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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jun 1886, p. 7

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0. m k\- AN electrical clock that runs without lwin:ling, is not affected by the atmos­ phere, cannot vary, and can be sold for One-half the cost of the ordinary clock, lias been invented in that enchanted region known as the Mcajo Park, the home of the wizard Edison. SOME soldering fluids are injurious to tools and also to parts that have been |aid on the bench< The following fluid ^"ill not rust and tarnish any more than „ prater: Take two ounces of alcohol and , put into a bottle, add about a teaspoonful Of chloride of zinc, and shake until dis­ solved. Use it in the same manner as muriate of zinc is commonly used. IN spite of the alleged impossibility ®f operating telephone wires under ground the Bell Telephone Company's • Report shows that 2,203 miles of tele­ phone wire were put under ground last year in the cities of Washington, Chi­ cago, New York, Pittsburgh, Boston, Brooklyn, Baltimore, and Milwaukee. ^There are now 3,428 miles of telephone ivire under ground in these cities,. DURING A recent discussion of the estimates for the railways of Alsace- Lorraine, which are owned and worked oy the State, it was mentioned that the daily work of locomotive drivers varied jfrom four to five hours on fast trains to y ten hours on freight trains with switch­ ing service for a long time. The driv­ ers had every fourth or fifth, or at the least every seventh, day for rest. : Pointsmen or switchmen have a day off . fevery two weeks. ATTENTION has been called to the connection which exists between gas ': explosions in coal mines and certain at- . "biosphere conditions, which is expressed jbv saying that the number of such ex­ plosions is very considerably greater tinder atmospheric pressure (under so- called barometer depression) than with a normal or high barometer. Numerous experiments prosecuted last immmer at the mines of archduke AL- • bert, in Ostran-Karwin, confirmed the . views of the English experts and those expressed by Cowen before the English ' parliament in 187B, and Science pre­ dicts that they will produce a change ' Of opinion in other countries where ..ihoso views are not known. They show the great importance of the ; barometer in coal-mining. The order is already in force atKarwin, forbidding blasting at all dangerous points on the tipproacli of a barometric depression, . ftnd, if the danger increases, all work is ' to be suspended. A SERIES of experiments have beeni made with natural gas in the puddling .ttnd heating furnaces of the Beaver 1'alls Iron Company, Beaver Falls, Pa., /which, it is claimed by those who have been conducting the experiments, / demonstrate as an actual fact that which has heretofore been deemed an - impossibility. By the peculiar^ con­ struction of the heating furnace upon sr which the test was made the gas, after • being turned on and lighted, succeeded •in bringing the furnace to a white heat in less than two hours; with coke it gen­ erally requires twelve hours to produce •he same degree of heat. The furnace Was a cinder or ore bottomed fur ace, «nd grew so hot that the cinders in the bottom melted and ran out of the tap- • ping-hole like liquid, and had not the 4 furnace itself been. built of the very best quality of fire brick it would have Incited down. The heat was concen­ trated and combustion perfect. In the fitack there was but little flame and but few degrees of heat. Hindoo Fanatics. "The scant success of the East Indian missions cannot be explained by the want of zealous missionaries, but rather by the fact that their zeal is directed against the most tenacious creed on earth--the ineradicable cult of Brahma. Bralimanism has withstood the attacks of Moslem and Portuguese zealots; it has survived the political convulsions of half a hundred centuries; it has done more. It has prevailed against the per­ suasive gospel of Buddha Sakyamuni : ^Fifteen hundred years ago the largest part of Hindostan had accepted the doc­ trines of Buddhism, but the north­ western. strongholds of Bralimanism gradually encroached on the territory of their rivals, and at present a hun­ dred million of natives whose forefathers had, for a time, renounced all super- Btitions but the belief in the supernatural mission of their messiah have returned to their idols and worship a hundred of gods, besides the monkey Hanunian, and other zoological vermin. Their belief in the merit of self-torture, too, has revived in some of its most gro­ tesque forms. Ridicule is impotent against the belief. Since Anglo-Saxon skeptics have superseded the old mas­ ters of Texas the Mexican "penitents" have become more self-afflictive than ever, and merely observe the precaution to veil their bloodsmeared faces. Nor has derision cooled the enthusiasm of the Hindoo fakir. In the streets of Aurungabad, one of the most populous cities of the Deccan, a British officer recently saw a devotee suspend himself head downward by twisting his legs around a sort of horizontal bar, exposed to the fierce glare of the noonday sun. Tlie observer, seated on the shady ver­ andah of the stage-coach depot, watched liim from morning till noon, and saw him in statu quo when the coach started, an hour before sunset. Can­ didates for the distinction of a more perfect saintsliip supplement the caloric of solar heat by lighting fires in the open air and standing erect between three or four piles of blazing fagots. Few Caucasians could endure that or­ deal for more than half an hour, but a .Tainos, or Brahnianic devotee, will stand his ground for days together, and indignantly refuse alleviation in the form of a cooling drink. Nay, even true-believing spectators would resent interference of that sort, for tempting a Jainos to break his vow would pro­ voke the vengeance of an otherwise pro­ pitious deity, and perhaps compromise innocent third parties. Hindoo fakirs would smile at the idea of expiating sin by a pedestrian pilgrimage. Benares, the mouth of the Jumna, and other lioly localities are yearly visited by pil­ grims who have conquered distance by wriggling along the highway, after fas­ tening their wrists and ankles to a shoulder-strap, or even to an iron neck­ lace. Anjl yet the Bralimans complain that the tunes of true religious fervor are days of the past. The men who hoped to crush out the taint of original sin by hugging the wheels of the Jug­ gernaut were only second-rate devotees; a true Jainos would deliver his soul from the thralldom of the body by sit­ ting down naked in a stronghold of horse ant% or by plastering a number of artificial seres with the caustic leaves of the Urtica urens, unless he preferred to prolong the pleasure of self-destruc­ tion bv a diet of stramonium seeds.-- Frof. Felix L. Oswald. THE gem cannot be polished without friction; neither can man be perfected without trials. Green Tea and Blgek. The principal market for green tea is the United States. Having fallen rather into disrepute in the old world, it h«s established itself in the new world, where it is largely consumed and known as "tea" simply, in contra­ distinction to "English breakfast tea," "China tea," or "Oolong," by which names the black teas are designated. The reason for its popularity is no doubt in a great measure due to the in- tercouse with Japan, where green tea alone is manufactured, and which every year sends enormous cargoes across the Pacific.^ In thel making of tea, as in everything which this curious people do, the Japanese have a way of their own. It would startle an Assam planter to see them in picking time squatting down before the trees and stripping the branches of the leaves, instead of. sci­ entifically selecting only the young, undeveloped leaf, the first leaf below that and half the second, from which would be evolved respectively, "Broken Tips" or "Orange Pekoe," and "Souch­ ong." Any one accustomed to the elaborate machines for "rolling" and "fining" the leaves which are in use on European plantations, might be amused at the Japanese method, where the workers roll and squeeze and twist the leaves in their hands on a parchment stretched over a charcoal fire. Very fine teas are, nevertheless, manufac­ tured by the Japanese, and in the cele­ brated district of Uji rumor tells of tea worth $16 per pound, though it is not definitely stated whether that price has ever actually been paid for it. More­ over, in the case of teas intended for export, only so much work is done upon them as will enable them to be sent to the "tea-firing godowns" of Yokohama, where they are worked up fpr the mar­ ket before being shipped. As is now well. l;nown, the difference between green and black tea lies in the fact that in the former fermentation has been arrested by "firing," the color of the leaf being in this wav partially pre­ served and fixed; with the latter by a much longer process, fermentation up to a certain point is permitted and the leaves are not "fired" until they have become oxidized by exposure to the air. In Japan the leaves, after being picked and withered by a short exposure, are fired in the way described above suffici­ ently to stop fermentation, and in this partially cured state are sent to the European tea merchants," by whom they are again "fired." In the "go- downs" of Yokohama hundreds of wo­ men can be seen at work turning the leaves over and over and round arid round in large basins built over a char­ coal fire. The coloring or "painting," is also done at this period by means of a spoonful of indigo and powdered soapstone put into each basin and thus disseminated through its contents. But in J apan tea is not grown for ex­ port only, but is the chief article of home consumption; and these domestic teas as procured in the country are probably the only samples of unadulter­ ated green tea which Europeans are likely to meet with. They produce a beverage which is refreshing, quite harmless, and which, notwithstanding the way in which it is prepared, can, after only a short residence in the country, be readily distinguished from hot water.--Home Journal. Willing to Repeat „ I've noticed that a man can argue on one side until he believes in it. When I was a youth we had up the question: "Which gives us the greatest pleasure, the pursuit or the possession of an ob­ ject ?" I was then pursuing a maiden with great alacrity and pleasing pros­ pects, and was intensely happy in that particular business, and as I had been assigned to that side of the question, I spread myself like a green bay tree to sustain my cause. I dwelt Upon the eager fascinating pleasure with which man pursued fame and fortune, and how vain and empty he found them when once in his possession. I quoted Shakespeare and recited Cardinal Wol- sev's soliloquy: "If I had served my God as faithfully as I have served my king," etc., and I sat down with a modest content, for the eyes of the maiden were upon me and I had won her smiles. Just then one of these rollicking boys, who never prepared himself, but just opened his moutli and let her talk, rose forward and said: "Well, now suppose, Mr. President, that Brother Arp were a pnrsuin' a pretty girl that he were in love with just as hard as he could and were a longin' for her and dyin' to get her, would he druther keep on pursuin' an' pursuin' an' follerin' an' follerin' to the little end of time, or would he druther catch up with her an' hold her in his arms an' exclaim, 'She's mine, she's mine, I've got her at last, an' bless the Lord, I'm gwine to keep her forever an' ever, amen:' I say, Brother Arp, upon honor now, which had you druther?" Well, of course I blushed and so did the maiden, for everybody knew our secret, and everybody cast one eye at me and the other at her. We lost the case, but I am not yet con­ vinced that I have ever seen happier days than my courting days, and I wouldn't mind being young again and going through the same rapturous ex­ perience.-- Bill Arp, in Atlanta Con­ stitution. How American (Jirls Arc Fitted for Ac* tive Life. There is a fashionable boarding school in New York where the "young ladies" are taught to enter and get out of a carriage. A vehicle with the proper pedal arrangements for this sort of ex­ ercise, which determiner, a lady's breed­ ing and claim to social position, is kept in the back yard of the educ ational es­ tablishment, and there the "carriage classes" are put through the most arduous training. Another accomplish­ ment peculiar to this gilt-edged academy is learning to eat asparagus, oranges, grapes, and other juicy and unnianag<v able viands in a style that shall repre­ sent the perfection of table manners. Of course these are luxuries, and like French and Italians, included in the "extras," but then the social creed of to-dav sticks at nothing, not even at this expensive form of higher educa­ tion.--New l'ork letter in the Boston Herahl. LKT no one suppose that by acting a good part through life he will escape scandal. There will be those even wli<> hate them for the very qualities that ought to procure esteem. There are some folks in the world who are not willing that other.* should be better than themselves. A FRENCH botanist. M. Buysman, has enumerated 378 species of plants grow- ingin Greenland, and he finds that they resemble those of Lapland more than those of the American continent. MISFORTUNE and misconduct were born twins. Our faults are oft the parent of our woes, and he ^Jio most declaims at the world's frown, has generally done his best to earn it. Robert Fulton Wanted a Thousand Dollar** and Ho Got It. "Ha, ha!" said a charming old gentle­ man whose memdry was wonderful for his age, for he was born during the first ten years of the present century. "In­ ventions! You can't hit them always right. It's like a lottery. A man twenty yeafs ago came to me with something and offered me a quarter share in it for $25. I didn't think it was worth shucks. Well, to-day that quarter interest would be worth a quar­ tet of a million of dollars. You see, the inventive faculty is one thing and the business talent to work out inven­ tions successfully something else. A good many people have the first, but very few the other. There was my father and Robert Fulton. It's a family story. I dare say it has been in print often and often, but you can't wear out a good thing. You see, my father and Fulton were quite intimate. Fulton was in the habit of coming to see my father, and having steamboat on the brain, he probably talked my father, John McKesson, to death. It was always endless chains or something or other. My father was a patient lis­ tener, ahd that's a talent. Cultivate it, young man. One day during office hours Fulton came to see my father. " 'John,' said he, 'I have gpt it sure. I can make her go.' " 'I am too busy to listen to you now, Fulton. I tell you what you do, come round to my house to-night.' " 'I can't,' said Fulton. 'What I want to see you about is this: I must have $1,000.' " 'Well, I haven't got it to give you. But anyhow come to the house all the same. You can take tea with us. Then you can talk with me up to 10 o'clock at night; then if you are not through I shall go to sleep. I alwavs go to bed at 10.' "Fulton seemed to hesitate for awhile and at last said lie would come. Ful­ ton did come round and took tea with father. Fulton told him about the pad- dlewheel. Father thought that a pad- dlewheel wouM never do. You see, in those times they were cocksure that the power used to lift up the water by the wheel would about neutralize the pro­ pelling force. Ha! ha! those old fel­ lows were smart. We always are in our generation." " 'Well,' father said, 'Robert Fulton, your wheel is no good. It would never work. You talk about making the boat go four miles an hour! That's an un­ heard-of speed. No, sir. With a wheel on your boat she'd stand stock still.' "Then Robert Fulton argued it out with father, and 10 o'clock came, and father was getting sleepy. Just then maybe Fulton got more excited or father more attentive, and it was 11 o'clock and they were talking over. it still. " 'It's time for you to go home, Rob­ ert,' said my father, 'unless you would like to have a bed .here, and you might as well do that' " 'If I do,' answered Fulton, 'I only adjourn the talk until to-morrow, for you must get me the $1,000.' Maybe Fulton buttonholed father before breakfast; anyhow Fulton's persuasive powers overcame father's doubts, and he agreed that he would do his best to raise the $1,000 for Fulton. Right after breakfast father went out, and the first man he met was Robert Lenox. 'See here, Mr. Lenox,' said father, 'I want some money of you to help one of Ful­ ton's schemes. You may not believe it can ever be done, but the man fancies he can make a boat go four miles an hour. I think he intends using steam, and a wheel, or something. I am going to let him have $100. Would you mind putting down your name for the same sum?' "'It seems quite preposterous,' said Mr. Lenox to my father, 'and I have no reason to believe that Mr. Fulton's boat will ever accomplish what he thinks it will. Still, if your name is down, you may let him have $100 from me.' " 'Then,' said my father, 'I will write down, "Robert Lenox, $100."' " 'No, no,' answered Mr. Lenox, 'just put down the $100 with no name to it, because I shouldn't like the people who come after me to learn that I was such a dunce as to think that Fulton or any­ body else could make a boat go with steam or wheels four miles an hour.' "That's the story my father told me. See here," said the pleasant old gentle­ man, "you never can exactly tell what does come from an invention. I won­ der what Fulton would have to say could he learn how those rocks at Hell Gate had to be blown up because they bothered that fleet of steamers which has to pass there every day. Eh ? eh ?" and the old gentleman gave here a merry laugh. - "Anyhow, Robert Fulton got his $1,000."--New York Times. The Cause of the Gulf Stream. It has been recently reported that there is a plan on foot by the Prince of Monaco to launch certain floats .to ascertain the cause of the Gulf stream, and it is said that the' co-operation of the British authorities in tliis scientific project has been asked. Whether the observations made in pursuance of this object shall serve to clear up definitely all qiu^ons of the dynamical origin and propagation of the Gulf stream, or whether they merely solve some of the disputed points, the scheme in itself deserves encouragement. Bottle experiments, to ascertain the velocity and course of the Gulf stream, fail to give exact information, because the bottle, being exposed to the winds as well as the current, gives a mixed record. But floats might be constructed so as to bo almost totally submerged, leaving so little surface exposed to the wind that the float would move with the current, in the teeth of the wind. If the theory be %ouud that the winds alone cause the Gulf stream, it would make no difference how much of the float is left exposed. But this theory is discredited, if not only utterly exploded, by the well-known fact that two contiguous currents, flowing in opposite directions, are found in the same ocean area. It is therefore all important to such an inquiry as the Prince of Monaco proposes that floats are use which will be well nigh insensible to wind agency, and will respond solely to the impulse received from the moving mass of water. If the researches are carried on with floats of this design there is little doubt that they will prove highly instructive.--Neiv York Herald. Tlie Gentle Parson and His Slieep. The story is told that a prelate of the Church of England, on accepting a country benefice, urged a friend to make him a visit as soon as he got settled, re­ marking in perfect good faith: "I have a nice little green field attached to the rectory. I mean to keep a couple of sheep, and we shall have mutton kid­ neys fresh every morning for breakfast." --'Boston Journal, When Catlin exhibited his pictures of Indian life, a little over twenty-five years ago, one of the most striking features of the collection was the rep­ resentation of the countless herds of buffalo that then ranged in millions from Mexico to the Hudson Bay ter­ ritory. In this year of grace the buf­ falo is almost as extinct as the aurochs, the bulk of the slaughter being done in the last ten years, and done so thor­ oughly that in a distance of a thousand miles a traveler was never out of sight of a dead buffalo, and never in sight of a living one. The long-range rifle in the hands of the white hunter has been the weapon of destruction. The habit of the animals in keeping together in enormous herds made them easy to be tracked; they possessed no great speed, nor did their senses enable them to de­ tect their foe at the distance which mod­ ern rifles will carry. The slaughter of them was thus not difficult, and as their hides are valuable, and their pasture grounds were coveted, the Western ranchman was not likely to be deterred by any sentimental considerations. To chase the buffalo on foot is a diffi­ cult task, the wildness of the country making the fatigue too great; the sportsman prefers to ride when en­ gaged either in looking for or pursuing his lordly game. It is not unconqjnon for parties who hunt for sport, if ponies are at hand, to change their large or­ dinary horses for the smaller and well- trained pony when the herd is in view. The hunters then approach carefully from leeward, keeping as much as pos­ sible out of sight. When concealment can be no longer maintained, they trot gently forward; the buffaloes gather together, Btare at the intruders for a moment and then dash away. A race of about half a mile takes the pursuers up to the game; each singles out a victim, rides up to its left flank, and fires, the pony wheeling sharply off to avoid any charge from tlie wounded an­ imal. In this style of hunting the hunter has to be close up, almost touch­ ing the animal, for it is so tenacious of life that it must be hit in the right spot. The charge of a wounded buf­ falo is said to be easily avoided, and accidents are rare, although it is a good rule to be cautious when near one ap­ parently dying or dead. The profes­ sional buffalo hunters use Sharp's rifles, which are the most accurate and powerful, and good for half a mile and over, and at this distance, out of sight and hearing, they can fire shot after shot into the herd, which stands still in a stupid, amazed condition. As m^ny as forty have been thus slain, the hunter scarcely changing his position. Of course, in this manner of hunting, the shooter dismounts, and, like a long- range rifleman, lies down flat. Al­ though the heavy Sharp's rifles, -With their conical bullets, will go through anything, yet at these long distances they are not of necessity immediately fatal, and the wounded creature has to be put out of its misery by a nearer shot. When it comes to a halt, the exe­ cutioner stepB up and aims just behind the shoulder. The buffalo drops its head, straddles out its fore-legs, rocks to and fro, then pitches heavily on its side, and all is over. The flesh of the cow or of the calf is good eating, and can hardly be distinguished from ordinary beef. The most delicate portion of the bull is the hump meat, the strip of meat on each side of the backbone, which is juicy and tender. It is in­ teresting to remark that a new species of buffalo is developing in the woody, precipitous regions of the mountain ranges; it shuns the open plains, lives in small herds, and is endowed with great activity, and is a clear case of the "survival of the fittest"--Harper's Bazar. An Important Function Stimulated. The kidneys exercise most important func­ tions, which are 60 wearisome that they tax to the utmost the strength and endurance of these busy little organs. Every breath, every pulsa­ tion of the heart, every movement of a limb, everv thought, makes waste and necessitates the development of new atoms. The used up particles in the blood are sifted from it and dis­ solved in » watery fluid by the kidneysj> which then discharge their fluid into the bladder. A train of disasters to the system would follow if these "ashes," so to speak, were not thoroughly strained off and discharged. This is the case when the kidneys become inactive. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, by restoring their activity, not only keeps open a most important outlet for im­ purities, but prevents diseases of the kidneys themselves, which, when inert, become liable to full a prey to diabetes, Bright's disease, mephitis, albu-menuria, and other maladies specially Incident to them, which, although not specially rapid in their progression, are particu­ larly obstinate and fatal. Important. When yon visit or leave New York City, save baggage, expreesage, and |3 carriage hire, and stop at the Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot 613 rooms, fitted up at a coat of one million A Great Financier. Henry Meiggs was born in Catskill, N. Y., July 7, 1811. In 1835 he went to New York City, engaged in the lum­ ber business, and failed in the commer­ cial crisis of 1837. In 1838 he again started a large lumber yard, this time in Williamsburg, L. I., and was for a time successful, but in 1842 he again failed, and for several years had a hard struggle with adversity. In 1848 the gold excitement in California attracted him thither, and he there engaged in the lumber business, with such success that in a few yeais he was the owner of a large number of ships and schoon­ ers conveying lumber from various points on the.coast. At last a financial crisis in the money market of San Francisco forced him to borrow heavi­ ly, and subsequent depression of busi­ ness made it impossible for him to re­ pay the losses when they came due, and he failed, and to escape his enor­ mous liabilities, fled to South America. He settled in Chili and went into the business of a contractor for building bridges, and in l.w58 made a large con­ tract with the Chilian Government by which he subsequently cleared a profit of $1,300,000. He then devoted him­ self to railroad construction, and in Peru contracted for the construction of six railways, one of which, the Cal- lao, Lima and Oroya Railroad, ranks among the most daring achievements of modern engineering. He also under­ took the improvement of the environs of Lima, Peru, and accomplished it in a manner that excited great admira­ tion. It should be recorded to the honor of Mr. Meiggs that after he bad retrieved his shattered fortunes he re­ turned to San Francisco and paid all the claims he had there incurred in full and with interest. Mr. Meiggs was a man of refined tastes and a connois­ seur in music and art. He died in Peru in October, 1877.--Inter Ocean. • To Consumptives, or those with weak lungs, spitting: of blood, bronchitis, or kindred adectionsof throat or lungs, send 10 cents lu stamps for Dr. R. V. Florae's treatise on these maladies. Address tlie Doctor, Buffalo, N. V. THE Swede is the proper man to rid the . garden of its weeds. ••Put Up" at the Ganit House. The business man or tourist will find first- class accommodations at the low price of $2 and $'2.50 per day at the Gault House, Chica- J;o, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This ar-famed hotel is located in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot Elevator; all appointments first-class HOXT & GATES, Propria ton. Ctet Lyon's Patent Heel 8tiffeners applied to now boots, and they will never run over. road to ail depots. Families can live better for less money at tho Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class hotel in tho city. ; French Wit. '• V" Guiballard meets his tailor, to whom he owes 3,000 francs. He declares he hasn't a sou. "Let us see," says Guiballard, "hare you contidenee in the Government?" "Certainly." "Eh, bien! You can trust me then, for I owe much less than the Govern­ ment." They were talking of spiritualism in the presence of Doctor X. "Do you believe that spirits can re­ turn, Doctor?" asked one. "Oh, my friend, how can you ask such a "question ? If I believed that I would not be able to practice my pro­ fession any longer!" A FOREIGN exchange says: "Statistics do not at all corroborate the opinion that git ls are delicate, fragile flowers. They prove them to be energetic, am­ bitious, resolute, and determined; as­ serting their right to predominate even in numbers from the time they are born, and, with the exception of about four years of their life, keeping on the winning side and gaining, as a rule, two, three, end even four years more of life than men." In France, where chil­ dren get less of good mothering than in other countries, the baby girls show the same amount of determination to overcome negle t. Of 10,000 born alive of each sex there died in the Boys. Girls. First year 1,844 1,507 Three next years .1,078 1,040 BROWN'S "Mow Can She Ever Love Mm!" Is what you often hear said when the pro»- pectlve proom is the victim of catarrh. '•How can alio bear such a breathV" "How resolve to link her destiny with that of one with a disease, that unless arrested, will end in consumption, or perhaps in i 11 san­ ity Y" Let the husband that is, or is to be, get Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and cure himself before it is too late. By drug­ gists. " ASSESSOR--This land seems to be very fertile. Farmer--Quite so; * even if the crops do fail, the taxes on it always grow. HOW WOMEN WOULD VOTE. Were women al lowed to vote, every one In the land who has usod Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" would vote it to bo an unfail­ ing remedy for the diseases peculiar to her sex. By druggists. A WOMAN has invented a window and had it patented. Now, who will invent a post-hole and get a patent on it? OBSTINATE cases of fever and ague can be cured by taking Ayer's Ague Cure. As A rule, lawyers ara a brave class of men. "It's conscience that makes cowards of us all," you know. FAIXCTO of the hair is arrested, and baldness averted, by using Hall's Hair Itenewer. "THE most important thing in connec­ tion with a house is the haul," remarked the burglar. m A Most-Liberal Offer! TAA VOLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall, Mich., offer to send their celebrated VOI.TAIC BELTS and Electric Appliances ou thirty days' trial to any man afflicted with Nervous Debilitv, Loss of Vitality, Manhood, etc. Illustrated pam­ phlets in sealed envelope with full particulars, mailed free. Write them at onoe. "ROUGH ON ITCH." "Rough on Itch" cures nkin humors, eruptions, ring worm, tetter, salt rheum, froatea feet, chil­ blains, itch, ivy poison, barber's itch. 50a jars. 'ROUGH ON CATARRH" K"0 corrects offensive odors at onoe. Complete cure of worst chronic cases; also unequalea at for diphtheria, eoro throat, foul breath. "ROUGH ON PILES. • Why suffer Piles ? Immediate relief and com- Slete cure guaranteed. Ask for "Hough on Piles." ure cure for itching, protruding, bleeding, or any form of Piles. 50o. At Druggists' or Mailed. Piso's Remedy for Catarr(i is agreeable to use. It is not a liquid or a snuff. 60c. "Bough on Bats" clears out Bats, Mice. 15a "Bonghon Corna, "hard or soft coma, bunions, 150. "Bough on Toothache." Instant relief. 15a WELL'S HAIR UAL SAM, If gray, restores to original color. An elegant dressing, softens and beautifies. No oil nor prease. A Tonic Restorative. Stops hair com­ ing out; strengthens, cleanses, heals scalp, 50a "ROUGH ON MILE" 1'ILLSt start tho bile, relieve tho bilious stomach, thick, aching head and overloaded bowels. Smali gran­ ules, small dose, big results, pleasant in opera­ tion, don't disturb tlie stomach. 'S>a. Instantly Relieved. Mrs. Ann Lacour, of New Orleans, La.; writes: "I have a son who has been sick for two years; he has been attended by our leadiug physicians, but all toco purpose. This morning he had his usual spell of coughing, and was so greatly prostrated in conse­ quence that death seemed imminent. We had in the house a bottle of DH. WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOB THE LUNGS, purchased by my husband, who noticed your advertisement. We administered it and he waa instantly relieved.'* - Is Life Worth Living? That depends upon the Liver, for if the Liver is inactive the whole sys­ tem is out of order--the breath is bad, digestion , poor, head dull or aching, energy and hopefulness gone, the spirits are de­ pressed, a heavy weight exists after eating, with general despondency and the blues. The Liver is the housekeeper of the health; and a harmless, simple remedy that acts like Nature, does not constipate afterwards or require constant taking, does not interfere with business or pleasure dur­ ing its use, makes Sim­ mons Liver Regulator A medical perfection. I have tested its virtuea personally, and know that for Dyspepsia, Biliousness and Throbbing Headache, it is the best medi­ cine the world ever saw. Have tried forty other remedies before Siinmong Liver Regulator, and none of them gave more than temporary relief, but the Regulator not only relieved but cured. • H. H. JONES, Macon, GO. M to 98 a day. Samples worth tl.50. FREE. fines not under the horse's feet. Address I Brewster's Safety Bern Holder, Holly, Mich. AGKNTS WANTED for the best and fastest wil­ing Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced XJ per cent. NATIOKAJ. PUBLISHING CO., Chicago. 111. T (.earn here and earn MBvna • • • £oo<l pay. Situations Write Valentine Bros-. JaneiTlUe. Wla. LI FLL fl >0 SCHOOLOK ECLECTIC A. HI LI Short-hand aud ty[>e-w nting. ni VlfcU U Unlimited course. |W. Send for circulars. Positions f 11 mi shed. HOB X. Clark a t.. Ch iciigo. BITTERS CoMhiaiag EBON with PUB! fBGETABLB TOXICS, qalckljr aad roapletelf CLBAH8B8 and KHBICHC8 TUB BLOOD. Qdckeaa Ui« artloB of the Liter aad Kidacya. Cfemtka eoaplsxlom, aaksa tk« skin smootk. ItdycaMl (•Jars tka teeth, caaae headache, orprodoteeaa* atipattoa--ALL OTHER IBON MEDIUMS DO. Ajaidaaa and Druggists everywhere recommend it _ Maa. D. M. HOTT, Morris, 111., VQE: "I hare used Brown's Iren Bitters for Impure Blood with the bast lasults, and I chMrfulljr recommend it." Wit. HXLTRICH, East St. Louis, m., sua: "I » Iron Bitters to parity the blood with ctary result*." MB E&HXST N. HENDBSSOH. Angus, Iowa, aaja: ' I used Brown's Iron Bitters ft* Scrofula with ma oh benefit. Can also recommend it aa aa excellent tonic." llaa. O. D. COLEMAN, Jefferaon. Iawrm, aaya: " 1 was troubled with soonj. I used Brown's Iron Bit* ten with much benefit and eaa truthfullr recoML- mend it" MR. GEO. C. VIKRR, with Messrs. T. B, HWL A Co.. Detroit. Mich.,sajs: "I used Brown's Iron Bit- tero for impure blood with the most uffeetiTe leBults.** Genuine has abomTrade Mark and crossed redhnea on wrapper. Take no uther. Made only by BUOWN CHEMICAL CO.. UALTiMOKK. MA. Cl V Ili "AMR QCICK for Prof. VoortT's New Mn>trala4 ll«K»k on I>re»« Unking, New l>otcnati, sad MsnUt »•--•'C uluiif, etc. Agent* »eU 10 aclny. I'ror.BUOUY.l!a«iuaU.Ck and MorpMno Habit Cgrrd in 10 to BO DAY*. HEFRRTO !<>O0 PHTIONTS MRED naed most OPIUM in (ill parts. Dr. Marsh, QuincyJ JAMS, pap*? of F*U Tbruit* _ - * JAMKS HASi.KY, JELLY, • 'car, Tat ur>, IVserret, CftBfttaf ir«e with diaoi# WINTKR ltl'K.TS thrown in. Kwt-r, Mniii.-im, Ark. A FORTUNE: K'.rKTu. N IVFOLI AF»nt*. TON L F *1 -- | l\ IB I I II RADWAY'S PlliS I The Great Liver and Stomach Remedy .For the on re of all disonhvs of tho Stomach. Liver" Bowels, KidiiryH. Bl.uid. r, XorvmiH Diwanc^. In-s of Appetite, !!cad>:che.Ci>*ttvene*fi, Inclination. Bilious­ ness. J-Vver, inflammation of tlio Howt ls, I'llew. and all di-riUiKenienta of the internal viscera. Purely vegetable, containing no mercury, mineral*, or dele­ terious drugs. iTicr, a 5 cents per box. Sold by all druggist *. DYSPEPSIA! DR. RADWAY'S PILLS5S.KJ! ««» at«re Ktiviiirth to the stomach and ciuMc it to perforin its functions. The e.vuiptoiuaof Ityspepsiadisd^fiear. and with tinm the liability of the system'to contract^ diseases, 'l ake the medicine according to directions, and ol>> erve what we ssy in "False and True" respect­ ing diet. A few samples of letters we are constantly receiv­ ing : • Pavid Ki' htrd.T.unenburg.N.S.: Pills such a bless- faiu th<.t he will tuke no other. r II. A. Carr, P.M., Escambia, Ala.: "Best Pills he has <\ er used." K. Hummel, Uoonville, Mo.: Cured him when all Others failed. Alice E. Ohaver, Mt. Storm, W. Vs.: "I positively say that Hadway's are the best Pills I ever had tor ®ysi eiisia." „ , i. li.W. Futcher, H am m on ton, N. J.: EITeoflvely on red ot rmworniH. and recommends ltudway's Pilis in the hi^hent manner. *3#- Send a letter stamp to l»lt. ltAim'A\ « <'«(., Mn. :« Warren Street, Hew York., for "1'aJbe and True." ^ - ;W »•; : ^ j., . •. - ,r V "'mM .'""PERRY DAVIS"** PAIN-KILLER II IS RECOMMENDED BY ^ 3 Physicians, Ministers, Missionaries, Utah ' agera of Factories, Workshops, Planta­ tions, Nurses in Hospitals--in short, everybody everywhere who has ' ever given it a trial. ViiXSH EffTEBNAIILY, IT WTLl, BE TOCTm A NEVEB FAILING CU&K FOB f -n SUDDEN COU)S, CHILLS, P. Of THE STOMACH CRAMP* and BOWEL COX- lAIWrm SORS • if THROAT, &c. t " f JEPPMBD EXTERNAL^ \ rr IS THX HOST EFFECTIVS AND BBS* @ * ' LINIMENT ON EAKTH FOB CURING ' SPRAINS, BRUISES, RHETJMAc TISM .NEURALGIA. TOOTH. ACHE, BURNS FROST- BITESt &c. Price:, 25c, 50c, ait $1.00 ier Me. FOB SALE BY ALL MEDICINE DBALKS*. * «"Beware of Imitations."'A-d r ,SC-j , < A > , 1 ASK Yo ur Ncwsdeatar for THE CHICAGO LEIXiER, the BEST ST OBI I'APXB in the country. Read it. '•f* >-"*• OPIUM MablS, tialckly and tfMnlesa* ly cured - t home Correspondence noddled an<l fre? triul of cure sent hones. Investigators. THBHFXAXK Bwibr COJU-AX Y. Lafayette, lad. JONES PAYStdeFREICHT 5 Toa Watts scales, Iron Uvert, Scc« BcarUgs,.Braa and Beam Box f AGO. lie Seal*. For fre< • fttt prtot MiS itloa thl< MMT aad aiWif BINUHAMTOM, IF RAGES CLUES ITsed by the best manufacturer^ Vsed by the best manufacturers and mechanics in the world. Pullman Palace Car Co.. Mason Jt Hamlin Or-'an A Piano Co., JkC.,/™* all kinds of ting tenr'e. At the New Orleans Exposi­ tion, Joints made with tt en-1 durea a testiiu* strain of over| J600 Pounds TO A SQUARE INCH. Pronovnct<l ttronge*t *qluc Knotrn. I TWO GOLD MEDALS. &M>lnn. 1883. If tie Orltan*. 1S85,1 If your dealer does not keep it aandh - - ^^1 can. KRBB. IB ITCIITC B.s. ft A. P. LACET. Patent VA I I'll I m Attorneys.Washington,p.C. I W% B •••m m Instructions and opinions aa to p^uitabUitir FREK. yemt' experience. • / - Piso's Rsmady far Catarrh la tka Beat. Kaaisat to Use, and Cheapest. C A T A R R H •Also mod fbr Gold in the Haad, Headache, Hay Fever,4c. «o earth ^ ".Tudarine from its effects in my case. Pi so'a Remedy for Catarrh is •Excelsior.'"--H.D.KNOWLTON, Hol­ land. New York. Piso's Remedy tor Catarrh laths |H Beat, Eaaieet to Use, and Cheapest. H C A T A R R H Also good for Cold in the Head, Headache, Hay Fever, &c. Mcenta. "Piso's Remedy for Catarrh pave me almost imme­ diate relief."--F. £. BRAINCBD, Audubon, Iowa. Piso's Remedy fbr Catarrh ts the |H Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapeat. C A T A R R H Also good for Cold in the Head, Headache, Hay Terer, Ac. HoenA "Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is just the medicine 1 have been looking for."--W. OUTON, May»rille. Ky. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh la the B| Best, Easleat to Use, and Cheapeak^^B^ C A T A R R H Also good for Cold In the Head, Headache,Hay Fever, Ac. Mcenta. 'Piso's Remedy for Catarrh has done me more good than anything I ever tried ."--Miss It. A. SxVDLET. Cornwall Bridge, Conn. [ his card and inc. rostafre for sample can.; BU8SIA CEMENT CO., dloveestsr. QOLDEN m Y iEDICAL •" DISCOVERY CURES ALL HUMORS, from a common Blotch* or Eruption* to the worst Scrofula. Salt-rhenHi, , "Fcver-sores," Scaly or Rough Sktnl in short, all diseases caused by bad blood u* conquered by this powerful, purifying, tgm invigorating medicine. Orcat Eating IJU" cera rapidly heal under its benign influence. Especially has it manifested its potency ia curing Tetter, Roae Bash. Boils, Car» ; bunclea, Soro Eyea, Scrofulous SorMi and Swellings. Hip-Joint Disease* White Swellings, Goitre, or ThlelE Neck, and Enlarged Glands. Send tea cents m stamps for a large treatise, with col­ ored plates, on: Skin Diseases, or tho SMBMB n mount for a treatise on Scrofu Ions Affectiquu "THE BLOOD IS THE LIES.*; Thoroughly cleanse it b; Oolden Medica . usingr Dr. Pierce^. scovery, and geem digestion, a fair akin, buoyant ipir* lie, vital strength, and soundness at constitution, will be established. Btet. Easiest to Use, and Cheapeat. I _Plso> Remedy for CktwA la tle C A T A R R H Also good for Oold in the Head, Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. iO cents. •• "Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is producing favorable results."--GEO. \Y. WITH AM, PhiladelDhlaTPa. Piao's Remedy for Catarrh k Om H| Beat, Easiest to Use, and Cheapeat. C A T A R R H Also good for Cold In the Head, leadache,Hay Fever, Ac. iOcenta. TREATED FREEd 3>H. II. II. GREEN <& Specialists for Thirteen Warn l'aat. Have treated Dropsy and its complications with the Biost wonderful succexs; use vegetable rt-metUea. entirely hhrmle^s. Remove all symptoma of dropsy In eight to twenty days. Cure patients pronounced hopeless by the best of b y x i c i a n s . . . . From the first dose the symptoms rapidly disap- ear, and In ten daya at least two-thirds of all Kymp- ims are removed. Bome may cry humbug without knowing anything about it. Remember, it does not cost you anything to realize the merits of our treatment for youraelf. In ten days the difficulty of breathing ia relieved, the pclHe regular, the urinary org ana made to discharge their full doty, eleep is restored, the swellii weir lull uuij,«iccy ia ui. . nearly ̂ rone, the strength im-reaaed, ead all or I made stand- times, . Give ifflicted, costive, pem ph le't rcontainlnKteatiirioriials.qheatioiia, etc. Ten days' treatment furnished free by mail. Epilepsy (Fits) positively cured. If you order trial, send IO cento in atampa to pay poitwe H. H. feKKEN * 9<>N8. M. Da., SBJones Avsnne, Atlantis, da. CONSUMPTI tioMH rcraedy;CR^^^^^H lease are >ver this tmfidy >ng this now csfc which is Scrofulous DlHiM Lung*, is promptly and cei and cured by this God-given r before the last stages of the disease are From its wonderful power over this fatal disease, when first offering this now i ebrated remedy to tho public. Dr. PintCS , . thought seriously of culling it his KCoga v, / . sumption Cure," but abandoned that nanM as too limited for a medicine which, from Kg wonderful combination of tonic, or strengthen* ' ing, alterative, or blood-cleansing, antl>ulioa% pectoral, and nutritive properties, ia unequal*^ not only as a remedy for consumption of tte lungs, but for all CHRONIC DISEASES or THB Liver, Blood, and Lungs. If you feel dull, drowsv, debilitated, hart sallow color of Bkin, or yellowish-brown spot! ou face or body, frequent headache or dttsW neas, bad taste in mouth, internal heat or cf " alternating with hot flashes, low spirits gloomy borebodings, irregular appetite, coated tongue, you arc suffering from In . gestion. Dyspepsia, nnd Torpid Livef^ or "Biliousness." In many cases cnly part of these symptoms arc experienced. As a remedy for all such cases, Dr. Pierce's Golden JHedical CQuai. For Weak I.uis Shortness of Breath Severe Conghs, Cons'u Iscovery has no SMB, Nplttl Br mpfion, aad kindred affoctiona. it is a sovereign remedy. Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Piereea book on.Consumption. Sold by DrB|(isMi PRICE $1.00, Bft.VSTSS World's Dispensary Medical i Proprietors, Hain St., BriTA&O, X. T. -i \CVCe*S LITTLE e\\e\» FILLS. ANTI-BILIOrs awtf" CATHARTIC* Sold by Dru|giits. 85 cents a vial. $500 REWARD is offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for a caee of catarrh which they cannot cure. If you have a discharge froat the nose, offensive or ott wise, nartiat loss of smell, t or hearing, weak eyes, dull or pressure In head, you have Catarrh. Ti sands of cases terminate in consumption. Dr. Sage's CATARRH RKHKDT cures the worst cases of Catarrh." Cold In tho Head.** and Catarrhal Headache. 60 cent* B flSH BUN*' Non» ceoalDo uolest tsmped witb the Above TRACK MAKE. SLICKER"-- ErerM. A/VII v NA?W;VHL UIOUV Ou A | uui VI I uvvvi VUA«I -a mi AMR^ NAPIM WNFI.A^A Is absolutely Hater and M raoor. and will keep yon dry in the hardest storm ASK tor tlie KISH BRAHD" SLICKXBand takenootber. If year storekeeper doei --" .gen<yi"l<lej<gllrttYec^UreuetoA_JrTOWBB,»9 Simmons St. Boston. Mass Sure relief • oimni• KIDDER'S PA8TiLLE8."noeac" by mail. Stowell&OOh tihariestown. Mats. FRAZER AXLE GREASE. A Life ExpeAsoee. quick euros. Trial Packages. Coasalta* tlon and Books by Mall VKKB. Add*ssa Dr. WARD A CO.. Louisiana. Not Beet Is the World. Get the ftesuise. Kvb err package hiu» our Trt4e*nark Mi la narked Kramer's* SOLU KT£KYW11KK£ ta««tfcer wUhaTALeABt.BTKSAriM ea this 01*58 C. N. D. . WHEN WRITING TO AD f» nleaae amy you aaw the • latusaaaer. :

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