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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Oct 1876, p. 7

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SCIfcKTlSrS OH SPIRITUALISM. subject Discussed Before the British Auociation At Glasgow on the 12th nit., in the Anthropological Section, Prof. Barrett read a paper on some phenomena asso­ ciated with abnormal conditions of mind. The subject was one, howevei, in regard to which there had been a great change of opinion, and no better instance could be given of this change of front than that afforded by Dr. Carpenter. Prof. Barrett on one occasion took a card and put it in a book, and gave the dosed vol­ ume to a giil. She held it close to her head a little behind the ear, and then said, " I see something inside the book with red spots on it." lie then asked her to count the spots, and she replied that there were five, which proved to be quite correct, for the card was the five ok diamonds, and yet he was the only person in the room who could possibly nave known -what it was. This appeared to him t# be a dear case of clairvoyance, and the important point was that every care had been taken to prevent any un­ conscious muscular action giving any indication to the subject of what she was being asked about. In another case there was a lady who was in the habit of tell­ ing the time on a hunting watch after the hands been turned about in all sorts of directors. On one occasion they found, as they thought, that she was wrong. Returning the watch to her they told her so. She persisted, however, that she was right, and on examining the watch they found that such was really the <K|se, and that it was they themselves who had made a mistake. In that case the thoughts of the mesmerist were against those of bis subject. He had asked Mr. Maskelyne, one of the clev­ erest conjurors of the day, and a gentle­ man who was engaged in an attempt to disprove the reality of Spiritualism,, to aeo some of these phenomena with him, and he had since received a letter from Mr. Mask^lyne's manager in which he said, " In matters of this kind your best men of science are more easily deceived than the men of ordinary talent." Mr. Crookes, speaking as a spiritualist, contended against the theory that people were deluded into the belief that they saw manifestations which never occurred. He maintained that a trained scientific inqqirer was much more than a match for any conjurer, and that if it were a mere matter of hallucination the trickery UPpuld be found out long ago. Dr. Carpenter said that there were sflfme people who had a curious power of tnought-reading. Detective policemen, he believed, had this power in a wonder­ ful degree, and he referred to the Constance Kent case and others, to show that the officers frequently hit upon the truth by intuition. As to Dr. Slade, he frankly confessed that the gentleman had done things which had astonished him, and just before leaving London he had challenged him to repeat them in his own house, in the company of his own friends, and with nothing but his own furniture in the ijpom. Dr. Blade had agreed to do so, abd therefore he considered him on his dial and refrained from saying more of him at present. Prof. Barrett charged Dr. Carpenter with changiug his position. Dr. Carpenter denied that he had done so, and in regard to what had been said about clairvoyants, referred to the in­ stance in which Sir James Simpson had put a £500 note in a case, and &aid he wotdd give it to anyone who would tell its number, the result being that it lay untouched for months. During this exciting incident the Rev. Boht. Thomson was seen at the back of the platform flourishing a bank note, and apparently offering to submit it to the, test, but no attention was paid to him. Prof. Huxley on Evolution. Prof. Huxley, the distinguished Eng­ lish scientist has just delivered a series of lectures in New Yerkon "The Direct Evidence of Evolution." The following ^re the closing words of the last leoture of the series : " When an inductive hypothesis is demonstrated by facts in entire accord­ ance with it, and such as might have been reached by deductive processes, it is firmly established ; if the doctrine of evolution has not been fully established as firmly as and in the way that the Co- pernican system has been demonstrated beyond the possibility of cavil, nothing has ever been or ever can be proved. The only escape, is to say that all these different forms were created separately and at separate epochs, a belief which can never be demonstrated and is not supported by any other evidence or pre­ tended evidence. The time will come when such endeavors to escape the con­ clusion will be looked upon as are the views of those not yet wholly extinct writers who hold that fossils are no indi­ cations of animals, but either the sports of nature or, as has been recently gravely asserted, special creations to test our faith. All evidence favors evo­ lution, and there is none against it. To the uninformed it seems an insuperable objection that geologists, astronomers, ynrf physicists say that not sufficient time has elapsed since the earth grew cool enough to support life for all these changes of form. We look to the geolo­ gist and physicist for information in re­ gard to the time necessary for the pro­ duction of these forms, the existence of which we absolutely know. Let them set the time ; with that we nave nothing to do. There is no foundation for the assertion that evolutionists demand an impossible time; the biologist has no way to judge of time; he takes his facts from the geologist, who tells how long it took to lay the rocky deposits. If he says 500,000,000 years, we suppose he hta good grounds for saying so, and so long it took for the development; if he says 15,000,000 years, that was the time in which evolution performed its work. Suppose Sir William Thompson says that life could not have existed at such or such a time j evolutionists will tell him to riiwiiiBB that question with the geologists--we take what they say; it does not concern us. t "I have now," said Prof. Huxley, " reached the conclusion of my task. My purpose not been to enable the unreading to leave this hall in a condi­ tion to decide as to the validity or in­ validity of evolution, but to put before you the principles and facts for judging that hypothesis, and to show you the value of its evidence and its cogency. To accomplish tbia aid I have not hesi-, tated to take you as students through ar­ guments which sometimes must have cled your patienoe, or to inflict upon you details that cannot be avoided. I rejoice to have done you the greatest service in my power, if I have convinced you that so great a question is not to be dealt with in rhetorical flourishes and loose talk, but deserves the keenest at­ tention of the trained intellect and ob­ servation. When I began I did not think it necessary to form a prologue as a stranger, for I have met so many friends in this country that to do so would have been out of place." 8n8pected Duties. We suppose that when Mr. Moody was preaching in the Hippodrome there were hundreds who suspected that they ought to imitate his life and labor. Per­ haps some of them ought to do so; and the chances are that such of them as ought to do so will do so, They will be moved to it iiresistibly, because the powers in them, corresponding to his, will clamor for their natural expression. But a man who is not moved to this is not convicted of being a poorer Chris­ tian than Mr. Moody by that fact. Mr. Moody has a gilt for preaching--a gift for approaching men personally, and di­ recting them wisely--a gift.that has been greatly improved by use, or course, but still a gift, without which he could never have begun his mission. Moat men have no gift for public speech, and therefore public speech is no part of their duty. They need not suspect themselves on this account, or blame themselves or in any way make themselves unhappy over it. There are a great many kinds of work to be done in the world, and just as many varieties of men who are made to do it. No one man can do the work of another. The business of each is to find exactly, or as nearly as he can, the work he is best fitted "to do, and to do it wifch all his might. This entire, overshadowing burden of suspected duties ought to be lifted, and the great world of dissatis­ faction and self-condemnation that lies under it ope ned to the sunlight of peace. Our social and our religious teachers, especially the latter, have a duty in this matter toward their disciples which they need not suspect for a moment. They have no right to set a man to doing that which be can never do with profit to himself or others, or instill the feeling among those who listen to their instruc­ tions that their duty lies in lines outside of their conscious or proved abilities. The man who does his duty where he stands, with such implements as God has given him, has a right to the enjoy­ ment of peace and satisfaction ; and to malJ him suspect that he ought to do something more and something else, is to do him a life-long injury and a great wrong. It is to make a pitiful slave of one who has a right to be free.--Dr. J. O. Holland ; Scribner for October. THE STATE OF TRADE. Should Women Tote I Why should not the women vote? asks Danbury Bailey. They are far more practical than are the men, and practi­ cability is what we need in politics if we need it anywhere. Mr. Marshall's ex­ perience is illustrative of this phase of the female character. Mr. Marshall's regiment held its reunion in Danbury on Monday. The day opened with a elear sky and bright sun. Mr. Marshall was highly elated. After breakfast he made ready to go down to meet the boys as they came in on the train. He got out on the stoop, and, taking a look over the broad expanse of sunlight, exult- in gly said to his wife, who was standing in the door: " What a glorious day, Maria, for the reunion of the gallant band. How anxious I am to see the bovs, to look into their eyes, to take them by tne hand, to listen to their dear voices, Again we shall in the spirit face the foe, again we shall storm the line of bayo­ nets, again we shall press forward, shoulder to shoulder, in the glare of the fearful contest." Mr. Marshall stopped speaking. His eyes were lifted dreamily to the horizon, beaming with a new light, while his face flushed with pride. Then his wife soft­ ly murmured: " Don't forget to stop in at Merrill's, Tom; there is not a potato in the house." Success of the Centennial. The Centennial Exhibition will, judg­ ing from present indications, prove to be the most successful of any interna­ tional exhibition. Last Saturday was the 115th day. At that time 4,071,313 paying visitors had been present. The Vienna Exhibition was open 186 days, and the total number of paying visitors only reached 3,492,622. The Vienna proceeds at the gate were $994,025.25, while at Philadelphia, on Saturday, $1,- 884,534 had already been received--a sum nearly double the Vienna income. The non-paying visitors at the Centen­ nial Exhibition down to Friday last num­ bered 1,368,509, making a total attend­ ance of 5,439,822 in the 115 days. At London, in 1851, there were 6,039,195 visitors in 141 days; in 1862, 6,211,103 in 171 days, and at Paris, in 1867, 8,805,969 in 217 days. The receipts at Paris were $2,203,675. The receipts at Philadelphia already approximate this sum, and there still remain thirty-one exhibition days.--New York Tribune. In the forty years that the Merchant's Gargling Oil has been before the public, thousands of patent medicines have been ushered into the market and re­ tired, while this old remedy has held on its way, increasing in popularity with each succeeding year. Merchant's Gar­ gling Oil is known familiarly the whole length and breadth of the land, and the name of the Secretary, Mr. John Hodge, of Lockport, has a fame as wide as the medicine he dispenses. We have no data as to the number of bottles sept out from the manufactory last year, but the quantity must have been enormous. The company distribute two millions of alma­ nacs and domestic recipe books annually, and when it is remembered that these are given away, some idea of the extent of the advertising enterprise may be formed. A medicine that will stand the test of forty years, as the Merchant's Gargling Oil has done, needs no special indorsement at this late day.--Buffalo Courier. Thbbs is a pear tree 106 yean old in Augusta, Northumberland county) Pa. It bore about five bushels of pears this year, and has never been known to miss a season. *• Encouraging Report from New York-- A Marked Improvement in the Dry Qtodi and Other Lines. [From the New York Times.] Hie bottom has been reached after three years of unprofitable business, during which many traders had to give way to financial embarrassment, brought on in a great measure through a system of large and long credits to their custom­ ers, which in a great measure is now abolished. A large portion of the busi­ ness of wholesale merchants is now transacted with cash, and the buyers seem to be of a more substantial class than those who fame here three or four years ago. Business of all kinds, too, seems to be springing up in all portions of the country. Mills which have been idle for years are again in motion, and on the whole there is every reason to be­ lieve that the evil effects of bhe financial panic of 1873 are rapidly passing away. Dry goods merchants say that the con­ dition of their business has improved re­ cently; that the improvement is steadily going on, and they lock forward to a healthy and profitable fall trade. The boot and shoe dealers sav tliat trade is veiy good, and that reports from all parts of the country are of a most eneoarag- ing character. The hide and leather trade improves as the autumn trade ad­ vances, and, as a prominent merchant said, " It is beginning to feel the invig- i orating effects af the improved business pulse." The^export trade in leather is very good; the home demand is increas­ ing, and a gradual and steady improve­ ment is expected during the fall. The carpet and upholstery trade has greatly improved during the past month; the demand has been very active, and business is in a healthier condition than it has been for many years. The wine and liquor dealers have no reason to complain of the dullness of trade. They say the prospects for the fall are very encouraging, and that a marked improve­ ment has taken place since August in the volume of business transacted. The consumption of spirituous liquors is ad­ mitted to have fallen off, owing to the " depressed times," the patrons of cor­ ner groggeries not having money to spend in luxuries. There does not, how­ ever, seem to have been any decrease in the consumption of ale or lager beer, the tendency being rather iu the opposite direction. The grocery trade is in a very healthy condition, business during the summer having been good, and the fall prospects are considered encouraging, though at the moment operations in the wholesale hue show some abatement of activity. The iron trade, which has been, per­ haps. in a worse condition than any oth­ er branch of business, is showing signs of activity, and the prospects are regard­ ed as hopeful. There is not much to be said at present in favor of the building trade, but the revival in other branches of business will no doubt be soon felt by this branch of industry; and, in some re­ lations, even this interest is picking up a little. Considering that we have passed through three years of unexam­ pled depression in the business world, the prospects, on the whole, are very favorable indeed, and will tend to cheer those who were beginning to lose hope in the future. REMOVAL-150 •ew ami Srcond-hnnri. at « PIANOS & ORGANS!! ST0*M,"h™.nrt; finttlans S^.lnciw<lli!K WATER8«SOKS, will /*« «"*ord i nn ry low l>ricr« to rlose gj?!1.1? Knst 14tl» St., Union J?®*?®*Oct. 12th. Aluatc at half-prlc*, some 5**,,®*!' R'*lllnstratMl « Ulntogaea • I * SpsTts! !;idurc- iia T3e TrPd< ' HOH .U K WATERS ifv, and Us;«Ic JUroaaway, New York. 481 EtAS Tie fuiPTtJPe^ Buy fhe Corrugated STOVE-PIPE ELBOW. Don't take any other. II is better aad will Jsst longer ftaa say Elbow The Best Truss without Metal Sjirings ever Invented. iNo humbug claim of a certain ,_Jr3ilie il our»\ but a gunranteB >-of a comfortable, secure, end satisfactory appliance. H> fin f'lle inirl nnl ji ,ty full faf price jnr all thai <t„ not suit. Price, single, HiW out, 3*; for both 8ft. Sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of price. N. B.--Thh T> mm trill ,-nrr mnr* Hvpturr* if,an any of 'ha»t for trAirA rjcravajant claim* are mailt. Oirculara fre». POME HOY TRUSS CO., T46 Broadway, Naw York. LADIES' SEIF DRESS-FITTER^ T h e « F I T T E R " c o n s i s t s o f . 1 s e t a o f 15 dlflVrviH hij!cm of a lady's Waist, cut in heavypaper, ho that- after measures are ta­ ken, the estsiet-Btthiit panvrn c;m be sc-< lecteiS all ready to cut the goods bv. so aim- p«c that a child can use it fucceaifally by reading Instructions. With it any lady c*n fit her dresses perfectly, while It is of price­ less value to every dressmaker. Trice of Self Dress-Fitter, |t.50. Agents Wanted Everywhere! JS,OT*.-F°r TWO DOLLARS we will mRkf yott a yearly subscriber to tho 8lft¥« y Dressmaker and MlliiHer splendid Fashion Magm- vou by return mail the "belf DrrMg-FitterM FttEE! Send stamp for new and beautiful Catalogue or X'ashious. ^ A. BURDETTE SMITH I Editor, ft&MMBQOMA ; ) IB Xut 11th. IX., { New-Vork City.! LANDS FOR SALE 960,000 Acres in Sonthwest Missouri. FIRST-CLASS STOCK FARMS, Excellent Agricultural Lands, and iMwt TOBAOOO REGION In tha mat. SHORT WINTKRS, NO GRASSHOPPERS, good MarkaWand a Healthy Country. Prices $2.90 to $10.00 an Acre. Tibm» : One-tenth down, ImIum la ntw mm* at T par MBk interest FKKE TRANSPORTATION to tha Unds furnished purchuer*. For olienliua, (tldM, «tc., addreM A. L. DEANE. Land Commissioner, SL LmI*. Things Worth Knowlaf. Kid gloves are not kid, but are made of lambskin or sheepskin. Arabic figures were not invented by the Arabs, but by the Indians. Tube rose is no rose, but the tuberous palianth (palianthes tuberoxa). Black lead does not contain a single particle of lead, but is composed chiefly of carbon. Turkish baths are not of Turkish ori­ gin ; nor are they baths at all. They are hot air rooms. Prussian blue does not come from Prussia, but is the precipitate of the salt of protoxide of iron with pruasiate of po-^ tassa. * Brazilian grass does not come from Brazil, or even grow in Brazil; nor is it grass at all. It consists of strips of palm-leaf, and is chiefly imported from Cuba. Whalebone is no bone at all; nor does it possess any properties of bone. It is a substance attached to the lower jaw of the whale, and seems to strain the water, which the creature takes up in large mouthfuls. Sealing-wax is not wax at all ; nor does it contain a single particle of wax. It is composed of shellac, Venice turpentine and cinnabar.' Cinnabar gives it the deep red oolor, and tur­ pentine renders the shellac soft and less brittle. Burgundy pitch is not pitch; nor is it manufactured or exported from B irgun- dy. The best is a resinous substance, prepared from common frankincense, and brought from Hamburg ; but by far the largest quantity is a mixture of resin and palm-oil. Copperas contains no copper, but con­ sists of sulphate of iron. Cobalt, sold as a fly poison, contains no cobalt; but consists of impure metel- lic arsenic. Red precipitate or red oxide of mer­ cury is not made by precipitation, but by heating the nitrate of mercury; when precipitated it has a yellowish oolor. T&ONAWf. Webster's Dicinary. mnn «04n n..a^A » 3000 Engravings. 1840 Pages Quarto. FOUR PAGES COLORED PLATES. One of children having Wkbbtkr'S Una- BRIDOED, and using it treely, and another not. having it. the first will become much the most intelligent men and women. Ask your teacher or minister if ii ie not bo, than buy the book, and use, and urge its une. freely. Publishedb> G.&C.MKllRIAM,Springfield,llua. MUSIC BOOKS! MUSIC BOOKS! [THE ENCORE! Contains an excellent Contains ft" fine collect'n For SINGING SCHOOLS. I x^Lnd By L. O. EiUiaaoN. | Anthems, Duets, May Part Songs and Glee* Wractic. and Recreation. , As will be seen, there ar« Abundant materials of the best character, fer making Sinking Classes interesting, wide awake and popular. The Encore is also an szeellent book to use In Con­ ventions, Academies, College Choirs, «to. Friba 76 eta. 97.SU par dozen. Contains a Good Collec­ tion of Secu­ lar Musio. The Salutation! CHURCH MUSIC BOOK ! For 1870-9r. BT L. O. Exxmow. Contain* a tho-ough Singintrbch'l Course, with abundaut exercises. But the greater part of this new and important musl- cal work is taken up with new Metrical Tunes, Anthems, Sentences, Counts, etc., etc. The whole constitutes a borfk quite equal to those already published, whioh huve caused the name of Mr. Kmerson to be widely known a* one of the most successful of modern composers of Sa­ cred Music. Price $1.38. Per do*. $12.00. Specimen copies mailed, post free, for retail price. OLIVER DITS0N & CO., Boston. ^ILBiliiondsCo., J.B.Dltion&Cfc, *11 BhoadwaT, Saccessorsto Lee ft Walker, New York. PhUfc. KifMFngui&Ct/s Sew I ork Fall of Strangers. * Within the past ten days over 60,000 strangers have come to New York, on the way to or coming from the Centen­ nial Exhibition. The hotels are crowd­ ed to excess, and many applicants for rooms and board are necessarily turned away. Some landlords are paying for lodgings for the help, and guests are sleeping in the servants' rooms. The following figures show the number of persons registered im thirty-nine of the principal hotels in this city : Sept. 12, 3,920 ; Sept. 13, 2,600 ; Sept. 14, 2,558; Sept 15, 3,000; Sept. 16 and 17, 4,350; Sept. 18, 8,900 ; Sept. 19, 3,720. Total in eight days, 24,048. These figures do not indicate the aggregate of what are termed "hotel arrivals," for there are hundreds of small hotels whose board­ ers are not recorded.--JSmv York Sun. It is a traefction at Harvard that Dr. Winship, when a student there, devel­ oped hia muscle in order to have the pleasure of threshing a fellow-student who had insulted him. He was obliged at last to content himself with the pleas­ ure of having the muscle, as the offender apologized. IMPROtfBD SHUCK SHELLER Fanners, don't shuck your corn but shell It on our Sheller, which shells with the SHUCK OK AS WELL A3 OFF. Send for circular. KINGSLAND, Turkish Neurotic! Is the only remedy that will cure IMl'OTK SCY, IMBFXUilTY, INSANITY, EP1I.KPSY, and other complications caused by diseases of tbe re­ productive organs. TUxusattdB of men of all axes are aware of a gradual weakening of the procreative powers. Tbe activity of the organs diminish. Their functions abate, languish, then cease entirely. The victim becomes moody, un. happy, ferocious, distrustful, suspicious and childish, The proper treatment for all such coses, young or old is. SAY'S TURKISH NEUROTIC. This is the only known remedy for the oondition above described, nnd relief is sure to follow it* use. Price One Dollar per bottle. Address all orders to W. G. OAT. 185 Washington St., Chicago, 111. If. B.--Those who cannot obtain the Neurotio of their drngginta may send direct to me, and It will be forward­ ed at once. The jdmi atraaei which an Rtw beta* brought to light in this country in various governmental departments, resemble those terrible diseases which prostrate the body and often destroy it. A simple life would have prevented the national shame, and a few doses of Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient would have removed the causes which lead to the Batoiy physical attacks under which so many »une». SOLD B7.ALL D&UGQ1STS. WOOD'S D HAIR RESTORATIVE What It Does! .. ..ruj-ixmn imm vents Irritation, Dryness of the tsaed. dry, harsh 14 n>nr\vs,dresses, vijtor t<i the trrowt h accomplishes more a short Urai- than ever made, ahvays soft, lively and It Wstores, quickly. Gray Hair to its plossy Natural color. It has tii«» clfw'tdl Restoring the Unir to premal tureTy li;ild Heads. It ltemnves theSoalp. It pre- ItcbinK and Scaly Skin. It Restored and falling Hair, softens and gives of the Hair. It desired effects in any Restorative I •••• leaving the htiif miu --.1 -• • •Lrn glossy, whether used ns » Dressing upon the natural hair or upon the hair in ^unhealthy condition: thus rendering it. for the Ola and Wiuiig, an article of unequaled excellence. So preparation offered to the public produces such wonder­ ful results. Try it! Try it!! Call for " Wood's Im­ proved i" as it contains uo injurious qualities. It was o rig-in ally Introduced <M years furo by Prof. O.J. wwd.bot the recent ch'ingoof ingredients in this note I# making a demand for it in all p&rte of the United States, Oauadas and foreign countries, ANNOUNCEMENT TO -- • CONSUMERS! The great radical improvement introduced in this ar­ ticle has induced us to take the agency and advertise its virtues to the world. Its effects as a Restorative are what has l>een long sought for and wanted for many years, be- CHEAPNESS St •£! JOURNALISE ONE DOLLAR > , PATS FOR TBS inir more decided than has ever he­ ed. No DriucKist kno\y« its corupo- make it; therefore it, "Wood's Im- lefc any unprinci- vinceyou that, he or Renewer as thing similar, ns and satisfactory fore been attain- in the world sition, and cannot when vou call for proved," do not pled dealer eon- nan a Restorative frood, or sonie- there is none like it. Insist ujKin having "Wood's Improved,"and take no other, for your money! It will not he long before all dealers everywhere will have it. K you should fail to hnd it. you can ewul $UH» f<> «u> by mail for a bottle^or for six bottles, and we will send it to you, prepaid, to any Express Station denired. A<l.lres* A. CfMIK « CO., Chlcaffo, «ht> Sol»> Agents for I Ho Vnited States and Can- "da*, who will All all orders and sapply tne Trade at Manufacturers' Prices. J. B. Kimball, Proprietor. I*" Sold in Chicago. Milwaukee, Detroit and St, Paul by all Wholesale Druggists, and by Retail Trade generally. " BOSS" AT THE CENTENNIAL As well as at YIEMA. THE W I L S O N RECEIVED THE HIGHEST AWARD, A MEDAL & DIPLOMA FOR THE FAMILY SEWING MACHINE IN THE WILSON SEVIN6 MACHINE CO. MANUFACTURER Ohioago, New Orleans, New York. OPIUM HABIT CURKD AT HOME. No publicity. lint* short- Terras moderate. 1.U00 testiino. Dials. Describe case. DR. K.' B. MaKhh. Quinoy, Mich. HALL'S PATENT HUSKING GLOVES. GFIEL HALF GLOVES. The fuiest and most economical Huakers In usa. O'i'fr §4K),000sold. Made of best calf feather. I'tiiekjed with Metal Plates, making them last five '.miRS longer, husk faster and easier than any other Husker. Sizes extra large, large, medium, and small for lx>ys and girls, for both right and left-handed persons. Price, prepaid. Full Gloves, $2.25: Boys, $2.00; Half Gloves, $1.15 per pair. Wealso " mend > manufacture and recom- HALLfS IMPROVED HUSKING PIW, made of best east ate«l, fin most approved form, ancS pro­ vided with straps ready for use. Unquestionably the very Ix-xt Husking Pin In the market. Price, prepaid, 30 eta., three for SO cts. Awk your merchant for them, os HALL HUSKING CLOVE CO- 145 So. Clinton StnChiimfiK The' Enemy of Disease; the Foe ol Fain to Man and Beast, la the Grand Old MUSTANG WHICH HAS STOiPlt 1'BK TEST 0F40 TEAUS. TIIEIIE IS WO SOKE IT WILL NOT III5AL. WO LAMENESS IT WILI WOT crHE, too ACHE^NO PAIW, THAT AFFLICTS THE HI'MAN «ODT, OB THE W»»T OF A IIOKSK OK OTHEH HOMR8TIC ANIMAL, THAT HOES NOT YIELD TO ITS MA«iIC TOIX'II. A bottle costing;(SOc. orfil.O'U ;d.:.oiten snveti the life of* human being. unrt restored to liftuteHfUiiNi many • valuable bomi EUPEON ! If yon hav* rheumatism, neuralgia, headache, a bum, or a braise, procure a bottle oi Eupeon. It wjll give instant relief, as thousands oan testify. For sai@ by all Druggists. H. A. HURIt- BUT ft CO 75 and 77 Randolph street Chioago, A§,eate for tbe Proprietor* im\m JOB ONE YEAR. U •y iiV For the Mature, For the Young, For the Ladies. CHOICE HATTER For Hie Fanner, " lor the Business Haa, For Everybody pHICftCO IEDBER AT Sl.OO a Year CONTAINS IT ALL. Ia obedtene* to the demands of tho timm* and believing the beat buBlneaa polkry be to place our paper at the lowest liviat sate, we announce that THE CHICAM# LEDGER ean be had hereafter for ALL WHO WAIT* A FIRST-CUSS STORY P/IPEK 'should send tor PfflCAGO|EDBER A PAPEE WHIOH WITH PROFIT. With an excellent eorps of ed» and oontribators; with that experleaeo Ma this Held whioh enables ns to know IhS wants of the reading public; with * paper which is now, and has been for years, m welcome and eagerly-looked-for flatter Is thousands of homes, we offer a First-Classj^Faniily Paper X ' ' | w ; ' V r v J 2 T » V-v- % OXOB DOIIXJAR FOB TWELVE MONTHS; We believe this the best ofler over wamUm la this country. No reader should Ml Is IMPROVE THIS OFPOBTDHHT TO GIT A Year's Reading; FOR ONE DOLLAR. In subscribing for THE LEDGER at OS# DOLLAR A TEAR, you PAT ROfflHifitd* AGENTS. 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