McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Jul 1877, p. 3

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. $' * I' t' AGRICULTURAL AJCD DOMESTIC. Aronsd the Item* GOFFER FOB TIMED HOBSEB.--A veter­ inary surgeon of Prague is said to have discovered that strong coffee has a won­ derfully-reviling effect upon decrepit and overworked horses. In a very short time it renews their vigor, smooths their skin, and restores their full capacity for work. No STOCK should be allowed to wander over the meadows. This is doubly in­ jurious. It destroys the grass and spoils the appetite of the animals for dry feed. Nothing is gained, but much is lost by this practice. The ground is also " poached," and quagmires are formed in low, springy spots where -the first grass appears. PROTECTING YOUNG TREES. -- The ,cheapest and beet way I b*y« fnmid to protect the trunks of trees from sheep, etc., is to cut bass-wood when it will peel freely, and cut the bark in strips long and wide enough to go around the tree. It will curl round in drying and be a sure protection. -- Cor. Country Gentleman. SCREENS--D^r. E. Moody said at the Roche sttM," horticultural meeting that he found screens of trees of much value to , some of his plantations. In his garden he gets abundant crops of the Franconia raspberry, except where there is an open­ ing in the screen which surrounded it. He has known peaches to be killed on the windward side of a screen and to escape on the other side. SHEEP AS FERTILIZERS.--Springel al­ lowed that the manure of 1,400 sheep for one day is equal to manuring highly one acre of land, which is about four sheep per year. Mechi, a still more re­ cent authority, estimates that 1,500 sheep, folded on an acre of land twenty- four hours, or 100 sheep for fifteen days, would manure the land sufficiently to carry it through four years' rotation.-- ' Semi-Tropical. HARNESS IN STABLES.--Harness should never be kept in the stable where ma- mire is constantly generating large quan­ tities of ammonia. This ammonia is rapidly absorbed by the leather, and the effect upon the leather is about the same as would result from saturating it with strong lye. In a word, ammonia rots leather, and hence keeping harness in the stable is sure to result in its dam­ age, more or less.--Exchange. WATERING GARDENS. --When the warm, sunny day s come, and our gardens look dry and parched, we are so strongly tempted to use the watering pot that we frequently * yield, and so injure the plants that we are striving to benefit. If we attempt to water our flower beds at all, we must do it thoroughly. Wait until after sun­ set, and then pour on water until it seems ready to run off. Let this soak into the ground and then water again. Finally, spread freshly-cut grass over the beds ; this covering will tend to keep the ground soft and moist. The usual method of sprinkling the flower beds slightly only tends to make the surface of the ground hard and dry, thus excluding air and moisture.--Globe-Democrat. MOTHERLESS YOUNG ANIMALS.--How to mother motherless young animals-- foal, calves, or lambs. Rub the palm of the hand full of gin on the nose and mouth of the dam; rub a little of the same bottle along the back of the young animal to be adopted, place them to- ' getlier and the relationship is complete. The advantage of this simple process will be complete to those who have to do with long-wool sheep, where, as is fre­ quently the case, a ewe leaves a pair of fine lambs, while probably another ewe loses her lambs, when exchange of ma­ ternal affection is r instantly brought about by the gin, to the saving and suc­ cessful raising of what otherwise would be two troublesome pets at best. When a ewe has three lamjos, and another ewe one, the disparity can be effectually rem­ edied in the same manner. REGULARITY IN FEEDING.--Nothing is more important than regularity in feed­ ing. : If the usual time be allowed to pass the animals become uneasy and worried, and every feeder knows a fret­ ting animal will not fatten. A supply of good, pure water is absolutely neces­ sary, and especially if dry food is used exclusively. Rock salt should be kept constantly in the feeding-troughs. Inju­ dicious feeding is generally followed by • scouring, and tiio nature and conditions of the secretions form infallible guides to the careful feeder. All cattle should be carded daily ; it is well known to the groom that nothing will BO improve the horse's condition, and in all animals it induces warmth and cleanliness, and promotes the healthy action of the skin. Very poor cattle will sometimes be found to be lousy, a remedy for which is a good wash with tobacco water. Ani­ mals of restless disposition do not thrive so well as those of quiet temper, and kind words and gentle actions on the part of the feeder will be well repaid in their peaceful contentment and certain improvement.--American Cultivator. Abont fhe Boose. HUCKLEBERRY BREAD.--One quart flour, one pint sour milk, one teaspoon- ful soda, one and a half pint berries; mix as stiff as biscuit dough. To CLEAN GOLOBED SILK.--Wash in warm soapsuds, rinse in cleat, warm water, dry quickly, and iron on the wrong side while yet rather damp. If there are grease spots on the silk, press with a tolerably warm iron undei: brown paper. IT is worth knowing that if one volume of castor oil be dissolved in two or three volumes of spirits of wine it will render paper transparent, and, the spirits rap­ idly evaporating, the paper in a few min­ utes becomes fit for use. A drawing in pencil or in India ink can thus be made, and if the paper is placed in spirits of wine the oil is dissolved out, restoring the paper to its original condition. SCALLOPED OYSTER-PLANT.--Boil oys­ ter-plant or salsify till very tender; drain off all the water and rub through a colander; add butter, pepper, salt, and milk, and mix well together. Put in a baking-dish, cover the top with bread-crumbs, with here and there small bits of butter. Bake a delicate brown. Celery-salt may be used for a flavor, but not quite as much as one would of com­ mon salt.--Christian Union. REMOVING TEA STAINS.--The stains will come out of buff linen ltinch cloth y being put in the boiler in a suds jnade two pailfuls of water, a teacnpful of soft soap, and a tablespoonful of the " Magical Mixture" for washing. Let these ingredients boil together five min­ utes ; then put the boiler on the comer of the range and put the cloth in, stir­ ring it around, bat not letting it boil. The color will not be injured in the least by this process, A HOME-MADB OAHPET.--An Eastern lady says: Have any of yon a spture bed-chamber, seldom used, which you would like to carpet at little expense ? Go to the paper-hanger's and select a paper looking as much like carpet as you can find. Having taken it home, first paper the floor of your bedroom with brown paper; then over this put down your wall-paper. A good way to do this will be to put a good coat of paste upon the width of the roll of paper and the length of fhe room, and then lay the paper, unrolling and smoothing at the same time. When the floor is all cov­ ered, then size and varnish, onlj\ dark glue and common furniture varish being used, and the floor will look all the bet­ ter for the darkening these will give it When it is dry, put down a few rugs by the bedside and toilet table, and you have as pretty a carpet as yon oonld wish. Death In Life. ' The other day I heard a Cabinet Min­ ister talking to a young chap who want­ ed a place. " My young friend," said he, "don't apply. Saw wood, drive cows, anything honorable, but preserve your independence. I have a man in my department who has been in forty years." " Forty years?" " Yes, every day of it. He came in in 1826. Well, he gets about the same salary he had to commence with. The other day he came to me, saying 'I ought to have died forty years ago.' 'You don't mean that,'I said. 'Yes,' said he, • I mean that. I have been buried in this building forty years, and I had just as well been buried in the grave. What's the difference between tombs ? Of what advantage have I been to myself in here ? I had nothing when I came in, and have got nothing now. I am disqualified for anything. If I was turned out to-day I would starve tomor­ row. ' So much for a Government posi­ tion that young men are so anxious to get. They had better let it alone."-- Cincinnati Commercial. The Wanderings of a Family Bible. Long years ago Ezra Osborn, of Long Hill, Springfield, departed this life, leav­ ing behind him the record of a Revolu­ tionary soldier and Mrs. Abigail Osborn, who ultimately sought the aid of a youthful lawyer, named Henry Morris, to get a pension for her. The law re­ quired proof that the widow of a soldier had been married to him before his ser­ vices expired, and in proof of this a small family Bible was forwarded to Washington in 1833 that the Pension Bureau might peruse its record of births, marriages and deaths. The pension was secured and the lawyer soon dropped the business. The other day Gen. Lee re­ ceived a letter from the bureau saying that an Osborn heir was wanted to which the Bible might be returned, and giving the name of the lawyer who sent it. Correspondence was exchanged, and the book was sent to Judge Morris, who drove down to Long Hill and gave it to Chester Osborn, a son of the veteran, 90 years and 6 months old, who gladly fur­ nished the Government with a receipt. Mr. Osborn is the oldest member of the First Baptist Church, and lively and ac­ tive still.--Boston Globe. Devoured by a Bear. A shocking story of devouring by a bear comes fa us from Fredericton J unc­ tion. An old man, named Thomas An­ derson, on Tuesday last, was chopping wood in Hardwood Ridge. Not return­ ing at the usual hour for dinner, the peo­ ple with when he boarded felt some anx­ iety for his safety, he being a very fee­ ble person. Night came, but with no tidings of the missing man. The follow­ ing day the settlement was alarmed, and a strict search instituted, revealing the fact that the old man had been devoured by a bear. Bear's footprints were found on the ground, which was bespattered with blood, and near the foot of a tree were found the boots of the unfortunate old man with part of tke legs in them. Not far from tnis was discovered a por­ tion of his head dreadfully mutilated. From the footprints, plain in soft soil, and the blood along the tracks, there is no doubt but the unfortunate man be­ came a prey to a bear.--St. John(N. B.) Freeman. Soltl Again. The benevolent old man looked out from the window of the car, and whistled to a newsboy. Three dashed in at the front door and four in the back. The benevolent old man bought a paper of the smallest boy. In making change the lad dropped two cents. He went down on his knees in an instant and soon found the money. However, he did not cease searching. Suppressed sobs were heard, while he dug his fingers in the holes of the mat The passengers became inter­ ested. " What's the matter, my boy ?" said the benevolent old man, lowering his glasses and peering over their rims. "I've gone and dropped a dime, an' I can't find it," whimpered the boy as he thrust his hand under the seat. " Dad *11 wallop me when I gets home." " Nev­ er mind, let it go," said the benevolent old man, " Here's another one." The boy took the coin meekly, and, as he passed the conductor remarked "sold again."--New York Sun. Effects of Tobacco on the System. Some years ago the French Govern­ ment directed the Academy of Medicine to inquire into the influence of tobacco 'on the human system. The report of the commission appointed by the Academy states that a large number of the diseases of the nervous system and of the heart, noticed in the cases of those affected with paralysis or insanity, were to be regarded as the sequence of ex­ cessive indulgence in the use of this ar­ ticle ; and it is remarked that tobacco seems primarily to act upon the organic nervous system, depressing the faculties and influencing the nutrition of the body, the circulation of the blood, and the number of red corpuscles in the blood. Attention is also called to the bad digestion, benumbed intelligence, and clouded memory of those who use tobacco to excess. POPULAR FALLACIES. Tin Xfoecmiltjr for Pare Air--How to Obtain It. (Pram Ball's Journal at Health.] Night air and dtutiB weather are held in great horror by multitiidea of persons who are sickly or of Ireak vgnstitutions; consequently, by avoiding the night air, and damp weather, and changeable weather, and weather that is considered too hot or too cold, they are kept within doors the much largest portion of their time, and, as a matter of course,continue invalids, more and more ripening for the grave every hour; the reason is, they are breathing an impure atmosphere nine- teen-twentieths of their whole existenoe. As nothing can wash us clean but pure water, so nothing can cleanse the blood, nothing can make health-giving blood, but the agency of pure air. So great is the tendency of the. blood to become im- {>ure in consequence of waste and use-ess matters mixing with it as it passes through the body, that it requires a hogshead of air every hour of our lives to unload it of these impurities; but, in proportion as this air is vitiated, in such proportion does it infallibly fail to re­ lieve the blood of these impurities, and impnw blood is the foundation of all disease. The great fact that those who are out of doors most, summer and win­ ter, day and night, rain or shine, have the best health the world over, does of itself falsify the general impression that night air or any other out-door air is un­ healthy as compared with in-door air at the same time. Air is the great necessity of life; so mnch so, that if deprived of it for a mo­ ment we perish; and so constant is the necessity of the blood for contact with the atmosphere that every drop in the body is exposed to the air through the medium of the lungs every two minutes and a half of our existence. Wlmtever may be the impurity of the out-door air of any locality, the in-door air of that locality is still more impure, because of the dust, and decaying and odoriferous matters which are found in all dwellings. Besides, how can in-door air be more healthy than the out-door air, other tilings being equal, when the dwelling is supplied with air from with­ out ? To this very general law there is one exception, which it is of the highest im- Eortance to note. When the days are ot, and the nights cool, there are pe­ riods of time within each twenty-four hours when it is safest to be in-doors, with doors and windows closed ; that is to say, for the hour «r two including sunrise and sunset, because about sun­ set the air cools, and the vapors which the heats of the day have caused to ascend far above us, condense and Bettle near the surface of the earth, so as to be breathed by the inhabitants; as the night grows colder, these vapors sink lower, and are within a foot or two of the earth, so they are not breathed. As the sun rises, these same vapors are warmed, and begin to ascend, to be breathed again, but as the air becomes warmer they are can i 3d so far above our heads as to be innocuous. Rhetoric and Statistics. "The day we celebrate." Let the toast go round. This the Sabbath day of liberty. Let the people all go up to the temple and worship. Bells will peal forth their merriest notes; flags will wave in every breeze around the world; bon­ fires will blaze; cannons roar; eloquence and song will contribute their share to the general rejoicings. Why not? A country whose farm products in one year reached the fabulous value of $2,447,- 588,658; slaughtered animals, $398.- 956,376 ; garden products, $20,000,000; orchard products, $47,000,000. For bread 287,750,000 bushels of wheat and 761,000,000 bushels of corn. The prod­ uct of oats reached 282,000,000 bushels, 3,000,000 bales of cotton, 100,000,000 pounds of wool, 27,316,000 tons of hay, 262,732.000 pounds of tobacco, 87,000 hogsheads of sugar, 22,000,000 gallons of sirup, and 143,337,473 bushels of po­ tatoes. Such are the sum totals fur­ nished by oensus reports of 1870. Miraculous Escape. A railroad incident occurred recently on one of the East India lines, which was startling as it was singular, and may be said to be one of the most miraculous escapes on record. A train was ap­ proaching a bridge on a ctm When the bridge came within sight, at a dis­ tance of 300 to 400 yards, the engine- driver was horror-struck to discover that it was completely in flames. Finding his brake power totally useless in the emergency, he jumped off, as did also the fireman, just as the train entered upon the buming bridge, over which it rushed, fortunately with unabated speed, through a continuous flame that rose furiously above the height of the rail­ road-cars. The wooden sleepers were on fire, and parts of the rails themselves were red-hot. The whole train, com­ posed of a number of cars, passed safely over, and not a passenger was injured or scorched. Strictly Confidential. " My folks are going to the country to be gone all summer!" enthusiastically exclaimed a little girl yesterday as she met another on Cass avenue. " Your pa must be awful rich," replied the second. " Oh, no, he isn't, but if you'll never tell anybody I'll tell you something." "I never will--hope to die if I do." " Well, then, pa was telling ma that we'd all go out to Uncle John's. Ma she'll work for her board, pa will work in the saw mill, I'll pick berries and ride horse to plow corn, brother Tom will go round with a lightning-rod man, and while you folks are in the awful heat we'll be putting on airs and fixing "over qur old clothes for falL Don't you tell, now, for ma is saying to everybody that she must have the country air to restore her shattered nerves."--Detroit Free Press. A New Way of Raising the Wind. Two gamblers were in Leavenworth, Elan., several years ago, With about $50 in their pockets. They desired to get money enough to go to California. They went to separate hotels. One registered as a physician, and advertised a remedy for cholera. The other put up a large quantity of yeast powders into sample packages, with a little croton oil in each, and hired a boy to distribute them. Soon family after familv, affected by the croton oil, felt what they believed were symptoms of cholera. The sale of the cholera remedy was enormous, and the gamblers were enabled to go to Califor­ nia. They now tell the story through the Virginia City Enterprise. Killed in his Side-Bed by Lightning. In the rain-storm of Thursday eve­ ning a bolt of lightning struck the house of Mr. Edgar L. Morrison, who keeps a gsorajrin a small two-story frame house in Douglass street, near Schenectady avenue, Brooklyn. Some of the family were just beginning their supper in a backroom on the first floor, while Mrs. Morrison, with a young friend of the family, was watching beside the sick-bed of her son, Benjamin F. Morrison, aged 26, a clerk, who had been confined to the little low room over an extension of the house with consumption in its final stages. His mother sat by the table a fe^r feet from the bed and a lighted lamp was beside her. The young man was speaking to the visitor when suddenly there came a sharp crack and the blaze of lightning was in the room. The bolt struck the tumble-down chimney in the center of the roof, just over the room where Benjamin Morrison lay, ran down the chimney, knocked out the tin cover­ ing which was plugged tiglihlv in the stovepipe hole,* burst throiigh the wall, carrying away the plaster on both aiues of the partition; jumped down to the baseboard, and ripped and splintered it. Another arm of it followed the chimney to the floor below, leaped to the table where four persons were at supper, turned over the dishes and blackened the food, and then passed away. It did not set fire to anything, but it scorched the lath* where the plas­ tering was torn off, and burned the base­ board. Mrs. Morrison was thrown from her seat in her son's bedroom against the wall, down which the lightning ran. The lamp was extinguished and over­ turned, and the hat of the young visitor was blown from her head. Mrs. Morrison says she was completely dazed at first, and thought that the roof had fallen. On relighting the lamp, she found that her son had been killed. She looked in vain, though, for any mark which the lightning had made. The body w.is not the least bit discolored, and he seemed to have fallen asleep. The lightning did not touch his bed, but rin along the baseboard by the side of it. The meal of those who were at the table was rendered unfit to eat. It smelled strongly of burned gunpowder. They felt an electric shock as the light­ ning flashed fcy, but beyond this they not disturbed.--New York Sun. Good MMMVC is the Watchword Of honest trade. Whentou boy DOOLKTV YKART POWDER, for BALE by all grown fectly full weight, juat *ud beside that an artiete made of the veiy best and purest mated*!, ao that th* strength own always be trusted, 1 grocers, you get per­ ks Marked on the cans, a w«»k In vonr own town. Term* star! 9 ftn. H. flALLKTT A CO., FortkW. nr. a*., rl WXOTHUI On Worn, CUM wWwijSaii. cat, rosex* * 14- THE name Cashmere Bouquet, as ap­ plied to Toilet Soaps and Perfumery, regis­ tered and patented as a trade-mark by Colgate & Co., New York. Purchasers, however, need ,rdly to be warned against infringements; the genuine article is BO universally esteemed as to have made the namen Cashmere Bouquet and Colgate & Co. nearly synonymous. A FEW years ago no one would have thought that more than a hundred hours' in­ struction in music oonld have been afforded fbr $ 15: vet this is i««t what more than 16,000 pupils have Becured at the New England Con­ servatory of Music, with its seventy-live emi­ nent Professors. Foil information may be se­ cured by addressing Dr. E. Tourjee, Boston. HATCH'S Universal Cough Syrup takes the lead of all cough remedies in our trade. We keep many others. None receive Midi general commendation. Our customers will be put off with nothing else. 'We warrant it in every ease. SAM 1, CBORS A Co.. Felt's Mills, N. Y. Sold by H. A. Hurlbut A Co., Chicago, 111. POND'S EXTRACT. --Large sums of money are spent hv the afflicted to find relief from iHles. The Extract is a oectain cure for Blind or Bleeding Piles. Hofmanu's Hop Pills cure the Ague al once. 16 to $20 •*» * •12 SKA* Address Qurtn Work*, Addreaa JAY OLVIEr FBEE! with bi>i Add tees J.Bown * Son, 186 A US Wood-.t ynr to A vent*. '•••'** For UTitie $5957 IF pdrcsg, J. Wuit5« ti C«., Si.L'Hixyi Mario hv !7 Aftrnts Ic Jan.frwME II»v l.Sii«<wurtl?ie«. Address JT. LinirngKm^ Cfttoqpfe ¥«t! «»ttl »«ree to distribute Ur*,ww»i Queen Victoria's Wealth. What Queen Victoria leaves behind her will never be known, because the wills of sovereigns are not proved, but those who have carefully considered the subject are of opinion that she must, since the Prince Consort's death, have saved at the very least £100,000 a year. Not only has she lived so quietly that a large proportion of her £385,000 a year public income must be saved, but it is to be remembered that Mr. Nield left her £500,000, which, at 4 per cent.., would give her £20,000 a year, and she receives £43,000 from her Duchy of" Lancaster. The crown lands, given up to the country in lieu of a parliamentary annual grant, have of late years been so ably and economically managed that their revenue covers the royal allow­ ance^,* and these crown lands were as much the property of the sovereign as the lands of the Duke of Devonshire, or any other landholder, are his. If the country choose to make the most of these lands by cutting up, say, the New Forest, and selling in lots, and adopting a similar plan with other outlying pos­ sessions or the crown, it would make money out of the royal family. The revemie of the Duchy of Cornwall has risen from £22,000 in 1824 to £75,000, and iucreases annually about £3,000, so that the next Prince ot Wales will prob­ ably be independent of a parliamentary grant. Queen Victoria is probably saving with a view of rendering her fam­ ily as independent as the wealth of the Duke de Penthivre rendered the house ©f Orleans, and made Louis Philippe, in consequence, the cheapest of French Kings.'-- Washington Capital. A Boy in Love. The following letter, from a boy to a woman nearly twice as old as he, was made public in a Virginia City (Nov.) court: 44 I want you to guess who this is from he who wrote this loves you from his very heart you know him very well bis name is D. A. A. If you guess who it is you touch him on-the back and he will bow to you he is a boy not a man, but if you are sure of it you can write me a letter I heard you say that I just suited your ideas and you just suit mine and if you will wait for me I will try to make you happy but if you say No you will make me uuhappy for life for I love you as hard as any boy ever loved a girl, you may be older than me but I love you all the same dont show this to any one for god sake." The War Against Dlsettae. The war waged against disease by Hostetter'a Stomach Bitters goes bravely on. Dispatches A AS constantly received from the cured indicat­ ing the decisive nature of tho advantages ob­ tained by tho great botanic,cordial over its for­ midable "adversary. Malarial fevers, constipa­ tion, torpidity of "the liver and kidneys, general debility, nervousness and rheumatio ailments invariably yield to this conqueror and prevent­ ive of disease. For the infirmities incident to the decline of life it is also an excellent specific. It hastens convalescence and repairs the rav­ ages of ill-health by facilitating the conversion of food into blood of a rich and nourishing quality. The appetite is improved by it. ana, in cases of nervous disease, it tranquilizer that great aeusorium, the brain, far more effectually uiau any mineral sedative. WIIIHOFT'S FEVER AND AGUE TONIC. -- This medicine is used by construction compa­ nies for the benefit of their employes, when en­ gaged in malarial districts. The highest testi­ monials have been given by contractor* and bv the Presidents of some of the loading railroads in the South and West. When men are congre­ gated in large numbers in the neighborhood ol swamps ana rivers, W'ilhott's Tonic will prove a valuable addition to the stock of medicines, and will amply reward the company in the sav­ ing of time, labor and money. We recommend if to all. G. P.. FINLAY & Co., Proprietors, New Orleans. FOB H*XE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. THIRTY years' experience proves the Graefeuberg Vegetable Pills to be the mildest and most effective medicine ever known for the complete cure of head&ohe, biliousness, liver complaints, nervousness, fevers, and diseases of digestion. Bold everywhere; price 25 cents per box. Send for almanacs. Graefeiiberg Co., New York. CLUBBING AGENTS. Send for our NBW &ASS8 and Terms to Agents. Superior Inducements Offered. THB iiEirw^Ein, ChioasoF XLL* Ui TBB NITED STATE S 1MSU RANGE COSAPJUIY, IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, 261, 262, 263 Broadway. ;--•--0B6ANIZE1 18&0-*- ASSETS, $4,827,176.52 SURPLUS, $820,000 EVERY APPROVED FORM OF POLICY ISSUED ON MOST FAVORABLE TERMS Ml ENDOWMENT POLICIES AND APPROVED C£AXMS MATURING IN 1877 WILL BE AT 7i OX r K ES EXT A Tl O X. JAMBS BUELL, U PRBSIDBNT. THEI HARNESS." An mid* in all otylM MM uf f--cr? driniptlon. from the Itchiest, flnent and moat elccnuit in aw* to th« heaviest »nii itroiiRiht requirM for any kind of work; are uil- | equaled In style. VVllVllllU I workntiuiahltt, «f rniKtIs and durability. They meeWe<t the litffh* est written n.>vard at the Centennial Expooitton. None Kemiltie an!«M they are •tnmpi il vriti: our name >tul .Warfc. A Ul>«r*l he tlven for infor- EL WV motion that will convict any one who MI lit* hn.m I«IW nx the Cotifnnl Ilar- nc.IK tliIKT tire not iimite Ity «•». KXU-H indue* taeof pflttpd. Send (or oiroular* Mkd p.-tae-Uutfc ( J. R. HILL & CO., coNroitn. N. H ORouraarente, Mem*. C. P. KIMBALL A CO., KM. 870 sad 878 ffrtwh aranue. Chicago. _____ t e a r a i v 8 e n < 1 » C H R O M O I f f o » u r Agent* wanted. KjMnfot. j Co., Boetoa. MMSL I A DAY KmE anuttlv1 S. Agents selling our Cf>ynnK^Pictnrynd CkM worth «at. Catalogue oMtoa. .1. H. [Established 1830.] frr«- $10 S $1 000 * W's *«»: TELEGRAPH Railroad Md . BnsfaMSS tMCkfc. nation* Small salary paid while la«minf . Artdrew, Iwiiwdirt^,, WESTERS SCHOOL or TEUOBAPBI» Rsglswotfa.il*. N. I'. lil-ICMIAM'S * WAT 3ES 3E*. - TUT" X* X3 3EJ 1» declared the "STANUAKIl Tl ItHI by over (tdO perwin* who use it. I'rii'f- rs*dj N«n psmphtot, free -v. ft £ $100-00 Hi SIKAVV HL.aIU v.aft W17 the re of mkl£ BEAKU Kl.iXl > . UTT, o: will forfeit £100.'"*'. Prio bfm!., i* jdwltitt't rent* ; fetf* *n\f : A- SMITH •; <sO . > n atin«s It»., IPflrWr •%*>*!«•>« »h* nuS: TRUTH IB MIUTT! «f mr htm kwfcwei «r fM( M«t, ItBM Ml ffiUlm iM AM km. !W. MABTtKKB. 4 IWm* |l„ K«IM, Man. fUiitMlMMf I AWNINGS, TENTS, Waterproof Coven* IMnrk Covers. Skew* Window xhnricM. Arc.. Ac. MOtKAY BAKER. lOO Sonth l»e*plnfn*>H k(.. Chiua«s%*Jf . 5T" Send for llliiNtrnted I*rlo<»-l«ist. EtXECTir n .HEOU'AL INNTIT! TK*. K» OHARTI:I!KI> 184&.-6J63 STUM:ST«. '0;>lI'N'S *ll;illi At' <5 AND SCHOOL OF MIDWIFERY, Gives extra fiioili'.ies ft»r* thorough in«fica led to both men ami women, by aura.i-i cviarwJ collie without of office instruction. l'\>r tail matiun address JOHN M. S(X'»DK8, M. D-.Cine: is not easily e,irne>i in the but it can I HI ivn<1t» in throw by any one, 01' either sex. &rt of the country, who $777 O B I t h a t w e f u r n i s h . j ' ^ r your own t. wn. Yon need . awny fvom home over nljtht. Yr,u can «svp yojr time to Mm work, or only -yo;tr snarw moments. Wi •cents who are makit-K o»or SKO per duy at neM. All who engage at once con make iitiitwj m the present tiiiM* iv> ney cannot bo made rapidly lit nr.y other business. It costs n >thl»gr W Imsiniiwe. Terms and Outfit frtw. AddraMyOt H. UA IXK'FT A CO.. R.-nSioi.l, M»ina SWEET NAVY CHEWIN8 TOM was awanlod the blithest twin) at Centennial Ei| for its tine chewin* unalittea. the Modhnoiia character ot itn swwtcninn «nii flavoring. K JW the best tobacco ever made, ask your srnKwrlw •cc thnt oach plux I tears our blue-wtrip t(*d»1 words Jackson's Best on it. Solu uit<>l*MM bers. Send for sample to C'« A.JAt'KSON lliRUutuciurerst l'twrsbsrg, Vs. . , BABBITT'S TOILET SOAP.' . ,1'nrtTalM fhr ttlil dsletarlMa •sti. Afltt inttSesnaAM WBUPnww jr. MW< •Smp kas two im.W*RIVER'S HEALTH CORSET. with Skirt HnpiKirtfr ajid ferlf-AdJnstiiig Pads. deonrrR HEALTH un<l cnMPOitTOf Bodv, with GUACK aiwl lijutrrrof Form. Th, »>e Onrnicnh in one. Approved bv al! • iivnu'iunR. A « K N T » W t N T K D . Sam pies ity mall, in Coutll, f2; Sat:evii, *1 76. To Agents at 25 cents leas Order fuse two inches smaller ttmu waist mea­ sure over the dre«B. Warner Bros. 351 Broadway,N.T. H U N T ' S a £ M^ D v ^ N . T H E C R E A T T I \ L J N e y m e d i C i . N L :as s assmcay -.,y Trgnssasob prcsiiy for the above discare*. It has • " • - Send to W. Iprepared .v. .»»*: cured thousands. Every bottle warranted. Hei E. Clarke, Providence, R.I., for illustrated pamphlet. If your druggirt don't have it, he will order It for you. is I i A3-Cent Pocket-Book! Any agent or oanTasser, or any |*naon who has avst aiiivat*«l or acted »» sidasmnn. or any idle person out of ainploymont, or tiny pn.-wn wwkint; n chance to earn as honorable living, can luivo »enl to them a substantial, serviceable! pocket-book by simply sending a three-eonl jxjstBiie stAmp to the umle*-- ^..ed. Th® pocket-book ountaitm two »id«« subdivided i*it.< repositories for bills, mems., silver, postage-stamp" and cards. 8end a 3-cent •tntm> iind the pocket-liook will be mailed immediately by return maiL Address GF-O. V. MERCHANT & OO.. IIS Monroe Street. Chicago. Ill- -- Maize Flour Toilet Soap!-* -- Maize Hour ToSlet Soap!- -- Mali© Flour Toilet Soap! -- A *T9si discovery f--a new soap oompound! It soothes, softens aad whitens the skin, has wonderf ul healing and cupb-ior washing properties, and is equally stilted for th* bath, nursery and general toilet. It ia delightfully per­ fumed, and sold everywhere at s moderate price. Regie- tawd in Pitfent. Ottoe. 107ti, by the manufactureH<, McKKONR, VAli HAAOElf A CO.. Philadelphia $1.00 $1.00 Osgood's Heliotype Engravings. The mhoieest houtehoM ornament a. Prios One Dollnr each. Send for valaloffue, JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO. BOSTON. MASS. $1.00 $1.00 UNHAM D PIANOS. Dunham & Sons, Manufacturers. Ware room M, IS Ernst 14th St.i I E s t a b l i s h e d 1 8 3 4 . ] NEW YORK, t Price® Reasonable. Terms Eaay.-flft LAD1IS Elegaat la- itatioa BOSS COBAL SET, Brsistpia ui Pesdtat Drsps, Snt Postpoil to uy Beader of this Paper for 85 eat: Three S»ti fbr 50 cnts. In Currency or Stamp). L. A. THOMSON, ClintonPliie«. JtowTort public The rnnCST TfllUT tbv WuM," Omht ti< nns wplaNi mU «mi is «la a>m/«hw. Wort^Uti Sample boi, pootalnlng 3 cake* of t os>. sacb, ml A«.*s «n receipt of IS conU. Addrtst 5,; .«e- !-i 0^ ' Hi ; >1 ,»H 'IK | ii'llCiAfe A IlwiiMrholti IVIik.Nt TnrraiK'* Si within reach luii an important ant of neailit iind lite. A feiv doses of ttiis «t;>nd.iinlj for indiasv'tion. constlpition nnd Iniionsr.ess. evor.v <!im reseia* «^*»i>tom and prevent danjrerona se<iuei;r(vi For sale by the entire drug trade. THE , €000 OLD l'«f| iitu-j kit Jt STAMD-OY.^ ?': -tiV' a • l: )*£ ' MEXICO MUSTA yiiiPTL. FOR MAM AMP BBAIT. - SNABUABKD35¥EAM. ALWIFSEOM Wdy. Always handy . Has never yet failed. million* htn« letted it. The whole world the glorious old Mustarig--the Best and Uniment In existence. 2& cents a bottle. Mtaitang IJniment cures when nothing else wiil, BY ALL MKDIOINE VKWPKifc NATU RETS REMEDY. vmm THE TUAR Btooo A BOURCE OP GREAT ANXIElTi. BO«TOH, MAU., Jatne^ar m 4 Mv daughter lias nxalfed great beaeflt from of VEOETINE. Her declining health was • mns eBT' great unxi<9ty to all of her friends. A few bottles ef MHR:, VEOKTIKR restored her health, strencth andjupeMa. r " s W. H. TILDBN. .4 ?. *• •• S Insurance and Real Estate AaMllP ' Ho. 49 Bears Boildtng- ., s( Vegetine is Sold by all Druggists. TI1E SUN. 1877, NEW YORK. 1877- • TBS Sim oontlnuea to be the strenuons sd.-ooateeE^ reform and retrenohmeat. and of the^snbeUeiUoeeWtt , »*|Sr; •ttttorimanshi!>, wisdom and integrity for boLew imbecUito aad fraud in the ftduiinirtratiop ol eft'oii*. It contends tor the jcovttr.imeut ol the poops a." II1onivonnqaann--The BSBI IV Keep's Patent Partly-Made Ureas Shirt* i ?an t»> dnuthfd as as hemming a ffintllleillhiel The wrj- l>ef,t. Mi f. r #7-OO. Keep's Oustoro Shirts--made to measure. The very best, »lx for An elegant set of freiiutne GoJd-Plate Oollar and Sleeve Buttons (riven with each half dos. Keep's Bhirta Keep's Shirts are delivered FKBK on receipt of prtoe In an; part of the Union--no express charge* to pay. SaaiNM, with full directions for eelf-meaeoremenk 8ent Free to any address. No stump required. Deal directly with the Manufacturer and get BOMOB Prices. Keep Manufacturing Co., Itia Meroer SU.K.T. me people and tor the people, ao oj.'.xfcwM ro gonni by' fraaas in the tallot-boE ana in the counting of ^ enforced by military violence. It endeavora to nnrai »<- "^4^1 readers--a body now not far from a miUion of sonw--wwm ; the most careful, complete and e.roatwortliy accuunweC current event«, and employs for this pun"1®? a --#.1 . and carefully selected staff of reporten ana wmyge . . etita. It« report® from Waehington, aapeciti'y.arw ~ . accurate ana fearless; and it donbuaes oootinuea servo nnd enjoy the hatred of tix»e who thriv«»JW' • doting tlie Treasury or by uiurping what tte-law<ao**e* * give them, while it endeavors to raocit th. confidence*; tho public by defending the rights ot the people acain^a ; the encroachments of unjust ined |>ower. The price of the Daily SUN is »a centa s r-wnttl.e^1 a year, postpaid; or, with the bund&y oaiHa^,. The Sunday edition alone, eight pagea. $jtl«£Qka yeaa^ . postpaid. . . M. , TUN WEEHII SCK, eight pages of 86 bcoad I is fumiahed at SI a yor,postpaid. S FXOIAI. None*.--In order to latradam * more widely to the public, we will aend IH1 edition for the remainder of tte yeaft to tte I.MI postpaid, for Half a Dollar. Tryi*. Addrens THE 8CN. N. Y. VlKfW O.V. u. \irHEI* WIUTIHO TO AD1TB&' TTpltaie isy/MMW' I* (hi* paper*

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