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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Sep 1877, p. 7

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REBELLIOUS CRAZY HORSE. Itdlln Episode at Hm Bad Cloud Im- dlmn AKtney. * [Camp Robinnon (Neb.) Cor. Chicago Times.] The arrival of Crazy Horse as a pris­ oner from Spotted Tail agency was at­ tended with a number of exciting events. About 6 o'clock an ambulance drove up to the guard-house at Camp Robinson, bringing Lieut. Iiee, Indian Agent at 5 Spotted Tail; Crazy Horse, the fallen Chief; Spotted Tail himself, and several Indians as guards. The ambulance was sKfescorted by about eighty Indian soldiers, • partly from this agency and partly from Spotted Tail. On arriving at Camp Robinson Crazy Horse was led by Little jBig Man and Touch-tlie-Cloud into the jx>st Adjutant's office, which place was lit once surrounded by Indian scouts And United States soldiers. The inter- {reter was then instructed to tell all the ndians that Crazy Horse would not be harmed, but would be put in the guard­ house and be taken charge of by the Soldiers. When they started to move him to the guard--house he held back and was forced along by Capt. Kenning- ton, who was officer of the day, assisted by Little Big Man. It appears that Crazy Horse's revolver and knife had toot been taken from him, and on being disarmed in the guard-house he secured liis knife and attempted to make his es­ cape. Little Big Man, however, hung on to him like a tiger, and received a severe cut on the arm from Crazy Horse. On emerging from the guard-house he was at once surrounded by soldiers, some of them with fixed bayonets. In the souffle which ensued Crazy Horse re­ ceived a wound in the abdomen which is serious but may not prove fatal. Dur­ ing the struggle to retain him, a number of the Indians who escorted him from Spotted Tail rushed up, guns and revolv­ ers cocked in hand, motioning for the crowd to open so they might get a shot at him, but on receiving this wound Crazy Horse sank to the ground, groan­ ing piteously. The Indians then re­ fused to have him taken into the guard­ house, and, when Capt. Kennington or­ dered four men to carry him in, one In­ dian, evidently a friend of Crazy Horse, leveled a pistol at the Captain's head, but his arm was pushed upward by an Indian standing by him. After having his arm dressed. Little Big Man returned to the scene of the disturbance, and gave some orders, thereupon Crazy Horse was placed upon blankets, and carried by the Indians into the Adjutant's of­ fice. DSATH OF CBAZY HOB9B. A later account says: " Crazy Horse died last night from the effects of the wound received while attempting to make his escape. This morning the body was taken to his village, where the mourning friends paid their humble tribute to his memory, after which the village moved toward Spotted Tail asrency to lay the regains away. They say Bed Cloud agency is not on hal­ lowed ground. The feeling among the Indians is generally good. They say that Crazy Horse was " the man without ears, who would riot listen to counsel." His father remarked this morning that the whites had killed his son; but he was a fool and would not listen; it was a good thing. Good V<)ice, one of the Brule chiefs, says the Indians do not blame the whites for killing Crazy Horse, and that he brought it upon him­ self. These assertions go to show that most of the influential men among fhem are on the side of the whites." Thurlow Weed's Hat. It has been the daily custom of the venerable Thurlow Weed during the hot summer months to visit Washington Market, and to send to his residence, No. 12 West Twelfth street, from six to a dozen baskets of fruit. Punctually at 4 o'clock he has opened his hospitable doors to a company of pale women and sickly children, and the baskets have been speedily emptied. The neighbors and intimate friends of Mr. Weed were considerably astonished on last Friday to see him walking bare­ headed through the pouring rain. He stopped eVery little boy and girl he met, as well as many parents of little boys and girls, and asked of each, in a tone of sadness, whether he or she had seen a wicked little boy with a big hat. In the war of 1812 Mr. Weed was a drummer boy in the Bluetail Regiment. The uniform he wore was severely sim­ ple. It consisted of a torn shirt, a well- patched pair of pants, and--a hat. After the wars he carefully laid aside the hat. It is kept in a box, and only taken* out when Mr. Weed desires to buy a new hat. A week ago he sent for Ms hatter to come and see the old Bluetail hat, and make a new one as nearly like it as possible. The hat was made. It was to have been worn yesterday on the an­ nual visit to Saratoga. On Friday after­ noon the new hat reposed on the rack in the hall. Mr. Weed's eyes wandered to it as he stood dispensing fruit and kind words. Suddenly a little bareheaded boy approached him, holding a hat with an immense flappy rim. It was a very deep hat, and held nearly half a bushel of fruit. Mr. Weed is very near-sighted, but for a moment, as he emptied the fruit into that hat, he seemed staggered by its dimensions. "Boy," he remarked, "either you have a very big head, or that hat doesn-t belong to you." The boy laughed, arid darted out of the open door, carrying away the hat filled with fruit. The baskets were emp­ tied, and Mr. Weed turned to enter his private room. As he passed 'by the hat- rack he stopped short. The hat was gone. Who could have taken it i Mr. Weed remembered, and, with a faint blush on his cheeks, walked out bare­ headed into the rain, sheltered only by his umbrella, in quest of that boy. Capt. Byrnes, of the Mercer street police, was notified, and the family were informed by Mr. Weed that they oould not leave town until the hat should be recovered. THE IiOST HAT RECOVERED. A pleasant-faced, blue-eyed boy mod­ estly rang at Mr. Thurlow Weed's door yesterday morning and asked to see him. Carefully wrapped up in paper he car­ ried a parcel. As he stood in the pres­ ence of the venerable sage the tears filled his eyes and his voice trembled. "Mister," began the boy, "here's your hat; al didn't mean to steal it. While you were fillin* the other boys' hats with fruit I took it, for I had no hat, and I wanted to bring home some fruit to mother. I read in the Sun about the ungrateful boy stealing your hat, and I felt awful bad. Here's the hat, sir. Mr. Weed patted the boy on the head. He took the much-prised hat, smiled af­ fectionately upon it, gave the boy a few kindly words of advice, and encouraged him to do well. Mr. Weed last night greeted his many friends and delighted in repeating the story of how he lost and found his hat-- the famous hat of the Bluetail regiment EF 1&L2.--Ifbw I ork Sun. § ? - , INTERN ALREYENUB. ^ IWIIsHcis of the Fiscal Year Kadad Jul SO, 18TT. The following statement will show the amount Of gallon-tax paid on spirits dis­ tilled from materials other than apples, peaches, or grapes in the States named during the fiscal year ended Jane 30, 1877 : UUHOflk First district.,.., 1,288,954 Second district.^ 10,390 Third district ......... 980,569! Fourth district.. . 490,819 Fifth district. ........ Tjfi01,M9 Seventh district......i-,...,, , 17,846 Eighth district S.542,912 'Tenth district M0 Thirteenth district......... 13,333 ToUL. 'Abolished Oct. 2, 1876. IHDIAXA. First district,,.. .... *;i?cond district... .. Fourth district ............. Sixth district........w..... Seventh district. Eleventh district.....;...... Total ....; 'Abolished Nov. 1, 1876. IMTUOMl Second district............. "Third district Fifth district.. - Sixth district Seventh district Eighth district Ninth district.... Total............ •Abolished Sept. 30,1876. XXSBOTjml. First district Second distriot....- 'Third district ' Fourth district.,. Fifth district..... Sixth district Total 'Abolished Sept. 90,1876. OHIO. Firs!; district Third district Fourth district Sixth district. Seventh district Tenth district Eleventh district Thirteenth district Fifteenth district Eighteenth district 847,206 ..f 9,83.1 ... - .. t,224,391 368,041 .. 1,576,266 4,212 t M6M10 .$ OCT.iwi . 2,742 .. 1,578,973 . 8 3(12,942 .. 1,332,357 157,067 55,984 ..$ 7,0W,71P .t 1,521,763 4,002 5,801 18,424 683 33,085 ..$ 1,673,747 .$ 7.803,4^8 646,594 865,653 440,913 101,745 89,203 782,730 7,364 14,093 39,721 Total $10,351,484 ....*. $ 1,103,787 1,020 1,304 First district Second district Third district....... Total $ 1,106,111 A comparison of the above figures with those of the preceding fiscal year shows the following result: $17,847,205 5,259,410 7.099,718 1,573,747 10,351,484 1,106,111 . 1876. $19,457,317 4,782,178 5,230,261 135,253 11,399,378 1,456,776 Itatea Illinois Indiana Kentucky Missouri Ohio Wisconsin...., Total $43,237,675 $42,461,693 The following statement will show the internal-revenue receipts by States and Territories for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1877. This statement does not include the receipts for the sale of ad­ hesive stamps, which cannot be appor­ tioned among the several States and Territories: Alabama Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut DakotaJ Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Maryland Massachusetts... Michigan Miunesota Mississippi MiuBOUri Montana. Nebraska Nevada. New Hampshire , New Jersey...,., New Mexico...., New York....... North Carolina.. Ohio. Oregon Pennsylvania.... Miotic Island South Carolina.-. Tennessee t 108,010 15,620 85,850 2,749,594 75,775 661,420 22,306 470,175 26,018 165,890 278,879 16,562 $1,870,203 6,037,229 810,399 130,763 • 9,534,424 626,439 79,620 2,705,246 2,068,726 1,821,882 239,464 78,063 4,450,U68 20,729 602,743 58,312 234-999 ,4,987|960 17,710 14,452,5° ' 1,775,8-i 15,474,689 53.100 G,2V9,046 ' 283,1G5 105,632 897,183 237,949 28,438 50,093 7,032,221 21,373 461,032 2,867,432 15,204 Utah. Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia.., Wisconsin Wyoming ...... Total $112,544,668 The fifteen States from each of which over $1,000,000 were received contrib­ uted in the aggregate- over $104,000,000, leaving less than $9,000,000 as the ag­ gregate amount of tax paid by the rest of the States and Territories. Illinois alone paid nearly one-fifth of the aggre­ gate amount collected, and the three States of Illinois, Ohio, and New York paid nearly one-half of the entire amount collected during the year. The six New England States paid less than $4,000,000, which is considerably below the amounts received from single dis­ tricts in some of the Western Mongolians in Australia. We are not the only people who have on hand a troublesome Chinese immi­ gration question. The Chinese are flocking to Australia in such vast hordes that the colonists are alarmed. In Queensland they are present in such numbers that the head of the Govern­ ment has addressed the Governors of other states, asking for united action to check the inflow of the Mongolians. They are invaluable as workers, and there is not precisely such jealousy of them as is felt in California; but in Queensland they threaten to form a ma­ jority of the population, and much com­ plaint is made of the vices they intro­ duce. It is proposed now to impose a heavy poll-tax upon them, and to refuse to allow future immigrants to land un­ less they are accompanied by their wives. THE great want in New York is civility in trade. Stewart, a short time before he died, said that one of the great plagues of his life was to find a salesman that would be civil to poor people who wanted a few needles and some tape. BRMFFLAI* APOSTATE 80S. Joka W. ¥< Bwdaimed to the Mormon . faWi. John W. Young, Brigham's apostate son, who renounced polygamy several years age, along with * two wives, to marry a handsome Philadelphia widow, has been lured back into the polygamic fold once more by the charms of one of his brother's widows, a daughter of Mrs. Bteahouse, who is now lecturing against Mormonism. Clara Stenhouse is the only member of her family that still clings to t.hift religion, and she is so bigoted and fanatical that for a long time after her parents apostatized she refused to even speak to them, and treated them with the utmost contempt John Young is the youngest child of the prophet's legal wife, and is the smartest, and has seen more of the outside world than any other of Brigham's children. He is a shrewd business man, a railroad magnate in a small way, and has been a very frequent operator in Wall street. His contact with the Gentiles in his long and frequent visits to the large Eastern cities has not tended to increase his faith in Mormonism, and it has long been well known that he only remains in the church for the emoluments which father's position afforded him. Of course these privileges, in­ cluding the handling of church tithing, were very convenient, but otherwise he had no belief in the doctrines of this gigantic religious fraud. Like the majority of prominent Mormons, John W. embraced polygamy, but for several years he has been a monogamist. His first wife was from Philadelphia, and it was while on a visit to her relatives that he met the woman for whom he dis­ carded both first and "second wives. He was a handsome, attractive man, and she a dashing young widow, and it seems it was a desperate case of love at first sight. She knew very well about his matrimo­ nial entanglements, as his first wife was her own cousin, but that did not prevent her accompanying him to Utah under promise to marry liim after their arrival if he would discard his other wives, which he accordingly did. This new marriage of course puts out of joint the nose of the monopolizing Philadelphia wife; but the popular verdict is that it serves her right, as she came out to Utah with the calm determination of betraying her own cousin by defrauding her of her husband, and carried her point with dogged perti­ nacity. ' She was an Eastern-born and educated girl, had already been onoo married, and could not find shelter under the excuse that she was raised in Mormonism and had been taught that polygamy was right. She may, perhaps, have loved John W., but most people believe that she was actuated by pure selfishness. A Queer Little Beast. The Norwegian lemming is an animal about the of « Tronic. It lives un der stones in the summer--under snow in the winter. It is a savage little beast. It hisses and bites. About once in ten years they emigrate in the autumn, in large armies. They march in a straight line. They cross lakes and rivers. They go through haystacks rather than go around. Nothing stops them, not fire, cascades, nor swamps. If a man stands in the way they will jump at him as high as his knee. If struck they will turn around and bite and bark like a dog. Foxes, lynxes, owls, hawks, and weasels will follow them and destroy large numbers of them, but it does not check them. They continue their course until they reach the sea, into which they plunge, as persistent and progressive as ever, until the waves drown them and exterminate them. .Uflrainalifck * PURELY VEGETABLE, M. RKCOBDON, of Geneva, has invent­ ed a machine by which blind people can write at once in characters meant for their blind brethren, and in ordinary letters legible with the eyes. A writer in a Paris paper says that he saw it in operation ; and a few phrases which he himself wrote with it, without any pre­ paratory study, were deciphered imme­ diately with surprising rapidity. t ' 11 1 "" The Misdirection of the BUa. The misdirection of the bile, a oonseqneuoe which eoanee when the liver is inactive and the bowels torpid, produces a nnmbar of bodily evils. The blood- becomes ©ontoiamated with the bilious fluid, causing the skin and the whites of the eyes to aommo t* jelkmish tinge; dys- pefwia and n&Heea superveno, the tongue be­ comes furred, ike breath foetid, there are pains in the side and between the shoulder blades, the urine is colored and ac&ldlng, and, in aggravated cases, jaundice and inflimmtHnn Qf the liver ensue, All these sonseqtienoeg may be prevented or obviated hv using Hostetter'e Stoua&eli Bitters, a vegetable alterative tonic, which stimulates the inactive Mvet to exert itself in secreting and directing the bile, acts naturally npon lite bowels, and removes every true of indigestion. . It it fa Well-Known Fact that many grocers sell DOOLETT'S YEAST POWDEB at the Bame price they do the cheap, inferior kinds, and, as they pay more for it, make less money; hence they never sell it unless the purchaser demands and insists on having it. They keep it out of sight, and urge customers to take the common kinds because they are more profitable. Good, pure articles have a value, and cannot be sold as low as those that are adulterated. THIRTY years' experience proves the Graefenberg Vegetable Pills to be the in'WTt and most effective medicine ever known fC rt&t oomplete cure ef headache, biliousness, liver complaints, nervousness, fevers and diseases of digestion. Sold everywhere; price 25 cents per bos .Send for almanacs. Gt&efeaberg Co., New York. The CHEW Wood Tag TOBACCO. TBK PIONEER TOBACCO COMPACT. New York, Boston and Chicago. THOUSANDS are entitled to increase of pension. They having been pensioned at rates below what their disabilities warranted, others as their disabilities have increased since first nensioned. All such can have their pensions increased, and those who are not pensioned, but entitled to pension, can secure the same by addressing, with stamp, McNeill & Birch, Washington, JD. C. NO fee till claim is allowed Hofmann's Hop Pills cure the Ague at once TEACIIEBS of VOCAL III, Desiring: the Best Boalc extant* ihould try TS l ITAD irTT I collection of FAY OKI Ihl Gems oompiled fop their use by I Prof*. H. H. and T. H. R. Chris- JSUMliS I tie, and supervised by Prof. B. M. Mcintosh, the eminent au­ thor and toaeher. Price MiA'A's » aogen. Sample by Sail, SO cents. SPKCIMBI PAGES FREE. B 'tv. CABROLL £ OO., Pebbten. Cincinnati, or 1.TOH 4 H.EALY. Chloaga. Men to travel and take orders of _ ___ Merchants. Salary #1200 a year and all traveling expenses paid- Ad draa* Qui ManTsOa,SfcLo^i,Ma WANTS NITED STA T&S $66 a week e few? ewn town, items and $1 bee. BL HALLETT A OO.. Portland, CIO A D\T at bnam. A«entewsatod. V I iC twins free. TRUE A OO.. Ang--Is. is BmcnjAx. arwior all dissssi the livar, Stomaeh AX. 8PM the liver BAD BREATH! Hothin* ls so unpleasant, nothing so eoauson as bad math, and in nearly mn ease It oomes front the atom Mb. and can be im easily corrected if yon will take SUMMONS JJVKR REGULATOB, DO not neglect to ran t renwdy for this dnordtar. It will *1^ fOtts* Complexion und General -• - CONSTIPATION: SHOULD not bo regarded a* • trifling ailment--In fa demand* the utmost the boweb. and any devtat from this demand pam the m often to eeriooadanger. ItiaqniM « neoemuy to lemoTe tmpw aoi comalattooa from the bowela aa it . » to eat or sleep, and no health 2*?. K wmeoted wh#m a ocettai . feahtt of body prev&ik- SICK HEADACHES . Thli dlstrewliy affliction ooonrs most frequently. Hie disturbance of the stomach, arising from the imperfectly IImmIm MntAfite Mnaas a mmmm •.•ii. il. a _ _ » rrJCiT nfUMiw; lor use re­lief of whichs Takh FIIMMOHT* Lma RXQUUTOK om jtoMonnt. MAVUTACrUUD OVLY SIT J. H. ZCILIN A CO, PHILADELPHIA. <1.00. Sold kjr all Druggist*. Four Months for One Dollar. The CHICAGO DAILY NEWS. »he only ONK-CKNT newspaper published in the West, It, * twenty-column paper, containing ail the news of the da» in short, sharp, oondensed form, aiming to give ONLY FACT", and leaving to larger «heets the monopoly of the reporter'« gush and the penny-a-liner's wearisome platitude*. It contains PRONOUNCED KKITORIALR upon the living questions of the day, copious TELEGRAPH and CABLE DISPATCWKS. RELIABLE MARKET REPORT®, and, in short, a complete record of the news of the day the world over. In addi­ tion to being a complete newspaper, every issue contains a COMPLETED STORY, thrilling and romantic, and pointing a wholesome moral. The DAILY NEWS is INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS, espousing the cause of no party, bat aiming to present exact and truthful state­ ments of every political event or question, without fear or favor. It is LIVELY, ENTKRPRIBINO, DECENT IN TONE, WIDE-AWAKE and SPICY, treating every subject briefly and pointedly, but In all things avoiding flippancy. It Is a DAIT.Y paper at the price of a weekly. It haa a larger circulation, as has been proven by published affi­ davit®, thmn any other daily paper published in Chicago. It liafl piinted and sold over 77,000 copies in a single day. The subscription price is I3.UO a year, $1.00 TOR FOUR MONTHS. No subscription received for less than four months, f®'- We offer no Chromos or Patent Light­ ning Rods as Premiums, but guarantee to give you the worth of your money a hundred fold. Address CHICAGO DALLY NEWS*, Chlcac*. HI. T O Y E P O L I S H If IS BEING DOME ALL AROUND YOU, Avayoti oat of work? Don't yon mate noBsp fart enough ! Send lor Circulars of " TOM SAWYER," MARK TWAIN'S NEW BOOR, or Catalogue of all our books, and select one to plnaae yon, and make from to felOO per week selling it. A trial will cost nothing. We will give yon the lhS Book and iargtrt Committiont, and yon cannot fall to sucoeed. Write at onoe to the AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.. Chicago, M. For SIX BK.U'TIH L PirTCRBS, (different subjects,) 14x17 inches; Or for FIVE PICTUKES, 17x22; Or for FOU! MCTUBES, 19*24.- Fac-simile copies of FIXE 8T8EL EKJJ8AVINKS, ma<le by i'ue cele­ brated ORAPIIIC process, printed on Heart' Plate Fa|«r for framing. Send tci.:. ccaiis tot lllu&tiCat­ alogue coatainiag over 10(1 (ilrturea. Addreti, Tut DAILY OR APHIC. New York City. The Bent Trnaa wlthoet Metal Springs ever inv nted. No humbug claim of a certain radical cure, bat a gtaaimntee of a comfortable, secure and satisfactory appliancs. We will take back and pay FJILl PRICE for all that do not suit single, like cut, 941 for both sMesu|& Sent by mril, post-paid, on receipt of price, ~ GCRE more Rupture; travagant claims are Bsasi; P0M1R0Y TRUtt UU. , 9U> M# IMW", N. This Truss wiu> any of those for which H> Circular* free. kttawhway. Www Vorfc. DO or agricultural use. Free to »ny Xtidi X0!(T60«BR\' WARD dfc CO., Original Grange Supply House, 82 d& £29 Wabash Ave., CH1CAUO, ML 3f€»¥ VAI1< to seiul for our New Catalogue. It con­ tains viiluaMe lnfws niatton for every pemosa conteir- platlng the put- ctuuwof aiiygrac'e for pcrBowu. family WHITNEY & HOLMES O R G A N S . Tlte Finest Toned and Most Durable Mad*. New Myles. New Htopa. Warranted Five Tears. Send for Priee>LWt, WHITNEY A HOLMES ORGAN CO.. QUINCY. ILL- O B G F A N S I Owing to the hard times and oonscqnent traduction In wages and in cost of all material, and eepeciallf because weare contented with email pro/Its, we are able to sell oar New Style Organ, which has a chaste and elegant aright ease, with lamp stands, carved brackets, curved s and sll other late improvements, and oontalns TWELVE STOPS Foil <67 .OO. On Pianos we can make equally favorable prices. IJor Illustrated Catalogue and hill particulars Address the m*Alleger"rBov*ii^j & Co.» Wuhlntian, ST. J. HEADACHE. DR. V. W. BENSON'S CELERY AND CHAM. OMlbE P1L1<S are prepared expressly ts cure SICK HEAIIACHE. NKRVOjfS HEAD- NEHSt ud will cure any case* Office. 106 jj, Eiitaw 8t.t Baltimore. H(«t* Price* &Oe*« Baltimore. Wd. A0OKS8 rm ewcuLAR K.OEOeWCK&CO UK .Co^TENNIAl. niY TO BOOKKEEPING! The Best Text Book and Self-Instructor in the World. Sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of Fifty Cents, by toeauthM. GEO. B. WELSH, Savannah,Geoigia. mSUMNCE COMPANY, a THE CITY OF NEW YORK. 261, 262, 263 Broadway. --0R6AI1ZEB 1S10--• ASSETS, $4,827,176.52 SURPLUS, $820,000 EVERY APPROVED FORM OF POLICY ISSUED ON MOST FAVORABLE TERMS ILL ENDOWMENT POUSSES' AFPEOVIB CLAIMS BSATUR1NO m 1877 AT 7i OJff PBJCSJENTATIOir. MMB6BOB&L, . - P1UBS1DB1IT. A The Best Polish in the World.1" Ov;v V\ o CO CASHMERE BOUQUET TOILET SOAP TELE novelty and exceptional strength of its per- faxae are the pecu­ liar of this luxurious ar­ ticle, which has ac­ quired popularity hitherto unequaled by any Toilet Soap of home or foreign manufacture. Three Wnrnlnjru.--A Sick Stomach--an Aching Read--and considerable general debility, are three warnings which it if madness to disn»K«rd. Dangerous diseases snay be expected to follow them if not arretted without delay. Tone the relaxed Ktoiuach, calm the ex­ cited brain, invigorate the nervous system, and regulate tho bowels, with Tarrant's Effervescent Seltzer Aperient if you wish to escape the evil# which the premonitory symptoms indicate. How many consuming fever*, vio­ lent bilious attacks, nervous paroxysms, and other terri­ ble ailments might be prevented if this agreeable und incomparable SALINE TONIC and ALTERATIVE we re al­ ways taken In time! Sold by all druggists. WILHOFT' ! Antl-Periodloi FEVER AND AGUE Fbf Ml DUfa«ni CntMfd by Jtatertal JMwni«9 0/ the Btood. A Warranted Cure! Gr. R. BrIÎ LA.Y Sc CO., JVnr OWcflMf m-TOB. BALK BY A.LL DKUGOISTS. T H O M S O N S P A T E N T c ; G L O V E - F I T T I N O x-i|C per dw at home. 8amplee 're*- STPfOW A Co.. Por*'---« $5937 Maiio hv 17 Apcn my i :iH,warticlc<!. Sarapli Address C. JT. LmingUm, 1&mm*0jUSre«. J. B. Oaylord A Co^ Chicago, lli ' 5XACHIBTUJ FWUUL HSL » Gaylord A Co.. SIJS*IC*i .worka. Hunter OWL I Agepta. ACOCLTIE $400BŜ MTdtiM. YAI A CftCbkagm $350t m inJon.77wttt MeNTH--AGENTS WANTED-M mm , sellingartkitoaInawworid; emaampisy»e<tr # Address JAT BRONSOIt, Detmlt. MM*. Jit* REVOLVER imi Ssa^S,!" Address J. Bown A8on, 186 A 1» Wood-et..Ptt5fc<ZK^" GKNTSCAM MAKE 88ft WE PAY our PATBSWT BEER FAUCET. Sena wm §3 5 , inlar. WQB8W1CI M'PG CO.. Ctesatog. Oijfc m ••&>** PENSIONSsrsaffffiL" * aoddsBtally lajored or dtoeaaed SoldWr. AdtrassOAI W. FITZOKBALD. U.&Olata Atfr.WaAtegto^N-1 CORSJEJS node of thi« UNRIVAUID CORSET I mmv nmnkandhy I MIUlONf 1 fVicM«f«nttchrM MEDAL RCCEIVtD AT CKNTCNNIAL. I Get the Genuine.,tffia .beware ofhnlutiont. | ASKAUO ran THOMSON'S UNaREAIUBlCmiU.| The btst foods md«. I See that tho name of THOMSON and the Trade Mark.a CROWN, ART stamped on overy CoreettStHl THE CHEAPEST k BEST ADVERTISING TO REACH READERS OUTSIDE OF THE LARGE CITIES. We represent over 1.000 Newspapers, having a weeft> ly circulation of over 600,000 Copies,divided Into I!H different Hsts,coveriiig different section* o! the country. Advertisement* rraelvcd for one or more Hsta. R» catalogues, containing names of papers and other in­ formation, and for estimates, address SEALS & FOSTER, If Pork Row (Tlsnrt. ltiillillna). Mew York* GRAC A TBGETABLE PREPARATION, Invented In the 17tii oenturjr by Dr. William Oraoa, Surgeon in King James' army. Through its agency ho cured thousands of the most, serious sores ana wounds that baffled the skill of the most eminent physicians of his day, and was regarded by all who knew him AS A public benefactor. s3 cents a box. For Sale by Drug­ gists generally. Sent by mail on receipt or (trice. kepiMd by~VSJKTH W. FUWLK & «ON». 88 HarrlMR Avenue. Bowf. MMe. A SOURCE OF GREAT ANXIETY. tJosxojt, MASS., June 8,1879. My dflughtor has r«ceived great benefit from the OM of VEQETINE. Her declining health was a source of grout anxiety to all of her friends. A few bottles of the VEUETUiE restored her health, strength and appetite. K. H. TILDKN, Insurance and Real Kstate AgsalL No. 48 Sears Building. Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. BRPETUAL SOIltJHLM EVAPORATOBs $15. $20. $25. [Cheap and Durable I Send for Circulars. [Address theonly Munufaotoren ICHAPHAMCO/^" Ho I 1 armers, foF lo^vft« Mend a Postal Card for dmription and maps of 1.200,000 acres of R. R. Lands for siue on long terma. ilret class. Tickets FREE to land-buyers from Chicago and return. Address J. li. <JAXIiOCN« Land Commissioner Iowa R. R. Land Co., "•»- itdph St«sots CmCAOO, or UEDAB R&2W%s lowfc UNS. THE BES Breech and Mtth LoMUag. gev^ ga^ei- E. 1NGRARAM & t'O.'s •tor in design -and not : in ouUtr. or aa tja*. knepen. Aak yonr Jeweluy far thmni. Manufactory--Bristol, Ol. ft $101425 Oatalognie fire. Butew. rKntabUahed IMS.] A HAY N(JKB made by A gents selling our Claeeaisu Ciijrons. Picturejuad Chn> mo Cards. lXS u worth ••• for H5~ Cents. J. IT. BIJI|pD*8 HO! $1.00 $1.00 Osgood's Heliotype Engravings. The choU>eat housebote onaamenle. Priee One Dellmr eaeh, Send /W» emtalofntm, JAMES M, OSGOOD & CO, BOSTON, MASS. AA $1.00 $1*00 JACKSON'S BEST SWEET NAVY CHiWINB TOUOOl was awarded the for Its fine chewing highest prime at i if qualities, the < weetening and i at Centennial Rxpcaftlaft _ . M excellence and last*-- character of its sweetening and flavoring. If m • the best tobacco ever made, Mk yonr grocer for tMa.1 see that each plugbears our blu»«trip trade-mark, i words Jackson's Best on it. Sold wholesale tir au bers. Send for sample to tA. .IACK!>OiN « Ct AlaaNlartwrer«. feiembtiig, fa. EIYERTIEW ICllEn, •Tr-T^-r; |>OUCHKCEPSIEf ||. Y., ' Wm- BISBEE, A. Il.t frinetpat end PrepiW^"!",°" Numbers Its alumni by hundreds In all the"hoaorabte Walka of life. Pupils range from twelre to tweatyywni IN age. Next session opens Sept. 18th. Thoee alahias to enter should make an early application. ,, If KKP'8 HHIRTS--oaly one enattur--The Ma IV Keep's Patent Partly-Made Drese ShirU Out be finished as easy aa hemming a HsnilfceinhllA The very best, six for Keep's Custom Shirts--made to meaawe, • The very best, sU for SB.OO. s Aa elennt sM of genuine QoM-Plato OoUar aad Bleeve Buttons given with each half doa. Keep's ShMa Sent Free to any addi urement. .. Ko stamp required. „ . the Mannfaelwer and get BOMMB KM» ManafaetulngOo.. 18ft Msroer St.. XT. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE gjitilUSTIiATcu iiiSTORY ra THE GREAT RIOTS It oontalns a foil acoount of the rei^n of terror in Pitt*. burch. Baltimore, Chicago and other cities. The con. tliots between tli» troops and the mob. Terrible confl*. jtratuniB nn«i destruction of property. Thrilling scene* antl incidents etc., etc. Sena for a full description oi the work and our extra tortus to Agents, A<!d;e«a, KATIOSAI. PuiiijRRtNU Co.. Chicago. IUL BABBITT S TOILET SOAP. f i f W F < 1 mi » li'll vSvifT r. lUnrlvalM fcr lToUttsiidltea sata. AftsryssrseT •elsntlScaysriataat ths msaafcctnrtr of B. T. BMiM't AM* S--p has wrfcew md BOW oflm to IB# i. : Sftf-iO •• U *5 I*- Rblle Tke FTKE8T T9ILKT SOAP In IU WiiW. |{V lit MNrt 9*09UW# OtU MM M i(l IM««/(ldlin, Bampl* box, containla( S cakct of t on. taoh, Mot frw te say s4* dtSHCB receipt of 15 ccnts. AMmi _ THE GOOD OLD STAND-BY. MEXIOAN MU8TAN6 LINIMENT. FOR MANANO BEAST. •eraBUSKXB 'f mmM, Always eaim Alwen laady. Aiwayoimndf. iu B®»ar yet faiM. HlllfMi hmt tutea it The whole worM. sppgfaS' Ike glortousoM B Ualiiiiuit bi existeuoa. M eenta a bottle. Ifet Mmtttmg Uniuwat cares when nothing else wUI. HOT.D BY A1X MKDIOWB VWPBH. ago t$t ffeW* |$ mm SCMSRALLY RECOGNIZED TO BE THE liEADINQ BUSINESS JOURNAL Of TNI UNHID STATES. Without political bias or alliances, it septa natc logitlation to the waterUl iatemts of the people. It favors Freedom in Banking, Freedom in Commerce,, and Freedom of Corporations; demanding for the indi­ vidual and the association the largest liberty to buy of aell, to lend or to borrow, anywhere and on any terms and conditions, without legal restriction. Itg Doaaeatic Market Hcperte aad Its Coa>~ •terclal Statlatlca are fuller UaaH those of any other paper. IT IB THE ONLY JOURNAL THAT HAR 8U0CEEDKD IN GIVING FULL AND FR REPORTS OF THE EUROPEAN AND ASIATIC MARKETS. Nltaeknewiedtei to be one el the ablest exponent* al the lanklng and Financial Interests ot the United Stales. The DAILY BULLETIN lias a Larger Circulation, among Banks and Bankers, the Dry Goods Trade, an<fc the buyers at auction, than any other Dally Commercial Journal In the United States, The DAILY BULLETIN publishes the Official Cir- enlars of the New York Produce Kiclmngv, together with all matters connected with its particular interests. The BULLETIN has the Largest Cfrcnlatioq among the merchant® who deal la the commodities bought and sold at that Exchange of any Commercial Journal la the United States. Send for Specimen Copy* TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: foMags Prepaid SJll.OO per AMWB. OFFICES: 6 and 7 South William St., New York* SANDAL-WOOD A pcatHre waady for all lUseaasaaf the Ktdaay»> Bladder aad Vrlsary ©r*aaai alao, goad le Drepaleal Co»pialBM> It never produce* riafc< aw>, li --*»«•» and speedy la H« action. It la la* superceding all other remedies. Sixty capetiies euro » alx o* eight days. No other uiedlalna oaa da tMa Beware of Iaaltatlona, for, eates to Ma n# ncoeiSt w&ag Itrn b#en offmd; aaae aie mem dNa g«oue,: eauMns DUNDAS DICK. «fc CO.»S Ssawdie Mf/t ale, Mslsistw OO ^odafcsaa^ ssM a( all isra Atkfar «*^4sr, srss#d/«re»e*»»«s<« WOM(sr stresf, JTsw Tar*. O.V.V. No. ST la tala paper.

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