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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Mar 1879, p. 7

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* FAMM AND HOME* v • , . ' . i/: "'>&*«& Farm BaMno*. - ••••, Wx shipped more wheat to the for- ?jiign markets the past year than the en­ tire product ot the United States in I860. " Farmers, this year, should make determined effort to raise the mortgage ,1m their farms, whatever else they may Attempt to raise. The average shrinkage of corn in a . year is about 25 per cent. It would, therefore, be as profitable to sell corn 75 cents per bushel after harvest as at $1 the next summer. 11TJEGE farmers to associate that they may have their inspiration kindled. Farm life develops steadiness of char­ acter; but isolation not only dries up human sympathies, but the intellect becomes moldy, unless a spirit of in- qtiiiy is awakened at some time of life. -•'Hon. James Wilson, of Iowa. : Sprouting Potatoes. - Sprouting Hie white potato will advance the Crop two weeks. They should be cut so that about two eyes are allowed to each piece, and these should be planted in hot­ beds with very thin covering of soil ; or it is better to plant in boxes and set these in a hot-bed, so that after they are properly sprouted they can be at once carried to the place of planting. If the nights should be anyways cold, protect "with a thin covering of straw when the plants make their appearance above ground. Some persons, who want a large quantity sprouted, cut the potatoes as desired and spread them on boards, boxes or crates in a dark place, and when sprouted, say from an inch to an inch and a half, expose them to the light, moistening two or three times a week with tepid water. They should be planted out so that there is not more than two inches of soil over the top of the sprouts.--Germantown Telegraph. Pruning Trees.--Set a green hand to prune trees where limbs of any size are to be removed, and the chances are, ten to one, that he will commence at the top and saw through the limb until it falls of its own weight, tearing down the bark and wood, inflioting a great, ugly TKOtmd, which may require years to heal, and which, if not carefully protected from the weather, will cause such delay as to destroy the tree. The method commonly recommended to prevent in- , jury is, to begin at the bottom and cut half way through, and then finish at the | top; or, with very large limbs, to have them supported by a crotch pole or pitchfork held by an assistant below; but we have found a better plan, and quite as easy, to be to make two cuts, the first at a convenient distance, say a foot, from the point where we wish the limb removed. This short stump can, except in the case of very large limbs, be easily held in the hand, while the final cut is made with the other.--Fruit Recorder. A Mopel Parmer.--Speakers" and writers frequently refer to "model farmers." They are generally sup­ posed to fee myths. But the Hon. James Wilson, in his Mitchell county speech, gives us a graphic picture of one. He says: "I only know one man who follows a system that could be pur­ sued by every farmer in Iowa with profit; he works half a section of land; keeps about twenty-five grade short­ horn cows; makes butter, which he sells in Philadelphia; he keeps his steers till nearly 3 years old, when they average 1,600 pounds in Chicago, and sell to Liverpool butchers; he raises 100 hogs a year that get a good start from the milk, and are finished after the steers. Three-fourths of his land is in tame grasses, that graze! better every year, owing to the large amount of ma­ nure he makes; he raises oats for his calves and cows, but little or no wheat; of course he keeps a pure short-horn bull; his grade cows are good milkers, and his steers becoming finer every year. He buys considerable corn, and sometimes more steers than he raises. But this man never wrote a line for a newspaper in his life, nor addressed an audience exceeding one or two of his neighbors; he needs about the same amount of help the year round; he earned the money to buy his land, and is gradually becoming a wealthy farmer." --Iowa State Register. Domestic JBWwmy. Fish may be scaled much easier by first dipping into boiling water about a minute. The ripe tomato will remove i«lf and other stains from white cloth; also from the hands. Fresh meat beginning to sour will sweeten if placed out of doors in the cool air over night. Eggs and Hashed Potatoes.--Chop finA some eight or t$a cold boiled pota­ toes the night before they are needed. Next morning, heat a spider very hot nil pat in piece of butter the size of a butternut and add the potatoes; salt it a little and stir frequently; when well heated through, turn in four eggs well beaten and stir rapidly for five or six minutes. Serve on a hot platter. Household Weights and Measures. --Wheat flour, one pound is a quart. Loaf sugar, broken, cne pound is one quart. White sugar, powdered, one pound one ounce is one quart. Best brown sugar, one pound two ounces is one quart. Eggs, average siie, ten are one pound. Liquid measntfe, sixteen teaspoonfuls are half a pint. Custard Pie.--One quart milk, three eggs, one table-spoonful corn starch, one desert-spoonful extract vanilla, one cupful sngar, a very small pinch salt; beat the sugar and eggs together, mix the corn starch in a little of the milk, and stir all well together. This is far superior to the ordinaiy custard pie made with four eggs. Less sugar may be used, if preferred. Qraham Bread.--To a pint of warm (not hot) water add half a teacupful of yeast, or a small yeast cake; stir in the Graham meal to a pretty thick batter, let it rise, but not too light; then add meal till as thick as you can stir it, add­ ing a spoonful of sugar or half as much molasses; put it immediately into the baking-pan; let it rise, not too light, and bake. The Graham sours sooner than fine flour, and must not rise too light nor too many times, nor should it be made stiff enough to knead, or it will be too dry. Potato Puffs--Take cold roast meat--beef, mutton, or veal and together--clean from gristle, cat small, and season with pepper and salt; also, cut pickles if liked; boil and mash some potatoes, make them into a paste with an egg, and roll out, dredging with flour; cut round with a saucer; -put some of the seasoned meat upon one half and fold the other like a puff; pinon neatly, and fry a light brown. A GHOST IN CAMP. Capt. W , a friend of mine, was telling me, while we were on the sub­ ject of ghosts, of a circumstance which had occurred while he was in India, and which had entirely removed his disbelief in the possibility of appari­ tions. He was the nephew of the Gen­ eral commanding the troops in canton­ ments near Delhi, in the year 18--. Attached to his regiment was a young Ensign, Arthur G , quite a lad in years, being only 17. He was an orphan with no near relations, and his guardi­ ans had yielded to his enthusiastic love for a military life. He had been a year with Capt. W 's regiment, when lie began to droop and feel an increasing languor and sense of illness, very de­ pressing to his buoyant spirit. This alarmed his friends, by whom he was greatly beloved; in fact, he was the general pet of the regiment, being a warm-hearted and genial comrade, often livening the dull routine of regimental life by his merry humor and boyish pranks. After some weeks of total prostration the fatal verdict of " decline " was given by his medical attendant, and, anxious to give a last chance of re­ covery to one so young and so amiable, the General in command sent him a sick certificate to Calcutta, from thence to embark for England after due exam­ ination by a Medical Board. That no care or attention might be wanting on his journey, a regimental surgeon, a very dear friend, was sent with him. In due time this officer rejoined the regiment, reporting that his young pa­ tient had borne the fatigue of the jour­ ney better than could have been ex­ pected; that he had himbelf seen him on board or a homeward-bound vessel, and that every possible comfort had been provided for his passage, the sur­ geon of the ship having taken the espe­ cial charge of him. This was satisfacto­ ry, and after a time his comrades almost ceased to talk of him and his chances of recovery. A few weeks after the doctor's return the officers of Arthur G 's regiment were sitting over the wine after the mess dinner, the mess- room being a long, large tent with an opening at each end. Capt. W said afterward that he wad just thinking of poor Arthur G : and wondering if he should ever see hitn again, when Arthur himself came in at one door of the tent, and, passing down the whole length of the dinner-table, went out at the opposite door. He was dressed as they had last seen him; he was deadly pale, but smiled and nodded to several of his friends as he had been wont to do, and gave a long and earnest look to­ ward Capt. W , who had been his most intimate friend. The mess broke up at once, some go­ ing to look for their old comrade in the mess-room of the regiment in canton­ ments with them, and Capt. W to the tent of his uncle, the General, whom, however, he found alone writing some dispatches, and who, looking up with astonishment, declared that he had seen nothing of the young officer. On inquiry it was found that he had also passed through the mess-room of the other regiment, and had been rec­ ognized by many of the officers, and also by the servants in attendance, and yet could nowhere be found. His sudden appearance and disappearance seemed equally mysterious. Eventually letters arrived from Calcutta bringing the sad intelligence that Arthur G---- had died at sea on the very day and at the very hour that he was seen in the camp be­ fore Delhi. STRANGE 1'EOPMC. « Dr. E. B. Heath, in a paper on "Pe* " avian Antiquities," describes a strange people living in a town called Eten, in seven degrees south latitude and about two miles from the sea. Th^y number about 4,000, and they speak, besides the Spanish, a language which some of the recently-brought-over Chinese laborers understand, but there is no other simi­ larities between the two peoples. They intermarry uncles, nieces, brothers a&& sisters, nephews and aunts, that is pro­ miscuously, and with no apparent curse of consanguinity; but they will not per­ mit any intermarriage into their num­ ber, or with the outside world. They have laws, customs and dress of their own, and they live by braiding hats and mats and weaving cloths. They will give no account of the place whence they came, or of the time they settled at Eten. History does not mention their existence before the Spaniards ar­ rived. Among them there are no sick or deformed persons, their custom be­ ing to send a committee to each sick or old person, and those who are re­ ported past recovery or past usefulness are promptly strangled by the pnblic executioner. Eten orders it, they say, and with Eten's orders there is no in­ terference.--Scientific Notes. WANTED. One of the arrows that Cupid shot. A man to awaken the sleepers of a railway. A hat for the head of a nail. A wick for the lamp of life. A key to fit an elephant's trunk. A splinter from a sunbeam. A train of cars to run on the branch of a tree. WE GIVE AWAY X.eitdere of Cnolra und Bond* In the town and county where Mimic co., 8tate St.. ChloMo, 111, STATSEf papercirculntea. Address . THE WE8TEBK Maslc Publish? ~ IJWITTWJD , Home and Dower Association of Pa., -nd Church WESTERN OEPASTM^TriW U&ll. St. Chicuo. llDS MowiSTMuTNoww! send fora pamphlet on KJ<W* WUOLRI°Ta ASEi?* Wwltlm self-cloalnjf, calf ••kin Poekefc. P?«tp»ld S5c. E. HALIjOwAv. Beltidere, "1 ft? 7 *na eipense® auaranteed to Acenta. • • Outfit fewu Shaw A Co.. Auqusta. JkUrait Afl * MONTH- AGtNTS WAMtU-31 Ht». tullllll article** in the world; om s&nspto /w. .Iwy Bronnon fWrMt EMf* VTiVy",k\?,u"}cil jOunita. Dili £ *, J® f«r 60 ct*. Oatnlofcuo ***** *>- M. SPEKCER, 112 Wasb'n St.. Ronton, feu* Akwum canvas*.lor the rlrr 5 Ylnltor. Ten™a,,d Outfit Frsa. Ad- ^ 4 Ct/KKRY. iiwiuti. Main* (Out Out| jUadvtlle andi HI mine* are to-day t he wonder of the mlntm world. Ita carbonate ems are lmmotisrh rich. ., . r-- orB* a*a immensely rich, jmdlj is correctly awaed the poor man's mining tty.' because its •Hi-- can to worked wif" wind'ass, pick and shore!; mw almuM da ly, and quit* a* often with an ordinary Mines m disc. v,nxi hjr the liieipc! ienctsd - - --f - i .. »».«. .nilliona In ore already mined »nd tb» cord* of sUrer bars are the beat evident of the solid wealth of tUa vicinity. f!?r * '"•P *d diaeorttriei, yield* of silver and gold at -rsd vicinity to date, and any informa­tion desired logardlnff minee or mininc, prioea of com­modities of cvi'i v kind, demand and wacee for labor of every kind, both male and female, how to g«t hare and wh it t« bring, write Price A Mcjfair, Broker*, Land and Mining Agents. Leadville Col. inotebw » centa. Kt ery possible courtesy and information wQI be extended at our office here to at rangier* on Mr mtnl without „„„„„ PRICK a McNAlR. RKl-RRENCKS--Hon. F. W. Pltktal, Governor Col­orado. IVnver; Hon. John F. Dillon. Jodan U. S. Cir. cott Court, St. Louis; Hon. N. P Htu, U. s. Senator from Colorado, Denver; L'ike County Bank of Lead* °f ̂ KIDPEWS P«8TII1E8.E.!̂ a1™ PPBHHNMi*ricstown, Mass. VOiiNG Wen month. Kvciry grartafttan uim atkm. AddreaaR- Valentin*. lln.Wfo HrDifAnd'> tB| iitv from any osnse R 1 • K V 1111 \ «j«e«dily cnr»d. Our A'«w (v AlJUMt * vUl) 8ent "« receipt of sfil. ORimuni-cationn confidential. El'RIiK V I MKIMCINfc, CO., IT? A' 171* 1-aSnlli- Stisyt.Chicago. I Chnlceat In the world--Importer*' prlcua --Larg»*t Company tu America--atapie i •• article--pleases everybody--Tritda eot»> i nally increasing Agent® wanted everywhere--beat indocements--don't waste tirno -send for Circular ROU'T WKLLS. 43 Vesey .St.. N. Y. P O. Boi 1287. OREGON! rrti MATERIAL PRtM5RKSS FOR TBI last tew year*--a statement of fact* By Williaui Retd, Eaq . Srcwtary of tht- Port­ land B'wnl of Trwl*. A vHlu»ble addition to any library. Pric^ 25 Cts, l>oi«tpai<U Atldreisu I>. H. STEARNS & CO., Boofc Pnblldww, l ortlaud, Oregon. On Our Most Distant Frontier*, As in oar busiest and most populous cities of the seaboard and interior, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is pre-eminently popular. Wherever civilization plants ita foot on this continent, thither the great tonic soon finds its way. Nor is this surprising, for it is the medicine of all others best adapted to the wants of the Western emigrant, be he miner or agriculturist. It is an incomparable remedy for the diseases to which fee is most subject, and which aro liable to be brought on by a change of climate, hardship, exposure, unaccustomed air and diet, and mi­ asmatic atmosphere and water. Among these are disorders of the stomach and bowels, rheu­ matic ailments, and malarious fevers, for all of which Hostetter's Bitters is a certain specific. A course of the Bitters before departing for tho new lield of labor, or on arriving, will have tho effect of preventing the evils lor which it is •uch * signal remedy; Mot Deserving of Pity. Beggared spend thrifts, to whom money has DO exchange value but pleasure. Persona who will persist in dyiog by inches with dyspepsia and liver diseases, when Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Purgative Pellets are unfailing remedies for these maladies. Parents who spare the rod and rain the child. Fast young men and women are generally spoiled children to begin with. People who suffer from catarrh,.when Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kemedy is a safe, reliable, and well-tested remedy for this loathsome disease. People who marry for money, and find too late that the golden glitter is al| moonshine. Women who suffer death every day of their lives, when Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will effectually remove those painful weakness­ es aud impart a healthful tone and strength to the whole system. People who live beyond'theti means and find that style and pride, like everything else in this World, unless placed upon a secure foundation, are subject to the law of gravitation. Invalids who do more toward fostering dis­ ease, by living and sleeping in the low, unventi- lated rooms of the ordinary house, than the best mediciues can accomplish toward recovery, when at a moderate expense they can secure all the hygienic au1 sanitary advantages of the Invalids' Hotel at Buffalo, N. If. Every physi­ cian knows how much recovery depends upon good nursing and tho hygienic conditions of tho sick-room. Chronic diseases aro especially subject to these conditions. New Saw Machine. For many years farmers have felt the need of some improvement on the old and laborious two-handed cross-cut saw, for sawing up bodies of trees into any length desired for saw- logs, staves, rails, stove-wood, eta This long- needed improvement has at last been invented by W. W. Giles, of Cincinnati, O., who, by the way, is one of the greatest of American inven­ tors. We see from our exchanges that the editor of the Ohio Farmer, also the editor of the A. C. Krvitw, of Cincinnati, called on Mr. Gilea personally to Bee the marrelons aatv machine. They both ptonoiitu-ed it a machine of great in«rtt. The curiosity of tli«*ae gentlemen was not, satisfied upon Seeing ot hers operate the machine, hut they both tried It tut>iBsnlv«>8 on a large )<>k, and tiivy report that one man opurutes it with ease, and saws much more rupldly tban tvro ni«n could wllu the ordinary cross-cut saw. The secret of running this machine so easily la ex­ plained by the fact that the weight of the operator dot* folly one-halt ot th© labor. It is easi y moved or car­ ried about by on« man, and hue ull tho points of dura­ bility and practical utility wanted in such an imple­ ment. A very large demand for then) machines la al­ ready established, and ail who see them are delighted with their superior labor-easing principles. Many peo­ ple are constantly catling on Mr. Giles Is &e» tho «a- •bin* and test it« merits for their friends In the coan-tty. Our attention tra* called to one man in Colorado, Who wr.»t» »o Csrp, of Cincinna"! (and, by the way, one of tho most dUtiusuished ttalesmen of Ohio), asking h'ru to call and »ee Mr. Giles and hi* saw mi- ebitie, and wrlto.what hethoughtot it. Mr.Garjr prompt­ly went to see the machine, and pronounced it a good machine, and concluded to buy two el them himself. Mr. Giles is said to be very wealthy, being a real eetate owner of over $iUU,U00, una hie confidence in the great merit ot his invention is shown fiom the fact that be futuiCitM everf uuMiiiiM to give MitiaUcitoa. Tiie Professional Indorsement which lias been accorded by leading medical mon iu various parts of the coautry tu Dr. Wm. Hall's Balsam for the Lunus is a (sufficient guar­ anty of its ullk-acy in eradicating diseases of tho breathing organs. These gentleineu liavo thor­ oughly tcsteil tiui remedy, and their concurrent testimony i« to the eltect that it is a positive spccilic tot lung, bronchial and throat aUections of every description, and a most reliable pro- •ontive of that dreaded scourge, cousumpiiou. Druggists uell_it Public Speakers and Hinoebs will find "Brown's Bbonchial Tboched* beneficial in clearing the voice before speaking or singing, and relieving the throat after any exertion of the vocal organs. For Coughs and Coids the Trochet are effectual. CHEW The Celebratad " Matchless * "Wood Tag Plug Tobacco. Tbs Tiokeeb Tobacco Coup ant. New York, Boston sad Ghictg* At every great world's exhibition for twelve years Mason & Hamlin Organs have been awarded tho gold medal or other highest honor. Last year at the Paris Exposition they were found worthy of the gold medal. Send your name and address to Ogdkn, Awt.*. . " _ . geti tratea catalogues of something stylish to wear. DEN, A WHi'i E .£ Co., Chicago, apd get one of their illus­ trated catalogues of somet See advertisement in another column. Chew Jackson's Best Sweet Navy Tobaoea Fg*T> Leadville (CoL) advertisement MIXXESOTA LANDS for nctiiiU Settlers cheap, by paying in R. R. bonds. Address F.S. OHRI&- TENSEN, Agent, Minneapolis, MIbil TEAS. tinually incre •don't waste time --send for KLLS. 43 Vesey St,, N. Y. TKi'Tll. IS 9SM5HT1' l" ^ i\ /7w\ J , f - j . ftt --»1 . » S.SE3C when M , awl tke 4ei» ef eameeee MASTfKIt, 4 MA80N A HA MLIN CABINET ORGANS 2̂.; /L.pA,,ls; I1*! ,. vtKNNA, 1873. Santiaoo. ih;r»' ^** , a,IIIR' "'<'h ; "n'l <illANt> SWEIXKH Gor.tt Mkdal. 1871!. Only American Drgan* ever award­ ed hiKlieKt honors nt any such. Sold tor cash or Inotall-mentH. It.i.UK-1 KATK1> t'ATAUKJt'KR and ('lrculars, with new Htyles and iirices, «ent fiw. MASON A HAM1.IN JMISTON. NKW YOHK.or OHICAtSO. PROFIT. "The Nu OKU AN t'O. $8 A DAY kODA POU N T A1N 5 -«•«. mioi »«67 k Shipiieil ready for u«. For catalogue, Ac;, a.Wre»» ' Chap itinn A Co., MdHwd, Ind.-- aiaviao Agent** maple, 6 easte kuDelichttn Nmmq, H.T d A G E N T S . R E A D T H I S rrin pay Ag«ni» a MWary of flOO month and expenses, or allow % lar^c commission, to sell our new ana wonderful invention#. mran tt'Aat u<r «<?v. 8kiii< pie free. Addrem 8HEUMAX & CO.» Mwshall, Mich. Largest Assortment in the Worll of Plays, Drama*, Comedies, Fafces, Ethiopian Dramas. Plajre for Ladles only. Plays for (>entlemrn only. Wijni, Beard*, Muatachea, Face Preparations, Burnt Oorfe, Jarley'a Wax-Works, Tableaux, Charades, Psntotnimes, t»uld« to the Stage, and, for Amateur*. Make up Book, Make-up New Plajr*. SAM'I, FRENCH St SON, S8 Bait 14th tit.. Union Square, New York. Cntalonei Kit FHGE!!! DR. rlSVIG'S KIDXF.Y fl'RK, for all KIDNKY DISEASES. A Sure Remedy; failures unknown Send for circular. Noyea Bro». A Cutler, Sts l aul: j.onl. Stoutl»ur'r <t Co., Chicago ; A. Smith, fscsn- ilon : W. Mnddox, Ripley,Ohio; K. Gary, I>e« Moines; F. Stearns, Detroit. Tht« moat popular medicine of the day. RV tPKI,A X - Any ^information _f«Karding THE NEW YORK SUN. ffites ehwtpeet and noat ioterertlnc paper te tte IJittM THE WEEKLY SUN to emphatfaaBy tht |» pie'* bnilr paper. Ti, MOI-AHD. Pabllaher, *. Y. CHy. WARMER BRO S CORSETS rectiT»(t th* Hlrhrnt Medal at ta<- rerciit PARIS EXPOSITION-©rer all Amerlcaa Tiiflr FLEXIBLE HIP CORSET (126 bone*} U wauu>tk0 not Ic !in*ak dowuovfr th^bln*. P r l c*$l.fV T l u' l r In voft gnd KosiVik: and conliint M bones, PrkM by 'asmO, $1.50. For ©ale by all fading merrhastl. WAM1E BBOB., IS! Iroaiwaf, N. ¥. Relimos be placed 1b HtTKT'g BEME11Y For the prompt cure of Kid­ ney, Bladder and Urinary Waeaaea. H V JT T MS KEMEDY cures Diabetes, Gravel, Dropsy, General De- bilitr, and Pains in the Side. Back and Loin*. HUSXnl StEHEDY ' : andJU>ins. HD.\' is need TIE UTMOST WIL K. GLARKE. PrarideiiM. R. L TIE iii mi co; VIrvt Established i Moat StteceesfolJ • THEIR INSTRCMKNTS have a atandaitf Talne in all the LEADING MAnKBTS OF THE WORLD! Ererywlwre raoogaiaad m fltTMT IM f-ONR. O V E R 90,000 Made and In nse. New Dealgos Beat work and lowest prices. (I* Bend for a Catalogue. Itant SU opp. WtKhui St, Ma, lis, © SAPONIFIED Is the Old Reliable Concentrated Lye FOR FAMILY S0AP-MAKIK8. Directions aooonipanyine each can formakinc Hard. Softaiui Toi-^t Q I'H'KLY. JT IS FI LL WEIGHT AKD arRENGTB. The market is flooded with (so-called) Concentrated Lye. which is adulterated with aait and rosin, and f»»H makttoap. SA VE MONEY, AKD BCTl' THE SaponiheR MADE BY THE Pennsylvania Salt Manufg Co., PHILADELPHIA. _ ^ <§> 22"^!&ABCHER AT CmcAtioJlL Also, Dealers In Gents1 Furnishing Goods. Fine Suits made to order a specialty. Send 3 cent stamp for our lUmrtrnted Cat attorn* 1879. Over 60 en«rravin<rs of new styles, wilh prices. Full iu^truetions for taking miamir* and ordering by mail or express. Buy or the manu­ facturers. and save middlemen's profits. We employ over 800 hands in «>ur factory. If yon are in the city, call and seethe lamest house of the kind in Chicago. See address :tti«ve. All coods scnl I\v express ntv C. t). I)., wtjh privilege of exaMiijyitig lieforc paviun chnrtres. PIANOS SSXSSIXSSSs. Wsthushak's scale for tquarrs--finest up- 1-inlits in America--12,000 in «sp--Planos •fnt on trial--Catalogue fi**. Msndkia- SOHK F.UIO Co., HE. 18th Street, N. Y. Patent ^ FIRE Kindler. PtU'l l»r mcrrat CQQAft* YEAR. OOyyUe®®*#- « yoNuK, Kt. W«> aro prwparpd to till all ord«r» ft»r Stoker's Patent Fti-e Klinllcr for Coal or Wood. Amenta w.intod on Salary or Commission. Send St«tm>. KMERYA \KARP.\NN, Masmers, Whltchwll, Mich. KKT IMfTIONAItY, 30,000 Words, and r. Vfatv-y Health Meaiki*. one year, litio. AT Hilt, Pt n t'o., 129 R. gSth St.. New York. ornn s Loilit HABIT & SKIN DXSEA&ua. Thousand® cured. Lowest Prices. Do net fall to write. j>; .F.E.Marah,Qulncy,Mlch. BUY IMR<1A1NS of Jink* »rf\otaot land. Konti and Pacilic H. R., a ro^lnn tiol. sorpanaml' for < Rontel'nxss .. . r>Hwn for «:lt-mate.tiealtajfrowingof c«roaln and at<wk. K. S tiraham. Grajiam. Young '• •>., IVxjia. SV tint out for refmenca' e $25 Every Day Can be easily made with our Well Augers & Drills One man and on* horse roqutrrd. Wo ure the only maker* of the Tiffin Well-So ri tig and Ro«k~Drillinff Maehine. ll»«* llent on I'&Kb! of our snake frota^^CI on/K uud Circulars FREE, Addreee, LOOWfS « ifWAW, TIFFIW. OHIO. .. A6jRm WAXTKIt FOK "BACK FROM THE MOUTH OF HELL." By oft* trho Ac** thttre ! "Rise hih) Fall of the MollstAelle.,, My tb* flurUttffton Hawkey humorist. Samantha as a P. A. and P. I. Hi/ Joiitth A llr*'* tHf 't. The three brightest and best selling hooka out. Agent*, you can put these books in eveiywhnre. Best terms *l»en. AddresH for Agency, AMI- ItK'AM PUBLISH­ING CO., Hartford, Ct.; Chicago. ML MASONIC but, O, Supplies for Lodges, Chapter*, "'I €otnmander*'v" by*. Lilt* and Commander!m, manufact- Mwi i Send for Price lA»t*. Co.. Colum- WKnlgfiti Templar Unlformt a Specialty. •nd Firemen'* Good*. Fir Braatr •f Patlah, Wl'lRW vim LabWi Clwan-eapneaa, Une««ialed. '*•«- Canton* Btaaa* soldiers--Pensioners! We publish wi elghi-piute paper--'"IB Natiokax. Tribtjnk --devoted to tue (nt«rost« of Pensioners, , Soldiers and Sailors, and their ; alio ooatalna in-teresting family reading. Price, t'if'ty • year--special inducements to clubs. A proper blank to collect amount due under new Abkeahb or Pension ltn.i, fuminhed r*uf»cri6«r# eaty, and such cliiisn® raliaitfm&ty to e<i in Pension ice without ehargt. January number aa specimen free. Send for it, UROROK K. LKMON A CO.. copy Washington. D. O. Lock Bob »*A. Sawing off a Log. This SAW MACHINE ta a wonderful in­ vention. The weight of the man who it- wwinf doea half of the work. It anwa logs of any alee, and will aaw off a 2 foot log in 2 »lnttt«R, Circular* free. Addr«*«».., Wm, pop W. (Ith ft.. - ' MUSTANG Survival of the Fittest A FAMILY MKDICIXK THAT HAS HCALED| HIUtlONS DVB1H3 SS TKABSf amtu î tus ummT A BALM FOB EVERY WOU9D OF| MAN AND BEAST! THEOLDESTftiisT LINIMENT EVER HADE IN AJIEIUCA RAT.itfi LABQlUfHAH E7EE. The Mexican Mustang Liniment haa been known for more than thirty-nre years as the best of all Liniments, for Man an <1 Beast. Its sales today are larger than ever. It cures wbe»» all others fail, and penetrates skin, tendon and muscle, to tbo very bone. Solo everywhere. S C&0FULA. -Persons afflicted with Scroftila, Hip-disease, Ul­ cerous Sores, Abscesses, Whit? Swelling, Psoriasis, Goitre, Ne­ crosis, Eczema, Diseased Bones, will please send their address r.y Dr. JONES. CaxMur, New Lebanon, >.I. Cklcaea BbIihs dmt. lilTB STOCK COMMJUUflQM. imhiuto a oa.aB pi-- «• •> Tm* • PKOOUCX COMaUUUMOIl flLO. SARQKAirr.Q--a. Oiiwill t.HWIlUA MS * OO.. Waftwrjl 5 MUSK 5 lOOKS 5 Fiaao, places takan from the attractiv* oo-- Pr->r Vocal See <»«, ___________ • : Words and Mnale. fLOo "*^ THE SORCERER. J" by ,hp R»w® composers as pinafom K*ao -- ' HULL'S TEMPERAWCK 6LEE BOOXl 40 cts. Contains a lame and well-arrana«d oolteotion hacrkd and Sxculab tongi for TmpstaiM f»is- CUT8<i^ANBl^^AUCEBW^ By Gaoaaxm. A d«!i|hlfnl Parlor Operetta aa. Very good mnsio. f;A, . THE ftKX GLEANER. By^v Ap u»ftttu*llr gooii cftltection of Aatfaeiaa. All ehiii ® ' •iwaid tt. - OHVER DITSON * 00u J? f/-- C. II. Dl*yr.» & J. E. Dllsoa " TIA & 848 Broadway, N.Y. 9M Chestnut St.. Phflk " $IU to $1009 Aoa™ BAXTER *,®.,%S8£:Vnimk.K.T. teasKSftstiiM ' "*g"T r̂ .fiu iiiiiiii.ii I« perfectly ptim Pronoun«sed the beat by the eat medical authorities in the world. Oiven M »*wdat la World's Eiroaitiona, and at I Boldbjr DrunrisU. W.B.HckleiTeIla«c TEAS! nana! o<»t larce lmy( New terms 1RKK. AH The direct portera at Half , - plan eve,' offered Club Areata Ur«e Iihv.'tr. AIJL KXrUES.S CHAKGK8 Ve#ejr BUT TTTin BAY STATE ORGAN DIRECT FROM FACTORY, " And Mn Affonta' Commlaaloii, Two full Ra<Mi«, with Oelexte it Stupa, for SAO. Fully warm Other strips very low Correspondence solicited. C. B. Hl'ji'T A OO., Mananictartrfc -mkW tOl RHslol Nt.. afna£n " -mEOfi;; ™WESTI"* A choice from o*«r i.oOO.OOO-acrea lawa __ doe west from Chlcaco. at fiotn 16 to 98 per ai Low frelaht* and no Indiana farm lotF. and on aaay terms market*. Ho wilderness---nc «aue-- no ... nplorlng tickets from (tiliatfo, free to buyeu . Maai pamphlets and full information appl* to IOWA ItAILKOAH •.AJfUCOMPAKri Cedar ltaplds, lowa. or 92 Bandolph tKreet. Chicmgo. CURED FREE I An Infallible and fit", fiptle warraR nnowned Soeoiao an valuable Treatise any sufferer sending Poatofioe and fftpws dress. ,i:t Ph. H. G. ROOT, 183 Pearl Btraet. New York._ P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE /5^ " ICTORIA1,t HISTORY"™* WO It oontaina 6T» tea hMorioal engtavtnea aad larce doable-oolnna pa«ea, and ta the moct co , Hiatonot the World ever ppblished. ItnUaaldih Hand forspeoimen pace* aad eatra tanaa to AMita. Addma NAItR)HAL PUBUSHI^g. ̂ ^ a n d y FREE HOMES IIOW TO(iKT Til KM it* the 1**1 p^riofth^ 8titc e,aa«.oaa( aerettor »l«, for t'at'K"«i>v "t ilir " Krhmn Patriae Wiai ilea4." a fi O'lm. .. i.,n< rn»r-. WsHe>. K»w..« THEORiaiMLftONLY "Vibratxir" WITH IMFIOTIO MOUNTED HORSE POWBtfc And Steam Threaher MmgIbm, Made only by ; ; IICHOLS, SHEPARD A 80 , MATTLJB CBJSSK, MIVlL rl& Matchleaa Grali^iavlai, Tlwe* tariiif, aiut Moaay-SavInK 'ChraaiMrs of this aay ill . moerstlon. Beyond all Bivatry fsr Kaytd Watfc, (H^ Xtfflssnina, ana for 8aTlnt Orshi &p«n ^uap. IM Ralaers will net Snknlt ts tha s wsatac* »f Grain A lu. Interior work dom by H cnormoaa tilt ir"-tr msrhlnn, ~' tn irnrt|HT»ttittii t*i» tfarsnriT rffi Elf TIRE Thnthlat often S to 6 i tmeg that arntmui t can Im m«d« lits £itr« Qrtia 8AVKD bjr tk«s« lmprov*4 MicUaei. feO Ktfvflvia* Shaft* Iiilie tba • rator. Eullraiy (Tea 1rom Bouin, Flcknts. JtaUalM, and all each «lm«-wastlna and Kraln-wSatiac romp'., iations. Psrfwtly adapted to alt Kinds aad Oondliious .-Brain, Water Dry, Lane er Short, Meadeaor Bosad, IOT •als- Vnatly 8iperl«r for Wheat, Oat a* ftarley, Kye, and iiku tut the only CNnll Thresher in Flax, Timothy, 01ov«r, ttteSMM&h Beqttlreg no ^ attackmeuis,r ©r " r<@&miMii3£ ^ <p cto|» from Quia to gt«di» ||ARTBI<OUS far Slmpllcltr af Putt. H asinc lua tlian aas-taalt th* uaasl kits saiaMra w llalMaaalittariaceeraeatUrinsa. PUR Blaea af Sepnratere VadklUfe in;; !'r«ss Mx tu Tweiv© Hortc lilt MoutH«4 Bont row«r» to ibttctk S¥EABK Pawer Threahera a SMelaltr, A «fctal slsa baparatnt SMdaaxpraaaly tor IWaaia n»wift OUR Unrivaled Steaa Tkrnher hs (inee, Willi Valuabia ImpnivanMnts and INattaoltsa KskMb fcr feaysnd any aUar aakear kH^ Ml Tharaaah Warkaaaaahlpt BMrnt • vialah, HrtactTon of l»art«, CompUtenMa of Kqaipmaat, * a*e-, enr "ViaaaTus" Tbrcslasr Oatttnara tiwanTurshla p̂ gMa&aac.aaJa.'s; C. N. U. No. 13 3H ji m review r •%.?# Ju.a WHEN VFRITINO TO AOTEKTI8EK8, plrnwe say yea aaw the advertlaeaaeBt 5 iu thla i>ai»er. , t % m 'vM

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