McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Sep 1875, p. 8

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; * '•V;\ -X' im •o •V ;- ..<••' ':f. YS ' •HsiaW glis The f MOUNTAIN MEADOWS* New Evidence Relative to the Ootthety Brought to IJsrfct--A Recital Almost Too |Iorrible f(tr Blllef. <t j Kali JLakfl Cra OiiiciimaM Commercial.] Whether tiia beads of the Church are more pleased or chagrined at the result of the*trial of John D. Lee is doubtful, bat they are evidently in great trouble ffVBI the effect it hoS iiau Gli the lifitlGIl. It is such a barefaced fraud on justioe that the most inveterate Jack-Mormon does not venture to apologize for it. The defense, in the interests of Brigham, doubtless, are now seeking to have Dame mid .Ltee tried together in September, au il the venue removed to ihis city. But Item inclined to think that would be for the interests of justice and the liberal cause. As to the men themselves, it would be a pure waste of time to try them over again with our present jury laws. The facts for the prosecution are as clearly proven as the fact of there having been a war in the United States, but a new jury would give a verdict just ik Brigham 'dictated. It is now sug­ gested that Congress appoint a oommit- utee to select juryiaen here; that a list of athousand names be made out, and the jury drawn therefrom. It w<Md be im­ possible to "pack" a jury out of that rturaber; and yet more than that oould be found who would not submit to any dictation from Brigham. At present one-iialf of the list is selected by the Probate Judge, generally a Bishop. The idea of a Mormon Bishop selecting a jtpy to try Brigham Young, or any of [lis agents, is too huge and painful a joke to write about. Meanwhile new evidence is coming out all the time--some of it curious, most of it horrible. Jacob Hamlin, a life-long Mormon, ,then lived in the north end of the Meadows; he was absent from home, bu,t left an Indian boy named Albert, whom he had brought up, in charge of his flock. This boy speaks good En- ;lish, but could not legally be a witness. ~ e boy says that when he learned what was going on, he drove the sheep slowly In that direction till he saw the emigrants coming out of their corral, when he took position near A thicket to watch the re­ sult. There were two wagons in front filled with children, and men who had been wounded in the siege; both wagons iriven by Mormons. Behind them came the women in a mass, leading the larger grildren, and behind them the men; be- ade the men marched the Mormon mili­ tia, single file. At the words, " Halt! Fire !" some fifty rifles were discharged upon the men, and nearly all of them felFdead. Then the Indians rose from their ambush and rushed upon th#' women, who turned and fled back to­ ward the men. Most of them were brained in a few moments; but two young girls, about 18 years old, Albert minks, sprang into a gully, ran down it and icross the bottom to where he was stand­ ing. They begged him to save them, md he directed them where to hide in a thicket. In another instant John D. Lee tnd Bill Stewart came galloping across h^ hollow, and, with savage curses, ord­ ered him to point out the run­ ways. He dared not disobey, and xm the girls were dragged out. Kneei­ ng to Lee, they poured out the most pas- donate prayers for mercy--they would >e his slaves, would never betray him, vould work for him forever. While ene Jung to his knees he jerked her sud- lenly upon her back, and, placing his mee upon her breast, cut her throat rom ear to ear! The other had, mean­ while, run away. He overtook her, and- savage blow on the back of the lead with a ragged stone, crushed in ier skull. Both these bodies were nissed by the burying party, and, strange o say, lay there ten days untouched by he wolves. When Hamlin returned ;pm Salt Lake City Albert pointed lem out, and they were buried. .Ham- adds that there was not the mark of a th on either body, and ho sign of ecay, so pure was the air. Their fair luntenances were like those of persons t dead, and their handsome forms un- uched by the beasts and birds of prey, ature and the wild beasts of the moun- xris were kinder to them than men of own race and color. Iqriilly strange is the story told by lin -since deceased -which nlv hearsay, but is confirmed by bilateral evidence. A Mormon womii advanced in pregnancy was at Ham­ 's ; her husband was driving one of le wagons containing the wounded, paving been ordered on that duty by shop Klingensmith. When the mas- cre began this man took a fit, and an died of excitement or fright. When i§ bloody wagon, containing the chil- reh and the dead body of her husband, pas brought to Hamlin's, this woman rent into a spasm, prematurely gave ^irth to a child, then became insane, and lgered twelve years a raving maniac. In* making horrid music, the curtain moved aside and an unearthly countenance ap­ peared. It seemed, says a reporter, like that of a Greek statue, its features clear, distinct, and moveless as marble; it was illumined by a soft light; the eyes were tkAra mo "no Riwnlft-niuo ujjcu, out 3-- i tion" in them. The whole company had gazed at the ghostly faoe for some time when a friend of Timkins fired his rifle. Not the least impression was pro­ duced upon the mysterious faoe. which remained a few seconds before the cur­ tain slid across and hid it. When the door was opened, several minutes after, Clark -as forSd just- as Timkens tied him,; though the cords had evidently been strained a little. He was very much exhausted. The reporters say that they don't see how there could have been any imposition about this. The rifle-ball oertainly went through toe faoe, whatever it may have been, for it was found in a board on the wall behind the cabinet through which it had passed in range with the aperture a$ which the faoe appeared. . -- - . . . . . . . . THE BLAGS HILLS. Prof, jtataney Telle What He KmowS Abo*t the Geld XMncovcrle*. ' Prof. .Teaney, in a late letter to the Indian Bureau from the Black Hills, says: " I found gold in placer deposits on both Spring and Rapid Creeks, from their headquarters to a point where they emerge from the Hills, and more ex­ tended prospecting and exploration shows that in localities in the valleys of these streams, gravel bars, especially those of the older formation and elevated aboVe the present level of the streams, contain gold in quantities sufficient to yield a fair remuneration for labor economically and skillfully applied, as­ sisted by the proper tools and mechan­ ical appliances, and at least a moderate amount of capital or its equivalent, and such system of working as the experi­ ence of twenty-five years has taught mineroof the ^Pacific Slope to employ. While the valuable placer deposits, as far as discovered, are by no means rich or very extensive, compared with those of California, still there is enough of the precious metal to develop the country, and stock-raising and agriculture will do the rest. In testing the deposits on Spring Creek I worked out a particularly rich spot where an old channel has been cut across by the present bed of the creek, and in ten hours' work, with a small sluice, obtained five-sixths of an ounce of gold, or about 815.50. The soldiers had pt&'i mine place not lesstnan two ounces of gold, and, in measuring the amount of gravel washed, I found that the total yield was at the rate of $4,00 per cubic yard, or about 3/oeata to the pan, as an average for the whole thickness of de­ posit. It was truly said of this region that there was gold in the very roots of the grass; but it is not the gold of the gravel bars or .quartz lodes; hot the gold of the miner or the geologist." No Time for Anything. The great difficulty in this country is, that we have no time for anything. The very walk of an American shows that he is in a hurry. An Englishman but tons his coat and gloves and goes to business as deliberately as he goes to church. An American business man flies after the car struggling with his coat sleeves as he runs, plunges in head­ foremost, and plunges out at the end without regard to his neck. Chief among our accidents stands those which occur because people jump upon flying trains or after departing boats. To wait ten minutes is something not to be thought of. Dinner is not eaten, it is is swallowed whole; and when one comes to the desert he finds that the fruit was pifcked before it was ripe. Everything hurried through, from the building of a house to the curing of a ham. The women who work on sewing machines stop before they come to the end of the seam. The dressmaker sends home your dress with basting-threads in it, and no loops to hang it up by. Sale of a Railroads A striking instance of the destruction of capital was furnished yesterday in the auction sale under foreclosure of the Bockford, Bock Island and St. Louis Railroad, a line about 260 miles in length, running through one of the most fertile and thickly populated regions in Dlinois. The road was built in 1868 and 1869, at an outlay, as represented by its bonded There "is none of the low- sure com- {,debt- of #9,000,000, and it was sold un A Clever Piece of Jugglery. A "materialized spirit" was shot in Rt. Louis, the other evening; a skeptic fffering $50 for the privilege. This is je test to which the mediums have been lenged to submit their apparitions, &ut the result will not be a whit more itisfying of their spiritual character, lie preparations made for the exped­ ient were elaborate, and took place in jresence of a small audience, con- lg of a few believers and reporters all tjie St. Louis paperfc. The medi- W. C. Clark, stripped naked before averal reporters ai?d the skeptic, Henry timkens then dressed himself in a white white linen trousers, and white lose, provided by Timkens. The cab- pet, which had been put together ex­ pressly for the occasion, and was a simple lell of plain boards, was examined at le last moment before Clark's entrance, tens had brought a brace and bit, bored holes in the floor of the cab­ let, through which he passed stout prds. The medium took his seat on le floor, with his back against the wall rthest from the materialization aper- re, and Timkens proceeded to cord m down; binding each leg above and low the knee; tying his hands togeth- drawing them down to the bottom of box, passing the rope through and " aning it, as in all these bindings, on outside; the body and neck were swise tied against the end of the box. tens was sure after this that he ^uldn't shoot the medium, at all its, and the door was shut. In a few jtutes there was rapping all around |box, then a period of silence, then 'picious creaking, as of cords, and in an hour, while the company were pleteness of the old world about any­ thing, and even fortuitcs arc gcacrsLy- made in a hurry, and lost in the sarae way. If any man we know is getting rich by the slow aad jpatfcnt process - of saving, be sure th|,t he was not born upon this continent. Yet people live as long here as they do anywhere else, and the days are the same length. Why is it we have no time for anything ?--New York Ledger. Scandalizing the Postoffice Department. The regulation which prohibits post- office employes from reading postal cards " except when they contain obscene mat­ ter " does not seem to be rigidly adhered to. A publishing house in Boston re­ cently mailed to its subscribers a postal card on which the following was print­ ed : " The ridiculous postal law, by which we are compelled to pay treble postage on all magazines sent to sub­ scribers in what is known as 'Burt's Syndicate,' compels us to establish a postal service ourselves. Your magazine will be left by the tenth of the month at , where please call for it hereafter." The cards were not delivered, and on in­ quiring wherefore, the firm was told that it was " using the mail to scandalize the department" The question now arises whether postmasters have the rigl't to mail matt ment " scandalizes the department, stop matter which in their his head, which was lanced, and the doc­ tors removed a portion of his skull. In their attempts to do this, the probe came in contact with a hard sufcatanca, which was thought to be the bone for which the surgeons were..in search. This was, after careful manipulation, brought to light, and,'to the great surprise of the physicians and doubtless the boundless pleasure of poor Best, it proved to be the veritable bullet which had been giv­ ing him so much trouble. This is a rare piece of surgery--one indeed which has never before been performed in America. v* A MONSTROSITY. 11' . - -------- ? -s.. A fjaia Bo*n with the Head of the "Feet of a Chicken. {From the Joplin (Mo.) Bulletin.] Nature, when in a festive mood, per­ forms many odd frealts, but the most wonderful of which we have ever heard, -twas the birth of a strange monstrosity about two weeks ago, and not half a dozen miles from Joplin. The circum­ stances were related to us by a physi­ cian whose reputation for truth and veracity cannot be questioned. At the request of the unfortunate parents, the physician's name, as well as iittrin, will not at this time be made public. About 1 o'clock a. m., 23d ult, Dr. ---- was summoned to attend Mrs. who was momentarily expected to be confined. Arriving at the house, he found three or four women gathered there in a state of great excitement, and on inquiring the cause of their agitation, he was shown to the bedside, where he found the lady in a state of great nervous prostration. After administering the proper remedies, which suoooeded in quieting her nerves, he was shown into another room, where he be­ held a strange looking being, which the lady liad given birth to a few minutes before his arrival. Even the doctor, who was accustomed to see strange eights, was shocked »<t this. Wrapped in its swaddling clothes lay the child, if child it could be called, weighing about eight pounds, with a head, whose fore­ head was well developed, but whose mouth, nose, eyes, ears and general countenance was the exact counterpart of a cat's, though the eyes, from tnetr dazzling brilliancy, looked like a ser­ pent's. The body, arms and hands were well formed and natural, and so were the legs as far down as the knees. From the knees they bore an almost exact re­ semblance to. a leg of a chicken--t* foot was as near a chicken's foot as can be imagined--and the infant would con­ tract ite toes just as a chicken would. Its head and neck were covered with a growth of fine black hair, the body and umbs looked like a chicken when plucked of its feathers ; its cries were those of a cat. Other peculiarities were noticeable, but, perhaps, it is best not to make them public at this time. It is said that this unfortunate circum­ stance was brought about in this wise : Some five or six years ago, while the parents resided in another State, the lady was watching a fight between a cat and a rooster in an adjoining yard. Two boys, aged ten and twelve years, respect­ ively, were watching the contest with gre«t interest. Finally the cat caught tuc chicken by the neck and iusuuiUy dispatched him, the other boy grabbed a light ax and, uplifting it, rushed toward the younger, saying : " D--n you! your oat killed my rooster, and 111 kill you." Tue younger brother, in attempting to es­ cape, stumbled and felL At this stage of the proceedings, the lady fell to the floor in a swoon, but recovered only to pass from one spasm to another, which continued for several hours, and the re­ sult was the birth of this monstrosity. The parents wished the child put out of the way by violent means, but, after a deal of persuasion and promise of a large sum of money, the doctor was allowed to retain it, provided he would never make its parentage known, or exhibit it for two years. He has liired an old ne­ gro man and wife, who live at an out-of- the-way place on the Arkansas line, to raise the infant. Less than a week ago he heard from it; and it was growing finely. There are other interesting mas­ ters connected with this strange case, which we will lay before our readers, in a few weeks, if permitted. der the hammer at $1,320,000, a little over seven-poT- cent-.- of its-- cof*-' Itr is difficult to account for tlixa enorKous shrinkage hi value.' There is' • no cl^-ge of 'extra-bad management, nor of any Credit- Mobilier scheme in the construc­ tion of the road. In spite of its appar­ ent opportunities and advantages for se­ curing a profitable traffic, the concern never paid any considerable amount of interest on its bonds out of its earnings, but continued to sink deeper into arrears, its total debt being something over $11,- 000,000 in gold; while the whole prop­ erty and franchises were estimated at only about $1,000,000 in the report of the Master in Chancery. The amount bid yesterday, $1,320,000, wis consid­ ered in excess of the actugf^alue of the road, which was accepted; by the pur­ chaser subject to various claims. At the best that can be hoped, the unfortunate bondholders will never realize more *.hn.n seven per cent, on their principal. It is a remarkable case of annihilation of val­ ue, and one which can only be explained upon the presumption that the road, running from north to south, and having for ite termini Rockford and St. Louis, was built years before it was needed, if, indeed, such a line could ever be made profitable.--Chicago Tribune. Wales' India Tonr. All England seems to be excited about the proposed visit of the Prince of Wales to India. If he could only travel like common folks and J[pay his own ex­ penses, there would be no trouble about the matter ; but this little trip of six months is expected to cost the snug sum of $710,000. It will cost $260,000 simply to convey the Prince to India and bring him back again. Two ships, the Serapis and the Osborne, will transport, the royal burden and his suite. When his Royal Highness reaches India, hfe becomes the guest ofythe Viceroy, and the expenses they have the right and exercise it they will probably have to stop a large num­ ber of newspapers as soon as their claim is understood. A Rare Piece of Surgery. Christian Best, of Louisville, Ky., in an unsuccessful attempt to take his life on account of a love affair, lodged a bul­ let in his brain in February of 1874, and the lead has remained there ever since, until last week, causing him intense pain most of the time. / Ah abscess foraWSd ou« of fbe rifce of hospitably are reckoned at $150,000, which the people of India are expected to pay. Then the Prince is to have $300,t)00 for personal expenses and for presents. So that this much-talked- of tour will cost England $560,000 and Trulia $150,000. A FROG Mid to be the size of a cow's head has made its appearance near Montreal, and has a voice as loud as a dog. Several unsuccessful attempts hare been made to capture his frogship, but when pursued he dives into deep water and keeps quiet for, several days. The Steamship Dakota. * The new Williams & Guion steamship t>akotn, sister ship to the Montana, of which extended mention has been made in these column*!*, tarived at this port on Saturday, on her first voyage from Liver- PAAl Sihft in Af flto oomn nAAnliA* w* Wiu UIMUV pVVU4UM| T**'H withal handsome model afe the Montana, 325 feet long, 45 feet beam, and 35 feet depth of hold. The Dakota can steam sixteen knots an hour, and has accom­ modation for 80 cabin and 1,500 steer­ age passengers. She is commanded by Capt Forsyth, and sails henoe on the 19th inst. xne Dakota made her initial trip across the Atlantic in less than nine days, and did not steam at full speed. Three days oat she passed on immmnA ioeberg.--N. Y. JEvening Mail. The GREAT FAVORITE !--The popular Chill Care of the age !! Composed of pure and ample drugs, Willioft's Tonic has long held the highest place in the long line of rcmediee for Chills and Fever. It in not only Anti-Periodic but in Auti-Paaio, for it curtails * the heavy ex- peiwe of doctors' visits, where friendly calls are all itemized in the account current. A penny saved ia a penny gained, and saving it ui thw way addB to health and oamfort. Try Willioft's touicf aa a oertainly, uid you will, never regret it. Wh(&LOCR, 'jtaiii & Co., Proprietor*, New Orleanti. FOU SALE BY AAA, DBCOOISTS. THE extent of country flooded in Southwest Missouri by the late storm is estimated by the Neosha Journal at 200 square miies, and the damage is variously estimated at from $500,000 to $1,000,- 000. Several persons are supposed to have been drowned in Newton county, and at Granby several families narrowly escaped drowning. A GENTLEMAN in the eastern part of the State, who was about having his leg amputated on aocount of ite being bent at right angles and stiff at the knee, heard of Johnson's Anodyne iniment. After using it a short time his leg came straight, as is now as serviceable an the other.. A GREAT many people have asked,us of late, " Hew do you keep your horso looking BO Bleek and glossy ?" We tell them it's tho easiest thing in the world ; give Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders two or three times a week. . A MORMON wagon brought the first rat to Pioche, Nev., that ever made an ap­ pearance in that city. A Gentile oat nabbed the polygamous rodent and put an end to his career. How TO On a HOMZ. Bee wlToitlmmenl The best invMtmMit-- SILVER-TIPPED Shoes. Five mdU laid out for Silver Tii>« add* ont" dailM' to tk> worth of * pair of tiiotw. Also, trjr Wire QnUtotI So!«a Bound to go beoauae everybody nnti them. CABLE SCREW WIRE Boot* and Shoe*. Thar are dar-r able, eaa? nnd drr. Alau, few Wire $jnUtad Solar I wm WARED A&KMTS. Sampin and OutJU fr--. BMxr thorn B«ld, A. OOULTBK k CO.. Ohtaag*. $10*$25rA torroBD'o Ho mi, BoaiM, Ma EVBRV PAJtlLY WANTS If. MmmvIdH. Ibid by Acwtfc AddNMM.Si.-i^VHjUiikl'fc ON SALARY only FevuiU. A " ' , Agoala wanted, Mat* mmd Address, 6. B. ChriaWan. Marlon, Oh la. Catalogue Free. Rv doluk & Co.. 1018 K 6th St. Lows. MO. AGRNTti, £0 KLKC.ANT OIL OHROMOS. UKmnt-od. size »xll for§J; 1*4) lor ' ' ' the world. XalleiuU Chreuw ' variety in BLLADKLraiA. A MONTH and EXPENSES to aU. Article) new, staple as Hour. Samples free. C. f<1N- INtiTON. NBW YORK or CHICAGO. $260 A MONT l<--Axente wanted everywhere. Business honorable and iiret Par­ticulars aent frwe. Adiiraaa WOKTJi A CO.. St. Louis. Mo. New Rt'V-BILL Ciucaao.lu. AVIfVTW and Morphine habit abaotntelir and II If IIIN Bpeedly oured. Puiiilesa; no pubioite. III 111 ID tend atamp for partuiufiira. Dr. Cart ****** ton, 187 Waahiqgtoa St*. Chicago,I1L CLARK'8 B00K-KEEPIN8. ce fl.OO, postpaid. Send (or Circular. W« * "¥' St CO., uil Raoe Street, Cincinnati, OMo. AGENTS WANTED Send for circulars vid our extra terms to Agents. NA­TIONAL PUB. OO., Chicago, 11L, or St. Louia, Ha for the fastest selling BOOK ever published. DOUBLE Y0UB TEADE S5idi' L'.:.,Cscixie ariiUi-iilLiU -Fttre CV .... ffeus.ui sealed jn-ckajjes, **rew-top oaru, boxes, # tutlf cbestfi- -GrwtTt'fK-Ui. Tjuk V*j--...? tof.ti - •ZTX.m l'V.!tos St., K. V..F. O, Bes yrsrost.. Sirdj per Mont aid assortment <i _ _ free. R. C. BKIDUMAN, 5 Barclay St.. Kew York, and 1TW West 4th St., Cincinnati. O. FV1H1S Paper is printed with Infe made by O. B. .. A A Co., 121 Dearborn Street, Chtayjo, and for by as in lariro or small quantities. CHICAGO HEWSPAPKK UNION, IM Monroe Street, Chioago, HL CUE! CUE Chicago Suburban Lots at 8100 each, (Un W "LClSl&'downand $5 monthly for balanee, within a sh< * * ' and cheap -- 142 LaSalle-st., Chicago. 111. 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BRIDE & CO.. liiv Broadway, Kew York. til8 s n | IPP A splendid Nxw Illustrated BOOK nILU LlrC of the author's own 30 years' IN THK life and thrilling adventures among ran Uirov Indian®,in border ware, hunting wUa rnll If CO I jinminls, etc. Tijk and <>n/y new and eompltt* book on the wild Fae WEST. Btatf an thirty to tell. AGICM'S WAM'KU. P. A. Huxca-IMBOK A Co., CHICAGO, Ixxe. THK MOUNTAIN MEADOW MASSACRE --A truthful account of thte terrible tragedy is contain­ed in Mr. Stonhouse'e 'ROCKY MOUNTAIN SAINTS..' a Jul! ana complete iiu-Uiri uf iiuj Mormons. l<uily illuiitrated with engravingo, maps, ete. This ia a great book for Agents at the present time. For full particu­lars apply to the publishers. D. APPLETQN A CO., *4:0 and 551 Broadway, New York. HI. Xa. OA3STl»IBI»I>, 57 La Salle Street, Chicago, 111., DEALER IN REAL ESTATE, Farms, Lands and Villagt Property. Correspondence solicited from those desiring to poaeof their real estate. Good fanas wanted. 'PIeas»a.nt and Profltable Employme&i "Beautiful!" "Charming!" "Ob, how lovely!" "Whatars they worth?" Ac. Such are exclamations by those whose® the large elegant new Chromoe produced by the European sad iaaerican Cfaromo Publishing Co.They are aU perfect game of art. No one can resist the temptation to bur when seeing the Chromoe. It requires no talking to sell the pic­tures, they speak for themselves. Canvassers, Agentaand ladies and gentlemen out of employment,will find this the best opening ever offered to make mon ej . For full particu-laie, eend stamp for confidential circular. Address I". GLEASON k CO., 738 M'tahiiigtoa St., Boston, Mass . .1* ICTf, OO MO Mynaali l^wiBbuf ® farm. Apply to H. P5 SyRSSMASiS'^ TPMMB1 WATER WHEEL ^SSt*sasms;K.s {ngtoB,D. O.,aod kaa prp-rrd to be tbe beft. WatMapada. Prt««« lower Wbaei. Pem. a WIM lilS*HOT^AKKsI nr~Sendat once for Cirsalar to GEO. P. OAKTZ A CO., ITS tommm* St., New York. ThSa new Trass to wo*t» with perfect comfort nigbl aad day. Ada^s iWW to •vei* motion of th* body, retaining rupture «nder U<e hardest exercise or severe •train unMt peraianently oured. Sold cheap by im Elastic Trss Co.. MO. 683 Broadway, N. Y. City. Bsntbymail. Call or seud totr OtrciUar and beoorMl. S. H. HARRIS' PIRB and BUROl2lK S A F E 8 and CHEAPEST, Mwaufkr torjr nnd galw-DOOESaw the BEST aa4 mirage. Great Central •mi. Market, between Wash­ington A Madison-sta. 4U.&0 PER DAY, PASSENGER ELKVATOE. J. A. Wilson, Propr. 1JA8T by selling our Patent Water-Proof Clothes I J? It will not Shrink, Stretch or Rot. Nothing it in the market. Tbls is much better and cheaper than the WUlte-Wire Clothes Line. AGEWTS C ANCOl A MOXIC Y with it. Krecjr family will bay one. Saiupue Adl5SkK IRON COMPANY. Box 900, PitfelmrgV P». nroomii FOR W.iDBOVN&W TTMBEKLLAS. PHILADELPHIA and <VKW YORiC.-Tbo qualltiea marked with tbatr iwimo are oonfidenUy teoom-mended. m E R l D E N MfMa g.r TIC K«LIIutfcilt»r" all kitl*L. (li nilTl UD¥ '<!'»• liU' ChI U'i-y. KK«Jkk>*« IIU 11iiin.I ui.. "PAimr WM* III Ai i vtlKV " or i'«Hnl >i<i Knife. • Th« xuoft |}ur«W»' tVItlTB mllANULK known. Original makers of the 1IAK1) KVB* liEK lltNUl.R. Always cms Mil tor Msrk" MKiU-f CO., ou Uie JUnde. W&xranted afld lers in Cutlery and by the MKKXUKN CO., 40 Chambers Street, New Yuak. Sorplime HaMt Speedily enrod l»v 1»H. EkCC'B onlv known and burc liwaiKiy. CHAItUU lor treatment until cured/ Call on or wldrotK Dr. J. C. BSCS. 112 John St., Cincinnati, 0. •£J»1C1IK BKIIDE&KD IKELKS*! Vol.TA'K Kl.KCTtto Hkl Tfiaiul ll;iiuis are iiulorwd by th»i eminent pli>«icutu6 in the world for thei'iirc of rlicu- iiiatiatn, neiiralKia. liver com­plaint, (lyHiM'twiu, kidney <lis- eMwi1, aches. i>ai iik. lie rvous dis- orders.fits.H'iimle cumplaints nervous and general debility, and other chronic diseases or t he cheat ,hea«l, li ver, stoniaoh kidneys and blood. Book with full particuhirw fn«" by VOLTA 11km Co , Cincinnati, Ohio. Selected French Burr Mill Stones Of all si/.e«, ami superior workimtii^hip. PorlaUtk* ^•irlndluK' MIIIh. upper <>r under niuiicrs, for (-'unit or nvrelumt nork. UeiiuiiH! I>iil<*li Ad- «.. . Slili !•!«•»*• . Coi n Shellcrs mid l'..-ni.-H.Tl:i:,HO.:- ali! kind;} ni iVtill• Machinery and Wiil.fc' ^1,,,'ji'ic-si. Si'SiJ'fi:K l":»n iphlet. K J ru«ffc. IWilli Coiiti'iiiiy. llox 1431), C'iiwJsmxiti; Ohio. Smith ©rgan Co., BOSTON, MASS. SPhese Standard Instrument* Sold by Music Dealer* Everywhere. MEWS WANTED IN EVERY TOWN. the United States on ttr INSTALLMENT PLANi thai is, an a ByUm of Moothly Paymots. taahsssn shonld ssk tor the Sum ChliloffMs i and fall partioilan «o SELTZER The Wonders of Modern Chemistry. ttaivflltairittiaKUB. Chssgct mm Seen Md Pelt mm T%mgr Wl#'"" * Oeewrsltsr Using m. Few Doasdef ' - EASWAY*^. 8arsaparillian - ^ „ Resolvent THE oeeat BLOOD purifieil- 1. Good spirMa, disafvearaiioe of melancholy; ineisass and hirdnsss ot clee, etc. 2. Strength inoreasee, appetite improves, reihil flo* food.no more sonr eractationg or wat«rbrmab,aood "" Keetiou. calm and undistattoed steep, awsA:,eh * * vwcoroiw. 3. OiwipjMte.nuw of flpnte, Wotcbne, pimi i j r healtliy, the urin© clianget bid and cloudy appearai.ee to a cioxx sherry or ambsc: color; water from the bl-.dder throoftbthio urethr* without }»a.lri or ecalding; IWtle or no sediment t no pain or weakn«ww. 4. Marked diminution of qcantity and frmjoency involuntaiT waakenliur diechtraee (it aflUctad that vva„. "f S^^waent cure. Incrpacsd eia&mm exalhited in tlie oecnttlnK glnnds, and tunctienai hi»-mony restored to ih<- wveral on Ysllow Ttaam. tiiv on C.w white of the pjm, theswar> n appef rjines of tlio skin cf bealUiy color. tm. and tt tuiagod to a clear,. [Tioae sMff«rinir from weak ov ulc^mted {nags r«alice (treat ben^Ht in eip ' 5. thy. saffron a; lively 6 T tnborcS(» will _ ... .... freelj' the phleorm <>r raucous from tie Jeile, hroncM or windpipe. Miirwi or head: di ! of tb»> frnqasnoy o< consh; (tcnAral iacieae* of strenyttt' . tnrouKlioat the system; of night sweats sod Wilns and feeling <>« weai-iww srotmd the ami" shoulders «M4*. ; oe«eation osr cold aj«5. chills, suffiMMt ion ; hard breathing 'ind paroxysms -iC wiop down or arising in the morning. All Une» dfefMws.. t.ympf«»arie Rmdnidly and surely disappear. i Aiiaai- after day tlis SAR8APAKlU,iA9i fei taken, new n#tis t>f returninjf health will aopear: as tbn Mood improve® in stren^j>. and purity, dioMia. will di-minish, and aU foreign and impure aepoeits, nodes, tpraors, oanoen. hard in mm. etc., be resolved away ana the trasound made sound and healthy; ulcere, feist sores, avphllttic eores, chroaic skin disnmwR disappear. *'• in oases where the system has been salivated, and *ry. Quicksilver, Corroeive Snbliuiat«. (the prfnei. pal o.iiiF(St«(»rit in the advertised SarsapaHilas, associat­ed in some oases with Hyd. of Potassa) have •-- ed and beoome deposited in the bones, joints, etc., causiniK oariea of the banes, rickets, spinal enrratnes, variooee veins, ete,, the SARSAPAIULIiIAN will resolve away tbass de-posite and exterminate the vims of the diMuw (too Uw system. f>. If those who are taking these medicine* for theem ot Chronic, Scn>fulous or Syphilitic diMMutes, however slow iuiuf Ik* the cure " feel* better," and fin<k their gen--• eral health improving, their flesh and rlirVitlniirriaslna or even keepiiuc ite own, it is a snw: eJku that the core w progress!»)«. In these diseases the patient either ests better or woroe--the virus of the disease in not inactive; if not arrested and driven from the blood, it wilt spread and continue to undermine the constitution. Aa aooa as the MAKSAPARILLIAN makes tJw patient "t'e«!l better," every hour you will grow better and ii»-crease in h«wuth. sfcrermth and flesh. The (jreat power of this remedy is in diseases that, threaten death--as in t •oni.auiption of the Lungs and Tuberculous Phthisis, Scrofula, Syphiloid IMseasw, Wasting, Degeneration, and Ulceration of the Kidneys, ;ths skid, . frooa its tnr- . j of 4-j> v' " , " - /, \ -J j, ;,rW v Diabetes Stoppage of W»t«r (inst«nbuwoos relief af­forded where oathetBrs hnvo to h>.- iKd, thas doing awu with the painful operation of using these tnatruaients), dissolving stone in the bladder, tutd in all eases o! If tlamruation of tl«i Bladder and Kidneys, in Chronic wises of Leuoorrhea. and Uterine disea«i6. In tumors, nodes, hard lunijw and syphiloid aksers; In (ir;i|«sy and venereal sore throat, nksers, and in tubercles of the luugs;in «out, dys{K>|^ia, rheumatism, lieketi: la nit^rcm ial deiM^itu - it Is in these terrible forms of diwase, wivere the liuiiuui lxn!y has become n complete wreck, and where every hour of existence is torture, wherein this groat remedy challenges the astonishment .and admiration of the sick. It Is in such caaes, wbece all the pleasures of existence appear cut off from the n-<t/- H!>d by Its ^>nderfuf, --.:• agency, it restores tho hoiH;l.«e to e new life and new existence where this great remedy stands alone in its might anil power. In the ordlnaiy skin diseases that evety one is more Or lohs troubled with, a few doses will in most oases, and a few bottlee in the more aggravated forms, work a per- . munent cure. Those aHlioted with chronic dinnasnn should pstebass ihWliluH. ..Jinrnlnlnrt «««, -. gor doTMi,^- ^5^ptMrTiilf doaen botiiM, or }1 yui bat- RAOWAVS R E A D Y R E L I E F WILL AFFORD INSTANT EABB. INFLAMMATION OF THK KIDNRTf, INI IjAMMATION OF THK BLADD INFLAMMATION OF THK BOI „««« CX)NOKSTiON OF THE LI SORB THROAT. DIFFICULT BREATHING, PALPITATION OF THK HEART. HYSTERICS, CROUP. DIPHTHXKIA. „ CATARkH. INFtUKNZA, HKADACHK, TOOTHACHE. MUMPS, KBUKAJXilA. RHEUMATISM, OOLD CHILIS, AGUE ClilLLS. Tbs application of the RKAIJY KKhlKK to t** part or part* where the pain or difficulty eilito wW afford eiise and comfort. Twenty drops in half a temblor oi wftter will, in a few momente, cure CRAMPS, SPASMS, SOUR STOBt* AGH. HEARTBURN, SICK HK^»A|;iiK, UIAR. KlfKA, OYSKNTKRV. COLIC, WlK» IN THK H()Wk1,S. und all INTERNAL PAINS, Travelers siiould always carry a bottle of RAD- WAY'S HKLIF.K with them. A few drops in watoe wUl psevent aiokness or puiit> torn chance of wata. IT IS BETTER THAN FRENCH BRANDY QR BITTERS AS A STIMULANT. Pricc 50 Cent*. Sold b)r Drnggl|(b DR. RADWATS RE6UL&TEN6 PILLS Po-'ol-4.!": t«;1"',e:-,-"rfc2.r c .-.ttct!- wju ' sv.. ' g--( SUiiii-'ic!:, Liver, BowcIl, Kidni^i-, Wf.ddci; Ntk-.^aiC Dis&tsc;, Headuahc. Cons'i.jtattan, Cortiveness, Ini'lge" > tion, Dysiwpsia, Biliousness, Bilious Fever, Inftamma-' tion of the Bowels, Piles and all Derangements of th® Interniil Viscera. Warranted to effect a positive care. Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drujrs. S ivTHmerve the followins symptoms resoltinff from Disorders of the Digestive Organs : Constipation, Inward Piles, Fullness of the Blood in the Head, Acidity of the Stomach. Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or Weight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations. Sinking or Fluttering ut the Pit of the Stomach, Swimmin# of the Head, Hurried and IMf" fioilt Breathin«, Fluttering at tbe Heart, Clrakiiwor Sutfocatiiuc Sensations when in s P-.tstare, Dim* ness of Vision, Dots or Webs before tbu Sijiljt, Fe*er i;nd Dull Paiii in the Head, I)»-t!c.itncy of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Ctieste, Limbs, and Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in • UA few doses of IIAI) WAY'S PILLS wUI free system from all the above named disorders. Prte«l Cents per Box. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. Read "FALSE AND TRUE." Seed one letter-etamp to RAOWAY & OO-, No. 3ii Warrrn Street, New York. Iafdtmattatt worth thousands will lie sent yoeu The Kins of the Body is the brain; the stomach Its main support; the nerves its messengers; the bowels, the kidneys and the pores its safeguards. Indigestion creates I:, violent revolt araon^ these attaches of tae regai organ, and to bring them back to their duty, there m nothing like the reguSatieg. purifjiog, invigoratuig. cool­ing operation of TaiTitnt's Eneyweseent Seltaer Aperlestf -- It renovates the system aad restores to health both the body and the mind. Sold byaUDrugglete. GEO, p. fiowEU. a Col DnutKlsts jVEIM'S WOOD JACKET CMS Mperiorto any pac SHIPPING ̂ ipTjrUPOSKS, [e ever offered to the Drag Jtrsdfc__ M C l.-THET S^THET 3.--THKY 4^--THEY A . 5r-THEY ©.--THEY One of these wood-covered cans will last L. three common ones. Price aboat the not. A KVEM>EN, Chicago, I1U. &W3 K SO o.o s s K SS-sS- OQSNcSsi" IgS .?;r:igsi!^|IS<Pa 2E^b,~o s" -^2 < c r C S K « 2 e - e ̂ ® < 3 W Mlagi I I: P?££?V Si B 9» a». u. TITHES WRITIlfG TO AJDVEItillSKR% Tf please lay you Mtw the MTUtlMnMai tet&to paper. ^ " 'X \ ̂ ^ %

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