that have been thrown underfoot during unnumbered feasts. These heaps are often two or three feet in thickness, and cover several acres, They were probably forming for more than one thousand years, and throughout the layer may be found some interesting stone and bone relics of the race which mad* them. _ fjondon Needlewomen* The women engaged in the shirt trade are to the full as ill off, as badly paid, and as much to be pitied as were their sisters in the day when Hood sang their sorrows and sufferings The woman who is solely dependent upon slop shirtmaking starves rather than lives by it. * She soon becomes in very deed The seamstress, lean and weary and wan, With only the ghost of garments on, who, In poverty, hunger, and dirt,. Sews at onoe with a double thread A shroud as well as a shirt. Happily, many of the shirt hands are not wholly dependent upon the earnings of their needle. Numbers of the married women of the poorer classes work at the shirt trade with a view to supplementing 'the scanty wa­ ges of their husbands, and the addi­ tional income thus gained, though it may not be more than three or four shillings a week, sensibly increases the comfort of the household. _ Con sidering the wretched prices paid for There was domethltic Uokia|. John Stetson, while talkihg tfo other day to a few friends in Uielotljr of the Fifth Avenue Theatre, told the following story: * "I had a colored man about my Boston theatre," said-he, "who was, I think, the laziest nigger I ever en­ countered. I stood him as long as I could, but when he reached the point of sleeping all the morning and dozing all the afternoon, I had to get rid of him. He came to me a few days after his discharge and asked to be taken on again. 1 refused him on the score of principle. Then he begged hard for a recommendation. " 'You just give me a riccomend, boss, and I won't arsk for nothing more.' "Well, I finally consented, and y should'have seen his eyes glisten a? handed him the following: " 'To whom it may conceyi: The bearer, John Smith, is fully compe­ tent to perfprm any duties for which he is qualified.' . - - "A day or two later he came back looking rather crestfallen. " 'I tuk dat paper to Lawyer Blank,' said he, 'and he luk at it so, and den he luk at" it so, and den he scratch he head'--and the darkey imitated a man perplexed in the extreme--"den.Mistah Stetson, he tole me to brung dat ric­ comend back to you and arsk you to be So kind as to write just heah what my kalificashuns is.' " 'And you want me to dothatP' 1 asked. " 'If you'll be so kind, Mr. Stetson.' "Well, I took the letter, and found that the lawyer had written at the bottom: " 'What are the qualifications re­ ferred to above?' " I wrote underneath: " 'I have been trying to find out for eighteen months, ana except a ca­ pacity for sleep, haven't discovered any. Suppose you try now.' "I was never troubled with that darkey again."--New York Tribune. P f z TT? 7 , < I •••hpr •m Boston Repartee. While the beagles were being ex­ amined, a big loutish fellow leaned over the railing and compared every dog led up with his own dog Jumbo at home, of course always to the disad­ vantage of the candidate. Nobody paid any attention to him until a beagle appeared, in which a woman at Tils elbow had some per­ sonal interest. "That dog can't take no prize," he observed, critically, for the benefit of the public generally; "he don't begin to be as well built as Jumbo." This was more than feminine nature could stand, and the woman turned upon him with a sudden vehemence. "I should think." she said, with bit­ ter scorn, "you'd hire a hall and have a dog show of your own. You and Jumbo'd be all the dogs needed. " A nice young schoolmistress of .Cor- nellsville, Pennsylvania, had among her pupils a bad boy whom she at­ tempted to punish. She found he was too big for her, but her young man happened to be in before school was out, she asked his aid, and with it thrashed the boy. Now the boy's pa threatens to sue the teacher's young man for assault and battery. AYER'S Cherry Pectoral No other complaint* are so insidious In theii attack aathoae affecting the throat and lungs: none so trifled with by the majority of suffer­ ers. The ordinary cougU«or cold, resulting perhaps from a trilling or unconscious ex­ posure, is often but the beginning of a fatal sickness. AVEB'S CHERRY PECTORAL, lias we>i proven its efficacy in a forty years' fight with throat. ami lung diseases, and should be taken in ail cases without delay. A Terrible Cough Cared. "In 18571 took a severe cold, which affected iny lungs. I had a terrible cough.aiid passed night after night without sleep. The doctors gave me up. 1 tried AYEB'S CUEKBY PEC­ TORAL, which relieved my lungs, induced sleet), and afforded me the rest necessary for the recovery of my strength. By the continued use of the PECTOBAL a perma­ nent cure was effected. 1 am now 62 yean old, hale and hearty, and am satisfied year CHKBBY FECTOBAI. saved me. E HOBACK FAIBBBOTHBB." Rockingham, VU, July 16,1682. ?*"" ! Croup.--A Mother's THtatS. "While in the country last winter my lttttf boy, three years old, was taken ill with cronp; it seemtfd as if he would die from strangn- latioii. One of the family suggested the use of AVKR'S CHEKRV PECTORAL, a bottle of which was always kept in the house. Tliis was tried in small and frequent doses, and to our delight in less than half au hour the littie patient was breathing easily. The doo- ,the work, the surprising thing is that the women should earn even so much as sometimes they do. Take the but­ tonholing--the leading branch of the work in Tenement street. The holes are rough punched in the factories the work of the outdoor hands being to stitch them round. This button­ holing is admittedly "niggling" work, and yet the rate at which it is paid for by the sweaters is a penny per dozen collars. As each collar has three holes, the hand, who finds her own needle and cotton, has to stitch thirty- six holes for a penny! Even so, some of the experts, by working long hours, by rising early on summer mornings and sitting late on winter nights, by living on iood that is ready to be put into the mouth, chiefly bread and butter, and eating as they work; by acting on these lines, some of the but- tonholers will earn as much as eight or nine shillings per week. The prices paid by the manufacturers who give it out in the first instance are probably such as would enable a skilled and industrious » hand to make a living wage; but as matters stand such men are almost compelled to employ mid­ dlemen, and the tender mercies of the sweater are cruel.--AU the Year Bound. WHEAT WANTED. The Highest Market Price will be paid for good Milling Wheat at the Fox River Valley Mills, Mo- Htary. B. BItfHOP. tor said that the CHERRY PKCTOBAL had saved my darling's life. Can you wouder at our gratitude? Sincerely yours, A!Its. EMMA GEDKEY." ISO West 128th St., New York, May 16,1S8S. •« I have used AYEB'S CUKRRY PECTORAL ta my family for several years, and do not hesitate to pronounce it the most effectual remedy for coughs and colds we have evtr tried. A. J. CRANK." Lake Crystal, Minn., March 13,1662. •' I suffered for eight years from Bronclilt la, and after trying many remedies with no suc­ cess. I was cured by the use of A VF.R's Ciiku- RV l'K< TORAL. JOSEFU WA Bylialia, Miss., April S, 1882. " I cnnnot say enough in praise of AYTR'M CHERRY PECTOBAL, Delieving as I do that but for its use I should long since have «Ue4 from lung troubles. K. BBAODOS." Palestine, Texas, April 22, 188% - • No case of an affection of the throat or tangs exists which cannot be greatly relieved by the use of AYEB'S CHEBBY PECTORAL, and it will altcayt curt when the disease » not already beyond the control of medicine. PBEPARED BY Dr.J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell, Matt. Sold by all Druggists. A Large and Beautiful Lifte ef A Handsome Line of km. NEW STYLES. AND LISLE. 0 /•mm' I jou want to secure Premium and the HANDSOME GIFT offered to the readers of tl#>i Plaindealer, Now is the time to Subscribe. Tbe I*LAINDEALER no recommendations, It speaks for itself. That its wide influence and large circulation are appre­ ciated is evidenced by the Crowd­ ed state of its advertising columns Look over the columns if the PLAIMDEALER and see if they do not contain more solid .reading (not trash) than any paper in the county. - -• i M - SUBSCRIBE .. And secure the PLAINDEAOSB A WESTERN PLOWMAN, both for mmmwmmiiiWNp eeeS Tbe ltiMf** weifc ataoiif l« knows at as the 'French uraae,' for deoerailnf Chirm, Glassware, eta, It to MMnetbfBf sntinlrMt, art to both profitable aad fascinating. It to very popster In New York, Boston,and oth» er eastern cities. Te ladles desiring to learn tbe art, we will send an elegant china placqae, (else 18 Inches,) handsomely deoorated for a model, together with box of ma­ terial, 100 colored designs assorted In flowers, animals, laudieapes, etc., oom- plete.wltb full instructions, upon re­ ceipt ef only 91. The placque alone i« worth more tbaethe amount charged. To every lady ordering this outfit who encloses the address of five other ladies Interested in art matters, to whem we can mall our new catalogue of art goods, we will enclose extra aed with* out charge, a beautiful 30 Inch, gold tinted placqae. Address, The Empire News Ce* fyr* aense, N, T. Bargain In Music. This FiYOrite Album of Songs Ballade, containing thtrty-two piece! of rhoice and popular music, full sheej muste size, with complete words apt muslo and piano accompaniment^ I| finely tainted upon heavy paper with a very attractive cover. The- follow-* in* are the titles of the soars and bal-^ ladsoontatned In the Favorite Album: As I'd Nothing Else te Do; The Dear Old Sengs of Home; Mother. Watch the Little Feet; Oh. You Pretty Blue- Eyed Witch; Blue Eyes; K<tty's Let* ter; Tbe Passing Bell; I Saw Esait; Kiselog Kate; Won't Yeu Tell Me Why. Robin; The Old Garden Gate* Down Below the Waving Lindens; Faded Leavss; All Among th« Sum-* oner Roses; Teuch the Harp Gently, My Pretty Loulee; I Really Don't Think £ Shall Marry; Dreaming of Home; The Old Cottage Clock; Across the Sea; A Year Ago: Bachelor's Hall; BtfVh and I; Good Night; One Happy Year Age; Jennie In the Orchard; The Old Barn Gate; Jack's Farewell; Pelly; Whisper In tbe Twilight. Tblf Is a very fine collection of real vocal gems, and gotten up In very handsome style. Published In the usual way and nought at a music store, these 32 pieces would ooet yon 9U.20. We bought job lot of this mueloat a great saoriflcf and as tbe holidays are Past, we desirf te close out eur stock at ence. Wilt send you the entire collection well wrapped and postpaid for only 49 oents. send Immediately. Address, The Empire News Co., Syr* acuse, N. Y. A Bargain in Cashmere RIDAY & SATURDAY We have Hosiery at •any price, from 5 cents to WE TAKS THB UBEBTY-ENU6HTENING THE WORLD, regard to the unequaled , - of merlte fkFllilJllMUljr { O N E B P D O L L A R We will send you the Formula for making the famous Compound 0XYGBM H0MB TREATMENT, a positive cure for Con* sumption, Bronchitas, Asthma, Catarrh, Haj Fever and all Blood Diseases of either •ex, from whatever cause, or we will 6end you the Formula and a two months treat­ ment with I nhaler for $3.00, Send in letter at our risk. Address, 0XTQBN HOME TBIITBEMf GO* 180 Dearborn CMIUAf*. WlJL 1) .. • " you n ji > Al." J I;: |wods.yar.: icr the «to: versation " Si" was very *i< 'c v.il!iprier.- monia. Had lio at fir: t t::Uv :i a dose ol SMITH'S BTLE BEAXS (I be:m) he would have been surely cured without harm. A cold is congestion; BILE BEANS will relieve a cold quicker than any other remedy, as it relieves the congested part at once. For sale by all medicine dealers. Price, 25c. per botti* Smoking Tobaeoo 19 oents po* Urifl M. Engeln't. \ ? ~~lha_Qriginal and Famous Three-Wheeled Plow, .hich lor Lightness ol Draft and Working Qualities is <ie Conceded Champion of the Whole Plowed World POIIItS OF SUPERIORITT. It runs* lighter than any other plow made, ecause by means o{ the perfect support afforded by tiree wheels the plow is carried, not dragged. It Is easy oil the team, because there ii osolutely no weight on the borsea1 tecks. Good Results in Every Case- D. A. Bradford, wholesale paper tfeaitr of Chattanooga. Tenn., write# that he was eerioutly afflicted with a severe cold that settled on his lungfti bad tried many remedies without ben<* eBt. Being Induced to try Dr. K injc'a New Discovery for Consumption, die so and wa* entirely Citred by use of a few bettlMw Since which time he hat n3*d it In his family for all Coughs an! CeldU with best results. This is the experience of thousands whose live! have been a ved by this Wonderful Discovery. Trial Bottles free at Henry Colby's Drug Store. Wonderful Cures. W.D. Hoyt A Co., Wholesale an A Retail Druggists of Rome, Ga., say: We nave been selling Dr. King's New Discovery, Eleotrlc Bitters aed Bucklen's Arniea Salve for two years. Have never handled remedies that sell as well, or give such universal satlsfao* tion. Thera has been some wonderful cures eflected by these medicines in this city. Several casos of pronounced Consumption haye been entirely cured by use of a few bottles of Dr. King's New Discover*, taken In connection with Electric Bitters. We guarantee th»>m always. Sold by Henry Colby. To~Nlght and To-Morrow Night. And each day and night during thia week, you can find a: Geo. W. Besley'a drug store Kemp's Suppositories, ac­ knowledged to be the most successful treatment yet introduced for the cure of piles. Old sufierers from this dia» stressing complaint are at once re­ lieved and In a short tine a permanent cure established. Check the disease In time by using the "most effeotive remedy. Prloe 60c. Send address fof hlet on piles. Box 295, Le Bof rr CARY STATIOW, 111., March 2D, 1986. C. DlOKUtsoN A SON--Harrington, 111. Omtiemen.'--l had a cow that dHI not clean for three days after calving, and I procured a bottle of your cow Prescription and gave It according to the directions, and the cow was all right in less than thirty six hours al­ ter giving* aud ha* done first rate since. AUGUST ABPS. For sale by all druggists. Stand Straight. Men's, womeu's, and children's brace*. No more round shoulders. No more flat breasts. A perfect skirt supporter. 80ld by E. Lawlus, Tailor, McHenry, 111. The Great Mexican SEEDCORN "The earliest, heaviest, soundest and most prolific variety of corn ever grown in Auier* ca." This is the testimony of twelre papers pub­ lished in different states, to whom we hare sent sample packages to test It. It surpasses all anticipations, and isiust "" -Times, Nachitocbea, lo snv nfhftV via} it *• thing needed. "It is superior to any other variety,* '"It wr­ it turns square corners, turning: to­ ws either inward or outward, as may be desired. The rear furrow wheel Is locked the Miss. --Journal, Corning. N. Y. "ft will be a value! ble acquisition to the agricultural products of the country."--Gazette, Sulphur Springs, Texas. "This corn can be sown in the tatter part of July and ripened before frost."--In. ilex, Warsaw, Mo. "It |s highly recommend, ed by those who haye tried it."--Ohio Hepos- itory. '-We have heard this corn highlp spokekofby the press."--Advertiser, Mouf- ton, Ala. It will yield in our climate, tw» crops i year."--Advertiser, Bastrop, Texas. •'It can he successfully grown in Canada." --Montreal World. "Is peculiarly adapted to the short seasons of the North."--Kev. J. Long, Keokuk, Iowa "It is just the thins for our swamp land." Dr. Johjiston, Oca la, Fla. It will produce from B<> to 75 bushels of shelled corn to the acre, on any soil from Florida to Oregon. 1st. This corn will yield from twice to three times as many bushels to the acre da the same soil nnd with the same culture. 3d. The coin Is heavier in weight has a larger and longer ear and thinner husk, and makes corn meal for family use sweeter and inoTe nutritions and valuable for feeding hen plowing straight ahead, but unlocked by foot- rip when necessary to turn. After the corner is jrned it locks itself automatically. Tlte caster wheels running In furrow -ifectually prevent any strain on the frame of the llow, or on the horses when turning. The ploW is irned on the some principle as a cart. The front furrow wheel Is at SOlnt Of ptOW, insuring- a uniform depth whea mossing dead Ijrrovvs or ditches. The lanti r.xle l:as a spring that • eensthc plow from ! ein:; too rigid, and causes it to at level when crossing corn furrows or ridges. - The team Is hltchesl the same as to a talking plow, and the horses draw easily and aattt. % e plow Is In front of the driver, here its work is constantly under his eye. _ These, and many other points, fully explained. Was. atud nnd proved in our descriptive circulars, «at f"<-e to any address. We also mail, free of charge, ic Agricultural Pilgrim's Progress, by John-with-a- Itiniim, with illustrations; the Story of the Flying Dutchman, a graphic sea sketch : nml other literature /hich will Himisr. i-ntcrtain anfi instruct, address, M0L1NE PLOW CO., Molina, Illinois is and ckl!Ve Ing ar more foltage. and Is en cut green than other stock. 3d. The stock a better/or feeding • varieties. 4th. That it will grow ane produce a profit­ able crop on ground where other corn wilt not grow to maturity. It ripens early and is not liable to be cut by frost Our corn ha* been selected with the great­ est ccre; tho small end of every ear broken off and the rest shelled by hand. W» Warrant Krsrj Brain te Qtow. The inerease yield per acre over the eld varieties will pay for the seed twenty times over; besides, every farmer that plants this year will have a large demand tor seed at IMS. By mall, postpaid, one dollar und, put up in neat packages; IB packages; good prices. TERMS. ; pound, put up in neat pad $9; 60 paokages for 115; I0t» packages, Terms, CASH. Registered letters at our risk. Address all orders to I fUffllV St HAULDJUCK, "W wmuiAiui m

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