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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Sep 1876, p. 7

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"THOSE CHRISTIAN DOtiS." erribLe Atrocities by the Fiendish lurks in Servla. I k [Belgrade Cor, New York Timet;} There are cousnls from England and Trance and Russia at Philippopoli, and yet Bulgarian girls are sold every day in its market-place like cattle, and similar outrages are perpetrated at Khaskoye and Teliirpan in the vilayet of Aurkn- ople. In Tirnova, Rahova, Sofia and Philippopoli twenty-seven unarmed citizens were shot down in the public streets during the week immediately fol- • lowing the declaration of war. On the 12th of July eight merchants of the neighboring village of Koprishtza were executed at Sofia. On the same day, at Tatar-Bazadjik, a town of 18,000 inhab- habitants. two pones, or Bulgarian priests, were hanged, in their vestment*, upon the bridge across the Maritza, and ten peasants at the corners of the streets in the Christian quarter. Not even the Amockeiy of a trial was pretended to in any of these cases, which were the on- authorized but unpunished acts of the Circassian irregulars. On flie 11th of July, a female teacher, aged 17, a for­ mer pupil of the Protestant Missionary School, was arrested at Panaguritch and ^ brought to trial at Tatar-Bazadjik on the r charge of corresponding with the insur­ gents. She was, of course, condemned, and, after being submitted to every out­ rage, was crucified on the highway. On ( the 19th of July, another girl, the beauty j of Plevno, was sold in the bazaar of that town for fifteen Turkish pounds. Hordes of Tartars, Baehi-Bazouks and Circas­ sians sweep through the country devas­ tating all around them, and carrying away all the most beautiful boys and girls for the harems of the Turkish dig­ nitaries. Over 100 hitherto prosperous villages are in ashes, and whole prov­ inces, once the source of its greatest revenue to the Government, are now lying waste and desolate. The popula­ tions are dying of hunger, and thou­ sands of once wealthy citizens are beg­ ging their bread, barefooted, in the streets of Philippopoli. The prisons are crammed with Bulgarians, in such numbers that they die for want of air, And their piteous cries for mercy are ueard distinctly during the silence of night Everywhere the Turks are preaching the extermination of "those Christian dogs who have forced them to leave their quiet life to fight against the enemies of Allah." Between Ak-Palanka and the Servian frontier not one village has been eft standing. At Posavina, on the Save, every Christian district has been abandoned by its population, which has fled for protection to the Servian camps. On the Dattle-fields where the Turks have been successful all the wounded nave been mutilated, and by a refine­ ment of cruelty have been left to die in Igony, with their eyes dug out, their lips, noses and ears cut away. Not only do ihe irregulars, but the Nizains and the Eledifs, participate in these atrocities, j ind weeping women tell you how their nnocent babes have been tossed into the or by these ruffians, to be impaled upon he points of their yataghans. Through he whole valley of the Nisharva, in the icinity of Nisha, not a priest or Chris- ian preacher lias been spared to perform eiigious service at the funerals of the lead. Nor are these and similar atrocities onfined to the provinces in the ueigh- ©rhood of the theater of war. It is the ame thing along the Black sea coast, it Nevrokop eighty young men were eized on the 20th of July and sold as laves in the adjoining villages. The 'hole population of Burgas was dis- rmed, even of its scythes and reaping- ooks; fifteen Christians were slaugh- »ed in cold blood, and ten villages of ie district burned to the ground. In alonica six of the most wealthy citizens ave been imprisoned; in Bitolia four thers. The crime charged upon these nfortunates is the sale of Christian ooks, of which, and especially of maps I the country, the Turks have a holy orror. Every bookstore has been osed in the provinces, and the dissem- lation of all literature not in Turkish laracters has been forbidden under of death. I will only add that these istancesof Turkish "amenities" have sen furnished me by a Christian em- loye of the Porte, who wa*» a secretary ! one of th& members of the commission >nomt<ed to investigate the outrages mmitted in Bulgaria; he adds that Ino true report will ever be published. ®ncy, with her eyes on the ground, and one arm round the boy. One of the women whispered something to my com­ panion, a Servian officer, whose face flushed, and whose mouth set sternly at the slow recital. Dismounting, he ap­ proached the woman, Mid, speaking to her, startled her from her abstraction. As he spoke, at first she was asleep seemingly and indifferent; her aspect was that of one with no interest in any­ thing. But, at length, she kindled, and with flashing volubility poured forth the terrible story of her wrongs, which my companion hurriedly and by scraps translated to me. Delicacy, after all, is a relative term. An Englishwoman, if she could have brought herself at all to tell the shame­ ful story of ontrage and in/lionyify which this miserable creature had to recount herself, would have spoken of her deg­ radation and its details with trembling lip and downcast eye. Not surely the less did this Sclave woman quiver with the agony of her involuntary degrada­ tion because she told ,us of it--here be­ fore the people--with shrill voice and flashing volubility of utterance! The personal outrages to which she had been subjected cannot be written down in their horrible circumstantiality; but you may realize bow the recital thrilled her audience, if you recall the shuddering spasm that vibrated through England when the earliest tidings, happily in one item of atrocity which they comprised not true, reached up of the opening scenes of the Indian mutiny. Her cot­ tage had been burnt before her eyes; of three children she had seen one, her baby, tossed about from soldier to sol­ dier, and then flung into the flames; of the second she knew nothing; the third, the lad who was now with her, had made his escape timeously, and joined her, from out the cover of a wood, after she had been allowed to drag herself away from the scene of deviltry. Her rela­ tives lived, she said, in one of the ham­ lets of the Golubinge upland, and she had tramped thus far on her way to shelter herself among them. Her hus­ band had left for the army since the earliest days of the war, and she knew nothing of his whereabouts. OUTRAGES IN BOSNIA. A telegram from Vienna to the Cour- rier de France says that massacres have been commited by the Turks in Bosnia. In the villages of Pervan and*Timar 300 Christians were drowned after being tortured. At Pavics twelve women were cut to pieces and thrown to the dogs. At Ratklovo sixty children were stoned by the Turks, led by one Fechim Effendi, to avenge a relation of Maj. Stocsvics Bey, killed at Bellina. At Sokolovo 180 young girls taken from the neighboring villages were penned in a field, and after the prettiest had been picked out for the harems of Fechim and Stocsvics, the others were abandoned to the soldiery, and were violated and murdered. At Maidan the Christian population assem­ bled at market were massacred by a fanatical mob led by Hadji Omer Ef­ fendi and another functionary named Ibrahim Kurusovics Aga. The victims in this case numbered 3,000. On Fri­ day, July 21, there was another massacre at Pryedor, under similar circumstances. All sorts of excesses by Baslii-Bazouks are reported from Brod. On the 12th and 13th a band of Bashi-Bazouks, num­ bering 600* pillaged and burned the village of Gens Mahalli, on the railroad between Adrianople and Philippopolis. In the neighborhood of Ismid Nioome- den there were similar atrocities. J0ME U1AMT8. T A Couple That the Fashionable Hotel. Cannot Accommodate^ [From the Rochester Express.] % There is on exhibition in a store cm State street, in this city, perhaps the most remarkable couple in the world--a man and woman who are giants in stature. They are Mr. and Mrs. M, V. Bates, whose "home is now in Seville, Medina couaty, Ohio. They are each 7 feet 11} inches in height, the husband weighing 478 pounds, while the wife weighs 413 pounds. The common-sized visitor, when placed between them, feels very much as Gulliver must have felt when he fell among the giants. Mr., or Captain Bates, as he is called, is a finely-proportioned man. of ruddv. heaichy-iookmg complexion, straight and military-looking in his regimentals. His immense stature is not so noticeable as that of his wife, who seems almost awk­ ward somehow on account of her length, she being actually taller for a woman than he is for a man. They are evi­ dently people who, if not so wonder­ fully tall, would be considered common­ place. They are intelligent! however, and the lady especially feels the awkwardness of her position as the object of the curiosity and open-mouthed wonder of the multi­ tude. In an interesting conversation with our reporter, she showed openly her dislike of the life she is leading, and her longing to return to her home in Ohio. Their home, by the way, was one built and furnished especially for them. The ceilings are 12$ feet high, and no doorway is less than 8i feet high* Of oourse they find the hotel accommo dations unsuitable to them wherever they go, as the doorways are so low and the beds so short. One of the strangest facts about their history is that they were the children of common people. Mrs. Bates' father was only 5 feet 4 inches in height, while her mother.was only a common- sized woman. Her brothers and sisters are of no remarkable height. Capt. Bates' father was 6 feet 2 inches in height--a tall man, but a dwarf com­ pared with his son. Bates is now 29 years of age. He is a native of Letcher county, Kentucky. His wife is a Nova Scotian, 27 years of age. They were married in London, England, while traveling in that country on exhibition. I The London Daily News' correspond- ft, at Prince Milan's headquarters, ites as follows : [Every tongue is charged and every tart is full of well-authenticated ti- of Turkish atrocities committed the inoffensive peasant folk of the Mitier villages m districts where there be no pretense for military reasons, ie men are gone from the villages of i Greuze ; the victims are the misera- i women and helpless children. Burn- wrecking, butchery, and violation istitute, to all appearances, the en- led functions of the merciless Bpshi- souks and ruffianly Redifs, whom the krkish commanders, keeping in fixed jsitions their regular troops, let loose letters of marque to practice the lost ingenuity of deviltry. rrom the frontier district between sell and Alexinatz come now similar lgs to those I telegraphed the other as having been sent by •Alempics fm the western frontier about Bellina. man who is not obstinately deter- led to be incredulous can question truth of these statements. Officers soldiers who came down from the |nt authenticate them with tales of rnt villages which they have seen, the lgled bodies of children lying in the ters among the charred debris, head- tranks of Servian soldiers in places |ere they had been fighting, men in up-country hospitals with noses slit | knives as they lay helpless from their ids. In the course of an after- >n's ride, I yesterday found my way a little village on the slope, about door of one of the houses in which re was a group of women and chil- in, with here and there an old man-- [the able-bodied men are away to the On the settle under the projecting |es there sat a woman, draggled, rais- Jlfe, and forlorn, with a boy about 12 i old standing by her side; and id them the people had formed a li-circle, and were looking on with a 3ge concerned patience of silence, woman', too, was silent; she sat | e in an apathetic revery of despond Clearing Land with Dynamite. Experience at clearing lands, both in removing stumps and boulders with dynamite, in Scotland, has proved suc­ cessful. The following account is given of a late trial in an Edinburgh paper: A spadeful of earth was removed from the side of a stump, and a hole driven into the stump with a crowbar. Into this hole a cartridge of dynamite was pressed by means of a wooden ramrod, then a detonating percussion cap, with a Black­ ford's fuse attached, was squeezed into a small cartridge or primer of dynamite, and inserted into the hole in the trunk in contact with the charge. The hole was filled up with loose earth, about a foot-length of the fuse being left bare. A match was next applied to the fuse, and sufficient time was taken for the powder to reach the percussion cap, to allow the operatives to retire to a*safe distance. When the explosion occurred the trunk was literally blown out of the ground, some of the fragments, weigh­ ing nearly twenty pounds, being thrown to a distance of over a hundred yards. The destruction of the stump was com­ plete. In breaking up the bowlder stones, the dynamite was simply placed on top of the stone, covered with wet sand, and fixed with the fuse in the ordi­ nary way. The result was the reduction of the bowlders to fragments the size of a walnut. It was effectually proved by the experiments that land can be speed­ ily cleared of formidable obstructions to good cultivation by the use of dynamite, and the committee of the society who watched the operations expressed them­ selves as highly satisfied with the re­ sults. A Conspiracy That Didn't Work. An Udderzook conspiracy has been brought to naught in Missouri. In the summer of 1874 a man named Folk in­ sured his life for $10,000 in the New York Mutual Life Insurance Company for the benefit of his wife, the premium being paid by an intimate friend named Mosely. The next winter Folk disap­ peared. His gun and coat were found on the ice on the river, and Mrs. Folk became convinced that he had been drowned. His body was advertised for, and a man came forward who declared lie had recognized Folk in a corpse that was taken out of the river when the ice broke up in the spring. Application was made for the payment of the money, but the suspicion of the agents was aroused and they declined. Mosely was sus­ pected of having arranged the details of the fraud, and he was "shadowed by the detectives." Finally, information of the whereabouts of Folk himself was ob­ tained^ and about a week ago he was found in a cabin in Prairie county, Ark. He was brought back to his mourning wife, and the two, with their tfriend Mosely, are now domesticated in the St. Louis jail, awaiting trial. The Government has saved a million dollars--sunstroke killed an itwiin in New York. Mortal Enemy to the Grasshopper. The St. Paul (Minnesota) Pioneer- Press says: "There has heretofore been some talk about a parasite having been found adhering to the grasshopper, which it was fondly hoped would ulti­ mately exterminate that destructive in­ sect. Early in the spring several par­ ties forwarded to this office specimens of the "hoppers, underneath whose wings could plainly be seen a little bug, which, it was alleged, was surely killing the grasshopper. It is needless to say that this hope was never realized, and that no substantial relief was furnished by any labors of the parasite upon the live 'hopper. Now, however, we have a different story to tell, and there is almost positive evidence to prove that the rem­ edy is at hand in the shape of an egg- eating bug, which is surely and certainly destroying all the eggs laid by the grass­ hoppers this year, thus insuring Min­ nesota an exemption from the ravages of this voracious and destructive insect next year. This bug is of a deep red color, about the size of a flea, or rather a louse, resembling the latter somewhat in its shape and movements. Ex Gov Stephen Miller has forwarded to Presi­ dent Drake, of the St. Paul and Sioux City road, a box full of earth which originally contained a mass of grasshop per eggs, but which had been trans­ formed by these parasites into a quan tity of loose soil, mingled with the romnants of discolored egg-shells, with a multitude of the fat little red bugs prancing around on the surface, appa­ rently in pursuit of something more to eat. As to the utility and complete sue cess of these bugs as destroyers of the grasshopper eggs, there would seem to be no doubt in the minds of those who have given the subject a general exami nation, es well as of those who have personally inspected their mode of oper ation and the places where they have already utterly Joskoyed the eggs laid by the 'hoppers a few ^eeks ago» What Is Any Man's Affliction to This ? Tuesday evening, shortly after retir­ ing for the night, the matron of the Home went down to the front door and found a little girl stranger calling loudly for help, suugly wrapped and laid upon a bundle that proved to be clothing for the little one. A note was also found, written in a lady's hand, plain and neat, The little one is a nice, healthy-looking girl, apparently about 8 weeks old. The letter read as follows: "I am a poor woman ; have been married two years my husband left me on the 8th day of May in search of work. I have not seen or heard of him in that time. He left me a little money, but it's all gone. I tried to get work, but could not on ac­ count of my child ; if I keep her we must both starve ; I know of no other to see her provided for than the way I have decided on. I can probably get my own living, and if possible, will send you money to pay her keeping, perhaps not enough, but all I cau get will be sent to you for her. If my husband comes back I will come and get my child ; until then I must let strangers care for her. It breaks my heart to let her go, but I can xlo no better; I have spent my last penny for things for her ; my last 2 cents got her a half pint of milk this morning, and I have not tasted food to-day, nor do I know where I am going to stay to­ night. You may think I am an unnat­ ural mother, but put yourself in my place and then you will see differently. My child's name is Nellie May, and I entreat you to love and be kind to my dear innocent babe, as you hope for mercy hereafter yourself."--Scranton (Pa.) Times. ^hired for saddle, must not be used in j harness. If the hirer violates this ex-1 press condition of the contract he is lia­ ble for any damage that may occur. If the horse is stolen through the hirer's negligence, such as leaving the stable door open all night, he must answer for it. -But if he is robbed of it by high­ waymen, when traveling the usual road at usual hours, he cannot be held for damages. As those questions are fre­ quently in dispute, these decisions may be interesting. Excitement in tlie Coal Region. * flPbttsville (Pa.) Cor. New York Herald ] A great deal of excitement was caused here aud toroughout the coal regidti this afternoon by the intelligence of breaking up of the coal combination in New lork. It is generally believed here that the effect will be very disas­ trous, and predictions are made that a number of individual operators will be ruined. The most hopeful operator in the country told the Herald correspond­ ent that he did not apprehend any per­ manent lowering of prices, but that after the stock on hand is disposed of, prices will again advance; others think a war between the great companies has been inaugurated, and that in the coutes the individual operators will be great suf­ ferers. What effect tUe destruction of the combination will hare on the wages of the thousands of poorly-paid miners and laborers cannot new be safely pre­ dicted, though it is easy to see thut their prospects are not brightened. HONEST OPINION! Mr. H. R STXTES8: •or** and Dicers on hiskg and hip. .on* than twioe ita i Trior Came out In lar*© Hi# W wa§ ftweliod hia-h stAndinffin their profession--two from Bo« ton and three from Ohsrlestown--without: a hit bettor. He was obliged Ira lie wherever he wis nlaesd tor tie had no use of his !knb« whatever. When we ha<{ of his living we were told to try \ Kt.KTIN hths gmt blood remedy: and he had taken itbut a short time before we coald see » great chance The sores run so bad that W« had to change the cloths four or five time* a day. Still, he was getting better; tyr he couid move hi* limbs and help himself a little "P in by constant, use ^ st ,«as Cuiw! him. Ke*has a lair*e leg, which he will probably have for life; but we all honesdy believe if we had used VEGET1NK before we hid bothered with those doctor*. It would have saved the use ?• leg, and restored it to natural health. I hope all thaw troubled with Scrofula will read thig testimony of who flow woil, &nd nbl® to spo&k for . Ax our request CJragin & Co., cf Phila­ delphia, Pa., have promised to send any of our readers gratis (on receipt of fifteen oents to pay postage) a sample of Dob­ bins' Electric Soap to try. Send at once. WhiHoft's Fevkb and Ague Toxic.-- Tliia medicine ia used by oouatruotkMi compa­ nies for the beuefit of their employes, when en­ gaged in ruaJarial districts. The highest testi­ monials have beeu given by contractors and by the Presidents of some of the leading railroads in the South and West. When men are con­ gregated in large numbers iu the neighborhood of swamps and rivers, Wilhoft's Tonic will prove a valuable addition to the stock of medi­ cines, and will amply reward the company in the saving of time, labor and monev. We rec­ ommend it to all. G. R. Finlay & Co., Pro­ prietors, New Orleans. Fok sale by all Druggists. PiMPiiEs on the face, rough skin, chapped hands, saltrheum and all cutaneous affections cured, the skin made soft and smooth, by the use of Juniper Tar Soap. That made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, ia the only kind that can be relied on, as there are man}' imitations, made from common tar, which are worthless. HVM.WI GAI HKKINK MAHONRT. Daniel mahonky, IfTWaton street, Charles town. The above plain but honect statement snows the qnioV and thoiwurik VEGKTINK in Scrofula. statement eonetaaifelr •toaiwto* «ff«eta af Uw Nearly Blind! H. ILSxr.vxKS: I)tar Sir -In expressing my thanks to yon for benefits derived from the use of vKGET1NE, and to benefit Other*, I will fttato: When ei^ht or nine years aid I «u afflicted with j w!ll\'tl nwde its »pp«i»r.nice In my eyes, face ?!">*/•ilIH1 1 VBry for 'wo yean. All Kinds of imeratiotts were performed on my eyes, snd all to not pxxl rpsult. Finally, the disease principally set­ tled iu niy Ijody, limbs and ie&t, imd times in fravated way. ^ Last summer I t-iw, from some cause, weak In my jpine and kidneys, and It waa at times very hard to n- lam the urine. Seeing your advertisement tn the Com- wiercial I bomjcht a bottle of VEOETIXF, and com- Bienced using according to directions. In two or three ways 1 obtained ^reat relief. After using four or live bot­ tles I noticed it had a wonderful effect or. the rough jc™*'blotches on my body and legs. I still nsorl VKUE* TIN F. 5-.-.;, tiis humorous sores one after Knottier disap­ peared until they were all gone, and I att ribute the cure °t the two diseases to VF.(, F.TINK, and nothing else. If I am em affectediwith anything of the kind again. , I shall try VKGKHMt sr the only reliable remedy. Onoe more accept my thankr, and believe ra® to be Very respectfully, AUSTIN PARROTT, Ns. 86 Gano street, Cincinnati, O. DM. 1.1872. Yegetine is Sold by all Druggists. AGENTS If roa want th«i bast selling article in the world and a solid gold patent watch, free of cost, write at J. BIUDK A CO., 765 Broadway.N. Y. YOUR own LOttiiNR tn oil color*, to ihow our rpUnted cm canvas, from a photograph or tin frftfl vriu> th© lioio© Joumsl, $3.50 a year. San Die opr work and paper, terms to agents, £o.. 10 eatife T. XjXjTHKR. MILL Erst© eountf, Pa. An Irishman called at a drug store to got a bottle of Johnson's Anodyne Liniment for the Rheumatism. The drnggiet asked t im in what part of the body it troubled him most. "Ba mo soul,'" said lie, "I have it in ivery houl and comer er me." Fob loss of cud, bom ail, red water in oowa; low of appetite, rot, or murrain ineheep ; thick wind, broken wisd. and roaring, and for all obstruction of the kidneys iu horses, use bheridaris Cavalry Condition Powders. Yegetine lias never failed to effect a cure, giving tone and strength to the system debilitated by disease. Ague is always caused b^mataiia. Shallen- berger's Pills always core it. Price $1.00. MaITT wbo ar« snfferinc from the effects of ttwwim waathar and wp jjfcHlUted.ars advlasd bv physicians to take moderate aaosints of whisky two or three times during the day. In a little while tboM who adopt this advice frequently increase the number of " drinks," and la time become confirmed inebriates. • beverage which will not create thirst for Intoxicating liquors, and whioh Is Intended especially for the benefit of debilitated per. •ana, whatber at home or abroad. Is Dr. Schenok's Sea Weed Tonlo. Containing the juices of many medicinal berbi, this preparation does not areata an appetite for the intoxioatlng cap. The nourishing and the life-sup­ porting properties of many valuable natural productions contained in it, and well known to medical men, have a most strengthening influence. A single bottle of the Tonlo will demonstrate its valuable qualities. For de­ bility arising from sickness, over exertion, or from any cause whatever.a wine-glass!ul of Sea Weed Tonic taken after meals will strengthen the stomach and create an appetite for wholesome food. To all who are about leav­ ing their homes, we desire to say that the ezoellent effects of Dr. Schenck's seasonable remedies, Sea Weed Tonlo and Mandrake Fills, are putioularly evident when taken by those who are injuriously affected by a cliunga of water and diet. No person should leave home without taking a supply of ttese wfagnwda along. Ssi aaia by all Druggists. §OutfitsC^HVrPRIlVTS or the AQF.S. Our cpre I" (iovernment and History. (iooiiKPEED'B Book, Bible and Map House, Chicago. REVOLVERS!! BFYEN 8UOT JtulHlo Bill Rcrolv.. 8ent with 1«<0 Oart- NjrRHi, Pi,at*. 8*tisfkrt*oa llluetrttei A<!dr*M WESTKKN Ul N WORK* CHICago/IIL $3.00 TELEGRAPH Railroad and Express business taught. Good wages earned while learning. Situations fur­ nished. Send stamp for oircular. Address Wksterw Union Trjlruhaph Institute, Bo* 700, Free port. 111. Tour name printed ot „ - SO Transparent Carila, containing a soenejnrhen held to the light A NOVELTY Carua, containing a soene when beld to the light (W ^••igns), sent postpaid for 85 cetite; 6 packs, S names, 81. fToother card-printer has the name. Agents wanted; out- ftt 10ota. Oabd-Pbixtb*. LMTK-BoxD, a«KU«^t Umm Pjj£$25ii Kloml Ai1<iro«,V d*y Mire* Illwlrttti! catalogue fr<t. of our fint Clmuiioi, Crayons, and btauttfu! Fu ture 'Jards of noted men.women, and Pre*Uient*of ,Vlilttag, Reward, Motto, Comic, and Trans­ parent O.irds. 125 camples,worth *&, sent for 85 oentt* J.M. BU WORD'S SOJH'S. 1JOSTON. MAS.S. fc.taMUU.Hl 1830. PE!«IVSVLVA\'!A JIY, „ MII.TTARY ACADK-. 1 Iwstrs-, Prnit., Keopenn September 13. Thorough Instruction in Civil and Mining Knginonring, tho Classics, and Knulish Branches. For Circulars, apply to Col. TillSO. HYATT, Pres. P. M. A. PSTCIIOMAWCT, or'Soul Charming.* • lt»w •-Itlii-r erx may lusrltintv aihl (jaiiwlie lovi and affection ol any person tliey choose, liiHtantly. This art all can poBSoKS, free, liy mail, 25 cviita; together wltli a I.over's Quid* KgyptUn Oracle, Dreams, Hints to Lnrifes, ic. 1,000,000 sold. -I queer book. Address T. WILLIAMS * CO., Pub's, Philadelphia. CWEATY AND TENDER FEfiT.-Mt. £3 tie's Original Ointment. Cure guaranteed for Sweaty, Tender, and Offensive Feet. Sent by mail. Price Ask your merchant or druggist for it. JOHN LITTLE & CO.. P. O. Box 2331, Philadelphia. W(llltCll Explanatory Stock Doc tor," a full treatise, with prescriptions, on "W0 pages, t^ound book published. horses, cattle, hogs, sheep and poultry. 800 pages, fcound in leather, illustrated. The best selling book miblished. Liberal terras. Addross J.H.Yeagley, Pub., Indianapolis <fcin ffeflfl AGENTS Wanttd-iflO to $100 IP I U|Ut!U a week, or S50W forfeited. New novelties, chromos, stationery packages, watches; jewelry, eto.; special terms given to agents; valuable samplo. with catalogue, sent free; a 16 karat solid gold watch given as premium. £. L. FlktcHEH, 11 Dey Street New York. TOBACCO USERS tT Nic-in-Noc should ml* with their tooarco. Prevents Vertigo. l>I/.ziNKsa, DTLI F a (TOFT * -t tome. Samples woifh $1 sent 90 MJ iJ>£U free. STINSON A CO.. Portland, Me. fit f I k a Day. F.mployment for all. ChroiU iiPTofelty JL "Cataloguefree. Fulton Jk Oo.,llW Nassau St.,N.Y BEST BOOKS on Steam Engineering. Send two stamps for Catalogue. F. Keppt, Pub., Bridgeport, Ot. •Dm P A "V To se'1 rubt>er stamps. Terras free. H. JDIVJ lAl & PARRISH, P.O. box 986. Chicago. AGENTS wanted, on salary or commission. New busi­ness. Address J. B. Massey & Co., St. Louis, Mo. (g 200 -Outfit worth . 1 free to agents Excelsior M'f g Co., i&l Mich. A v., Chicago. A at lima.--Get the genuine remedy, fl.Ol) per box by mail. SoldbydrugglsU. Ad's D. LangeU, Apple Oraek, O. IfiTliUl The only sure remedy. Trial paokam HO I tlmA. ft-. L. 8MITHNIUHT, CleTSULndTo. OUTFIT FREE. Bast Chance Yet. Write at Once. COLLINS & CO., 4 Clinton Place, N.Y. nn a Week Salary guaranteed to male and female. Sead tU stamp for circulars. E. M. Bodine, Indianap'lis, Ind. frolltable, Pleasant work ployed. hundnds mora wan tad , _. boadrads now aa> M. N LoTall.KHo.rik. SAWS FILED easily, «3. for illustrated circulars. New machine. Stamd K. ROTH, New Oxford, Pa. A P | | B r a C C I I D C n w i t h o u t t h e u s e o f t h e H b U n t H O O U n t U Kiltie. Scud stmiip for book, giWnK lu.tiiuer of cci tlficau s of cure, etc. Aildr>'8H DR. 1.. H. UKATI(^\Y, 162 I'Ll'N STUECT, NK.AU Kol'HTH, Box .'<ts. CINCINNATI, O. A BOOK for the MILLION. MEOIbAL AOViOE and (?lironic l)'i«"»»<'S. Cancer, Catiirrli. Itmitiire. finuim Hnbit,ftc.,8ENT FKEK -Jn 'cccipt Dr. Onus'JJis-'penssry No. 12N. St.Lotus, Ma A AGENTS WANTED FOR THE GREAT Centennial history It sells faster than any other book ever published. One Agent sold 61 copies in one day. Send for our extra terms to Agents, NATIONAL PUBLISHING UO.a OBICA(«O„ Ill PATHI'S AMERICAN PEOPLE I The Press calls it " the best." Relit where flimsy " Cen­ tennial Histories" have no chance; IU30 pages, Illus­ trations, Autographs, Maps, Charts, etc. 7Vi>« hiir. A Steul Enpraving (now at Momiuial Art liall, Centen­ nial Kxi>osii ion) </iwe n to suiiscribors. CANVASSERS wanted on lilwrnl terms. J. Be f^lll) CO., New York and Chicago. Traveling Sal^vum aad for eveiy county. cm Miin'f'g Co..St. Loulf. W.t NTED--Traveling Liberal salary or commission. Oct) sent free. PRESIDENT Boston, Masa. •IA n. day at home. Agents wanted. Outfit and terms 91a free. Address TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine. $175' .V GOLD given away to every agent. Circulars free. Samples 25 ets. Empire Novelty Co., 307 Broadway, New York. EU&INPCDfi anil Rnginc Owners Nhonld E.I1121 !i b !. nOall understand the Allen Governo*. llluttrated Circular sent free. S. B. ALLEN, BosxoM. URGE PROFITS • wanted. Jr. ~ "" " 23 cents. Agenta Address C. Dyer. Box 68, East Stouqhton. Massachusetts. The Law ol Horse-Hire. The Rural Sun has the following : It has been decided that when a horsQ or carriage is let out for hire for the pur­ pose of performing a particular journey, the party letting warrants the horse or carriage fit and competent for such a journey. If the hirer treats the horse or carriage as any prudent man would do, he is not answerable for any dam­ age that either may receive. But he must use the horse for the purpose lor which he hired him. For instance, A horse CAMPAIfifl targe DifcCouuts to. Stpacil business. Catalogue £sampl«S'gfro«k §31 SpgwcEB, 847 Washington St.,Bo»to*. •ilV,r?ofT,LPKN HAYES. Kx SHinchet SaoipTe by AksuU. J. H. BUFKORD'S SONS, UOSTOM. S3 WATCHES, A Great Sensation. Sanpli Watch anr* Out/it fret to Agents. Better Gold. Address A. COULTER & CO., Oucajflfc A Monti*.--Aeeats wanted. 36 beat sott­ ing articles In the world. One sample frm Address JAY BRON SON, Detroit, Miak $350 IJ. R. fare reduced. Telegraphing, free. at BAYLIES'Great Business College, Keokuk, low*. T?PVftT.VUP Little Oiant, ?ahot. Self Acting. iUa * WJLl ¥ £lA> Cylinder, with Box Cartridges) #3.SO. 64 pp. Catalogue fr«*. Sporting Goods, Novelties, Rare Books, etc. New Good* for Agenta. BALDWIN & CO., Ill Nassau St., N. Y. $77 PKK, WEEK GUARANTEED to Agenta. Mala and Female,.bi their own locality. and[ OU-fFIT FREE. AddreM F. O. YICKERY i CO., Augusta, Maine. CHOICE FARM I NO LAND8. The bent and rhe.ape.it in market, on the line of the Union Pacific JUilkoaw, in Eastern Nebraska, Iter ill' on long time and low rates of interest. Sccnre noil)*-, mow. Full information about lands, prices!, etc ; also new descriptive pamphlet, new number of sent free to all applicants. Address O. F. DAVIS. Land Commissioner. U. P. R. R.. Omaha. Nab. TO PARENTS. 7* your child is suffering from worms, use JDr„ Wis hurt's Worm Scgar Drops, an old and reliable remedy, that never fails in thoroughly exterminating theae pests of childhood. Being made in the form of Sugar Drops, having neither the tarte nor smell of medicine, no trouble is experienced in inducing children to take them* Sold by all Druggists at 25 eta. & box, or sent by mail on receipt of prioft, st the Principal Depot, 916 Filber* Streefcs Philadelphia, Pa. THE PEMlf HOTIUl LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF PHILADELPHIA. ASSETS,, - - 95,504,329.24. Incorporated ia 1847. Pwreljr Mutual. Annual Cash Dividends available to reduce Pretnlnma the second year. Policies non forfeitable for thaix valna. Endowment Policies issued at Life Kates. SAMUEL C. IIUKY, President. SAMUEL m. STOKES. Yne-Prasldcmt. 11. S. STISFHENS, 3d Vice-PMMaat JAS. WKIR MASO% Actual*. * HENRY AUSTIE, SMNtary. Agenta wanted In all the Western States, on libecal twms. Address J-W IKEDEIX, Jk., Superintendwl H Agencies, No. 33 W. Third St., Cincinnati. O. TO *» WMMtkm wttk on !•>!• READT- PRINT btablUkmnt we h*T« opened a • PAPER WAREHOUSE * "vV :: . 1 | - . :•{#?»* i ¥• *w#h !• rtoeked wtth • Ml lln* of RA611STBAV PEfflT, *T**T KIKD OF Cards and Cardboard, Colored Print Papery, Fine Flat Papers, Ruled Papers, Tinted Papers, Cover Papers, Bpok Papers, Manila Papers, Envelopes, Tags> Printer's Ink*, Roller Composition, and Printer's Furniture, which we offer at remarkably low figures for Cash. Orders for type of any kind wUl b* filled with the utmost dispatch. We InTite correspondence, and will be pleased to gtrs estimate*, ai we nr« certain we can meet comiMtukA SSSSk1' ^°r ou* prices befors buyinc OBIOAGO NEWSPAPER PSION, H* Monroe Street, Chicago, 111. The Enemy of Disease, the Foe of Pain to Man and Beast, la tha QrsaA Old MUSTANG LINIMENT, WHICH HAS STOOD THE TKST OF JEAM. THEltElS WO SORE ITWILL JOT REAL.no LAHENESil IT WILL. WOT CITRE, WO ACHE. NO PAIR, TOAT AFFMCTS; THE HllkAN BoAf OR THE BODY OF A HORSE OR OThlER DOMESTIC ANIMAL, THAT DOES NOT YIELD TO ITS MAtilb TOrCH. A bottH fw iS* **«• «r §1.0<>, hM often save# ffiii'V* human betas, ud restored to UitoaadwMftilnem suir • nlubli kwrn. LANDS FOR SALE 960,000 Am ill Mhvest Missouri. FIRST-CUSS STOCK FARMS, Excellent Agricultural Lands, snd bfrt TOBACCO REGION in the Wert. SHORT WINTKltS, NO GRASSliOPPKRS, good Market. ut« • Healthy Country. Prices $150 to 910.00 an Acre. TERMS : Onstentta down, bsUnos to ssrsn yesnst 7 psr oent. Interest. FKEB TRANSPORTATION to the lands furnished purchasers. For circulars, gildss msps, etc., address A. L. DEANE. Land Commissioner. St. Louig. mm§ HEALTH AND LyiilHAPPINESS FOR SUFFERING MILIT0KS! No external remedy for fifty years has cicats' I for it- n»lf so wide-spread a P'Hml.irity in so short a time s» Collins' Voltaic Plaster. And deservedly so: for no remedy hns been so succe**ful in the cure of LsmenBBs, Soreness, Weakness, Nuinbnesg, anil Ner­ vous Pains and Aches. A single trial is convincing. COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTER consists of silver and zinc plates, carefully attached to­ gether and embedded in u Medicated Porous Piaster. (See cut.) A narrow strip of cloth, nhich t'« nui i<> be r«. turn ed, is placed over the plates. When the plaster Is placed upon the affected part, which can l<e don* as quickly and conveniently as with the ordinnry pcrons plaster--that is, by mere pressure of the hsnd--the nat­ ural warmth and moisture of the skin causes the platss to throw out a current of electricity so gentle flint it Is scarcely possible to fee', it othorw ise than by the sooth­ ing ana grateful wiirmt ti produced, yet so penetrating as stop almost immediately the most excruciating pain, rs- luuve eoi«uee«, lameness, and draw inflammation from thtf imsgn. liver, fcirttr yE, spleen, bowels, bladtier. heart, iliis! mu .ck a. A siuitlo COLLINS* VOLTAIC PLASTER fur IodmJ P;si»s, ianieness, soreness, weakness, nnmhnsss, end inilanimittiiin of the lunif». liver, kidneys, splesn. l'OWfif, bladder, itcurt, mid muscles, is ecjual to an army of doctors ind acres of plants and shrubs. It instantly banishes pain and soreness, gives life and vigor to ths weakened and paralyzed muscles and limbs, and is so grateful and soothing thnt, once ure.'i in the above ail. ments, every other external application, sueii as salvws, ointtnents, lotions, and liniments, will at once be dis* carded. Kven in paralysis, epilepsy or ti'.", nnti nervous muscular affections, this piaster, by rallying the nervous forces, has effected cures when every other known rsn>- edy has failed. Soul l>y all Druggists. Price 85 cent* I>v mail on recsipt of 35 cents tor onsf SI I !J5 fur six, or S3-25 tor twelve, C»r«- full,7 wrapped snd warranted, by WKKXS & l'OT I KK, Proprietors, Ilostou, Mass. PIS A N A K E S I 8 . DR. SILSBKE'S • External FILE Eemsdy, The only Sure Cm* for Piles. In order to practically pros* t* the public that "Anakesis" is all we claim for it. we will, on receipt of a let t er stamp, tend to any suffsrer a sample of the "Anakesis." frseos chsrgs. P. .N'Kl S'i'AKD'i KH & i'O., Soio Manufacl urers of Anakesist llui aa4ii. Mw V«r|i. BUT THE BIST t WHICH IB THB PEERLESS Ciotbes friier! IT. F. BURNHAM'S MM Turbine WATER WHEEL Kns ilifplnrnl hundreds of otbsr 1 urbines. but I ia 4 never been it- self UisplHe r<l. Psmphlct free. N. F. BURA'UAM. YOSX. PA. M«om should travel without a bottls of Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient. ChangM of temperstare, irregnlarity of rest and SStlMr, and exposures to draughts, are great and active acMHS in deranging the secietions of the bod,v. A doss oi t aperient"wSl prevent the e.ils resulting from Oftuee&y and s&ve m&iiy in con venienc^i ana Mil.il BT all druggists. s£S _L. a w. o. No. 39 nrHEN WKITITO TO ADVKHTISKK*) TI please say you NW tkt advuttHK Jk iBUUipspcr.

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