McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jan 1883, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

-v >/ - * ••irv^> "v, w >* ;•/•;" ,"* < f -> \ /% 4«**^'^*'"*v* "*3 j-Si J<,^<'*'€rl-****josyui «J» . »* >' ** |p* 4* • y ! ' "***"* ^ f'^ '*- C ."" •'; "• 3 ' " - -f r ~' » *•«**- ^W»«^ „^i **• * A, ^4 , .'«*.(* J* ' p-; " - \ ,.,-V •.',' \;..v'-^pP ' vr k Vftrj;,...!-!.,.^-...^ :a». ^v»-,,-> ,^. ,-.• v(vr^w :,\ - ;./ » '*& * * -L ,«jft t * *i . .' t.„ **W. „ ..•»• "J -.'••»<' i-.. ""SECT'S." 3SJ. , f * w . '.. . . . *'. »« ,^«lt!,»Ai«rf M AsnniiMiaasoK, wrord^aoohillr. K - r I OPTO *peii pr • f»r take And IxctirymoM and qmdmnini texm- .', lactiferous and cecity, jfejuo* and bomcaopathy, - FaralyBte •nd«Wo*oform, M^hlaecemi ud pwiliydenn, - - Ketempayelkofti*, gbertdns, bani? - In certainly no easy task. tsfCaieidoaoope aad Tennessee, * --*f > 'fboatwhttu and dispensary, • •* - . JDiphthong and erysipelas "") "And etiquette and wuwafms, ' >• « Infallible and pfyalism, %.* • " Allopathy and rheumatism, ,aid cataclysm and beleaguer, *4. ^welfth, ei^litoentb, rendezvous, And hosts of other words are found. On JiuKltah and on classic ground; », BchrinK's Strait and Mi<" ipylse, Cordilleras, it hemorrhage, jalap and Havana, ,a«fotl and ipoca oanha, hit a<f Rappahannock, Shenandoah, a«I Sc&uykill and a thousand mora,' ^ Arc -words that some good gpellexa mia| in dictionary lands like this; Nor need one think himself a i it some at thaae bin efforts foil. ehriTBM^ %»v . > • •• -'-'A RECEIPT IN FULL : The tins had all been scoured until A could see her face, or grotesque rieaturee of her face, in each and yfbvery one of them; the window-panes lislied Tintil they sparkled like bright uno stmshine; the silver burnished un- »..,._ii neither sj>ot nor speck marred its Jnild luster; the loves of bread baked pntil each crispy crust took on the right shade of tempting brown; and Molly Vas scrubbing the only unscrubbed cor- " er of the kitchen, when Miss earner­ 's deep, harsh, precise voice came to er from the dining-room: "Mary, are oil not through yet?" Almost, ma'raa," answered Molly. I "I think it is high time you were 4 jjuite," declared the voice. "You must • linake haste. We are going to the lec­ ture this evening, Miss Georgette and I; and, as Mr. Malcom also wishes to go out, we shall be obliged to lock up the house. Therefore, it is necessary that yon should leave as soon as possible." "Yes, ma'am," said Molly, meekly, and finished her scrubbing, with her tears falling fast and thick. Poor little girl! ihe had tried so hard to please her mis- ess--for Miss Georgette was but a re­ flection of her elder sister--and her ef­ forts had been met with grim silence that betokened a begrudged satisfac- >tion, until the last few weeks; that is, in fact, until Mr. George Malcom came ere. Mr. Malcom was a sort of step- other to the Misses Cameron (his Cither, a widower with two boys, had married their mother, a widow with two iris), and they inheriting nothing in he way of property from their own ther, he generously made them an al- owance from the moderate fortune left im by his. Generously and forgiving- --for they had not rendered a tithe of e respect, to say nothing of the affec- i:* ^tion, which was his due, to their iiulul- .v?%S^'%ent and kind-hearted step-father, ; choosing to look upon their mothers's " feecond marriage as an insult to the ^memory of the parent whose not-at-all- amiable characteristics had been his only legacy to them. The cottage in which they lived, situ­ ated in the prettiest part of* Meadow- Ville (the furniture there l>eing their, own, the bequest of a maternal grand- other), belonged to Mr. George; and ere he had come in search of solitude l|jKua quiet, for the first tinie in twelve Vears or more, to spend a month or two In thinking out and arranging plans for Starting a large business in a neighbor­ ing city. And, as I have already in- timated, things had changed much for the worse with Molly, the servant-maid, * (since his arrival. The grim silence had given place to most open fault-finding V'hen Mr. Malcom was not within hear­ ing. The ooffee was too strong, the tea too weak, the chickens underdone, the teaks burned, the eggs boiled too hard, i >;|;he rooms badly swept, the shirts poorly roned; and all . these complaints, with tnany more, the elder spinster, confirm­ ed by the younger, gave her to under­ stand, originated with the guest. "What a hard man to please he must be!" Molly said to herself many times. "And yet he has one of the handsomest, kindest faces I ever saw; and he spoke right pleasantly to me the first day he came, and even offered me his hand "* ow Miss Cameron blushed); but I pretended not to see it, for I knew it was my place to shako hands with him. It is strange he should have become so fractions. He was so good, and merry, and kind when I was a little girl; I'd often heard father say he'd rather shoe a horse for him than any one else in the village." And then she would fall to thinking ,J»ow grand he looked to her childish vigByes when he came riding up on his bay tere smithy, where she spent Ijnilf her time watching her father at the "!M>*§f|orge. And he always brought her a t /|>ay picture book, or a pretty ribbon, or . box of candies, -or a bright, new silver ..^gjiece--one Christmas it was a gold one f -and claimed a kiss (good gracious, ow her cheeks finslied at the remem- rance!) for payment when he rode • . #way again. How happy, how very "• : frftPPy» she had been then, with that .• flear father and dear old Aunt Nanny! • s--so happy tlmt she had scarcely ever -» ,felt the loss of the mother who had died ."•in giving her birth.. But when Molly 4 ,»7'as 15' the blacksmith, so,, strong and '%au$|jfuddy that it seemed impossible pain or afickness could ever come near him, fell v#iok, and, after lingering, sorely crip- •*>:A!|>led for nearly two years, died, leaving r apothing to his darling but hard work, i. |^i|fes, there was one alternative--to be- ' jfioineMre. Jake Williams, and mistress .* &>f the forge again; but Jake was a v -trough, vulgar fellow, and Molly, inher­ iting the delicate tastes and gentle ways •t^Qof her mother, who had been a shy, , , |>retty young governess before she mar- ;*$#icd the handsome blacksmith, shrank t *|^roni the loud voice and rude laughter *#f her wonld-l»e husband. And so, in Inference to accepting Jake's offer, she / Ipecame--Heaven knows this was a hard ^ Enough thing to be--maid-of-all-work *" the cottage of the Misses Cameron. t*oor little Molly! prettier thau many a ^ ^ tjrinoess, witli lovely, black-fringed gray .' '^yes, and hair of the very darkest 0 nrown--hair that would curl in spite of to Miss Cameron's great displeas­ ure. "If I had such untidy hair," that #*» |ady would often declare, glancing ap- 4><^>rovingly into the mirror . at the flat yed bauds that made a triangle of her igh, narrow forehead, "I'd shave my eadand "We'd certainly shave our ead," would echo Miss Georgette. The kitchen floor finished, the rugs ( sfiftiaken and returned to their places, the ? pread put away in the big stone jar in VJhe cupboard, Molly sought her own piij-oom (which, to tell the truth, was no foom at all, but a corner of the garret dely partitioned off, with only a sky- admit light and air--there were empty, unused rooms, in the J^ttic, but "they were much too good for servant," Miss Cameron said; and r:> twiu lib Judely p light to ifrooms, ( "very much too good for a servant," agreed her sister,), to make ready for her fitting. Molly looked around it as •he tied her straw hat over her rebel­ lious tresses, and again the tears filled her eyes. It had been a place of rest and a shelter, and she had been glad to have it, fearing to leave it lest worse l^ick lay beyond. And she would not have been com­ pelled to leave it had it not been for that unfortunates mirror, and the un­ ceasing oomplaints of the old bache­ lor. Why, he could not be so very old, after all, for he was only one and twen­ ty, and she between 5 and 6 when he gave her ribbons and books and silver pieces, and she gave him kisses. But ^ the sound of closing shutters broke in on her reverie, and reminded her that her departure was waited for, pnd, taking her bundle in her hand, she ran quickly and* lightly down stairs to the parlor, where the maiden ladies sat erect and stern, their bonnets already in readiness for the lecture. ^ "I'm going now," said Molly, stand­ ing in the doorway, her sweet, pathetic face, with its pleasing gray eyes and quivering lips in no way, touclxing what her mistresses were pleased to call their hearts. "Good-by, ma'am. Good- bv, Miss Georgette." But the only reply was: "Bear in mind that you are still indebted to us eight and twenty dollars. If, however, yon should prefer to purchase a mirror yourself, in place of the one broken by you, we will consent to receive it, pro­ viding it is in every way as good as the one left us by our grandmother. And in that case we will agree to refund the S8 for last month's wages, which we have retained as the first installment of your debt, which is really much more than you could have expected of us." "Oh, yes, indeed; very much more than could have been expected of us," murmered Miss Georgette. "For such gross carelessness--" Miss Cameron went on. "Indeed, ma'am," interrupted Molly, her cheeks flaming and her eyes spark­ ling. "as I told you I never touched it; I wasn't near it. I was sweeping the other side of the parlor when it fell, and the cord it hung by was all moth- eaten, and had broken just in the mid­ dle, as I showed you at the time." "You should be punished," continued Miss Cameron, not paying the slightest attention to the girl. " "And one word more. Please remember that we have your signature to an acknowledgment that you consider yourself responsible for the breakage." "You frightened me so that I scarcely knew what I was signing," said Molly. "But as I promised, I will pay you, for it shall never be said that my "father's daughter broke her word. I'd give you the few dollars I have saved if I had not to keep them for nly own support until I get another place. Poor Aunt Nanny can only give me shelter, for, as you know, she has depended entirely on me for food and clothes since my father died." "Yes, and a very .ridiculous thing for both of you," snapped Miss Cameron. "She had much better sell the lmt she lives in for kindling wood, and go to the poor-house, and you might much better save your wages to pay for things you break. For break ^ou will to the end of you days. I never saw a person with such fly-away hair as yours tliat was not vain, oareleaa and frivolous. You may go." "Yes, indeed; you may go," added Miss Georgette. And the poor child went out in the road, homeless and almost friendless, with a shadow on her fair young face and a pain in her young heart. But she had only turned into the lane that led to old Nanny's cottage when some one came quickly to her side, and said in a kindly voice, "Molly, poor little Molly!" and thero was Mr. Malcolm. And Molly, in her grief, thinking only of him as a friend of her childhood, who had known "Her as the darling of the kindest of fathers, flung her bundle down, and burst into a passionate flood of tears. "They were hard on me, your sisters, Mr. Malcolm," she sobbed, "very hard on me. I did hiy,l>et;t for them. I work­ ed--and I au> not very strong, though I am a blacksmith's daughter--from morn­ ing till night, and yet I could not please them. And it was not my fault about the mirror. It was not--it was not--it was not. Though Miss Cameron insists that I stopped sweeping to look at my curly hair--I can't help its curling; I did everything to make it straight; I tied it back so tight, over and over again, that my head ached awful--and knocked it with a broom. She was a little better before you came; but after you came, and complained BO much about the tea and coffee, and your shirts, and--and everything--" "I complain ?" exclaimed her listener, breaking in upon her rather confused narration of her wrongs. "Why, I never complained of anything. How could I ? There was nothing to com­ plain of." "She said you did. But I beg your pardon, sir," suddenly remembering the difference between candy-and-kisses time and the present. She is your sister, and--my troubles are nothing to you." "She is my sister an extremely long step off," he replied, gravely; "and your troubles are a great deal to me; and, furthermore, I see a way--a pleasant way--out of them. Let me walk with you to your Aunt Nanny's, and there, with her to advise us, we will talk the matter over." "Oh, it is such a poor place, Mr. Mal- oolm. Miss Cameron called it a hut, and said it was only tit for kindling wood." ".I've been in much poorer places, Molly," said he, and, picking up her bundle, he walked by her side to the old woman's cottage. ^ Two weeks passed by. A poor drudge from the workhouse, whose chief (in fact, whose sole) recommendation was "no wages," had taken Molly's place in the Misses Cameron's kitchen. M^r. Malcom had gone away on business directly after her oomiug, and on the evening appointed for his return the two sisters, attired in dresses of dull gray, unrelieved by a single touch of color, sat (everything in the house being in a heart-chilling, dreadful stony order), one at each parlor window, awaiting his arrival. "Ho must be coming; I think I hear wheels," said the elder, in her usual precise tones. "Wheels," repeated her sister. And "wheels" they were, but not the wheels of a carriage, but those oi a truck, on which lay a long, wooden box, stop­ ped before the cottage door. "A mirror for Miss Cameron," the driver called out, as he jumped down. "A mirror!" repeated the spinster, tunable to restrain a gesture of surprise. And "a mirror 1" said Miss Georgette, with another gesture of surprise. "Yes, ma'am; from Willard's, New York. Where is it to be taken ?" "First unpack it out here," -com­ manded the lady, recovering her self- possession. "I can't have the house littered up with splinters and shav­ ings." " No, indeed P chimed in Miss Geor­ gette, also recovering ner self-posses­ sion. "Splinters and shavings 1" So the box was nnpacked at the roadside, and the mirror taken from it proved to be better and handsomer in every respect than that it had been sent to replace. "I've brought wire to hang it with," said the man, as he carried it into the OH. N« Post-iNqwfc) leHafL fit. JSutftl Prof. Tioe.--SL Lomi* IK the Time*, of Philadelphia, we ob­ serve: Mr. John McGtnth, 1236 Christian street, was cured by St. Jacobs Oil of se­ vere xheamati6m. .,,, Prof. does not believe that forests prodaoe rain. Prof. J. D. Whit- i ney, of Harvard College, has studied data on this point covering prehistoric ; and histarie linWm, and the Old and New 1 Worlds, and he, too, pronounces strong- ; ly against the popular idea that the | desiccation of the earth's surface, which ! is certainly going on and has altered ! the destinies of races and nations, is due : in any way to disforesting the earth's | surface. Be this as it may, the work of .forests in catching and conducting to house; "so there'll be no danger from | the soil the rain that does fall, and in moths this time." ' ! affecting the currents of wind that dis- "Motlis!" said Miss Cameron, glar- ! tribute moisture must be great. But ing at him. And "moths!" echoed her below the climatic argument is the sister, also glaring. And they both j more immediate matter of the preser- continued to glare, as though called ; vation of the trees, which are on the upon to superintend a piece of work ! whole the most valuable natural product highly ^ repugnant to their feelings, j we have. until the mirror was hung, and the ' driver again in his place on the truck. "Of course Georgo sent it," said Miss Cameron, when the man had driven away. "But Mary Brown must pay for the other all the same. Our having this makes no difference in regard to the agreement with her." "No difference in regard to the agreement with her," assented Miss Georgette--when who should walk in, in a gray silk walking dress, a bunch of crimson flowers at her throat, and another one in her belt, and the most coquettish hat, adorned with more crimson flowers, but Molly herself. "Good evening," she said, smilingly. "•I have called for a receipt in full." "A receipt in full! And for what, pray? Have you brought the money?" asked her whilom mistress. And, "Have yon brought the money?" echoed her other whilom mistress. "No, I have not brought the money," answered Molly; "but I have sent you a mirror that more than answers your requirements." "You!" from both sisters at once. And again, for the second time in one short hour, they were guilty of being surprised and letting their surprise be seen. "Yes, I have the bill with me. A re­ ceipt in full, if you please." Miss Cameron arose, walked in a state­ ly manner--Molly following her--to her desk in the dining-room, seated herself, took pen, ink and paper, and began: "Received of Molly B " when-- "Stop a moment," said Molly; name is no longer Mary Brown." "And what may it be?" said Miss Cameron, regarding her with lofty con­ tempt. "I'll answer that question," said Mr. Malcolm, suddenly appearing, and passing his arm around the slender gray silk waist, thereby crashing the bunch of roses in the natty belt-- "Mrs. George Malcolm." The pen fell from Miss Cameron's hand and, for the first time in her life that estimable went into hysterics, whither her equally estimable sister immediately followed her. And Mollie, taking her leave at that moment, never received any receipt, in full ©^otherwise, after all. my : Women. Draggfate. "'I was born in the same y&tT tritli Thurlow Weed, and have been in the drug business more than sixty years, and I never knew a woman who could put up a prescription," said David Quackenbush, the veteran druggist of Greenwich street, New York city. "I see no reason why women should not learn the drug business. Sdme of the medicines are rather repulsive, but there is no real obstacle in the way of the education of female druggists." Thousand* of Letters. The proprietors of that splendid strength- ener. Dr. Quysott's Yellow I)ock and Sarsa- parilla, have' received thousands of letters praising their medicine. From the testi­ mony of many ladies, the fact in proven that as a female medicine it excels all others. It never fails to relieve that sense of hearing down, that feeling of gre&t bodily exhaus­ tion. that depressed and gloomy state of mind incidental to dysmenorrhea. Ask your druggist to get it for you. What Malaria Is* There are some questions wliich the scientific mind isjcontinually grappling after, but which jompfiow-•-sever reaches. One of these questions re­ sembles the Irishman's flea, which, when you put your finger upon it, "isn't there." Such a question is, What causes Ma­ laria? The malarial mysterv is one which has long troubled the scientific mind. The very best authorities are not agreed as to the question of its pre­ cise origin. Scientists on both sides of the Atlantic generally concur in the opinion that it germinates or sprouts in the human body from very minute spores, numbering "perhaps *3.000 to an inch. But how these seeds* are transported, or what the conditi^p of receptivity and susceptibility under which they are developed, no­ body can yet tell. There is evidence that sporadic cases occur in dry, up­ land regions, but the disorder* loves marshes, clings to artificial lakes or ponds, riots by the banks of sunken streams, and works it burning and shiv­ ering damage most malignantly where the normal mutual relations between soil, vegetable matter and stagnant or moving water have been unsettled. This disease is frequently engendered in newly broken prairie, with the grass turned under to decay,in damp places obscured from the sun by high weeds or thick shade, decaying vegetable mat­ ter, and in animal deposits, about yards, stable lots, fence corners, or the rich soil, probably manured annually on lawns. In some parts of the country malaria is making tho most alarming encroachments on the public health. A startling picture of its growth in portions of New England is given in a recent number of the Con- gregationalist, in which Bishop Hunt­ ington says of its manifest growth ••here : Natives of Western and Central Mas­ sachusetts, who have been sent out* to do their work in less lovely regions, have been surprised, on coming back for rest during the last half-dozen years or more, to find their old neighbors shaking with fever and ague, and a general alarm creeping with the mala­ dy not only along the water course, but, to some extent, up the sides of the hills. The presence of the mischief is undeniable. Laboring-men, mechanics, shop-keepers, broom-makers, as well as farmers are disabled about half of their time. Hard-working women, needing every ounce of their strength and every hour of the week are prostrated. Children are interrupted at school, and become objects of anxious care at home. The household economy is sorely strained. Spirits are depressed. The "task of life" is fearfully aggravated. In some instances important branches of industry are embarrassed, enter­ prises are checked, business engage­ ments are broken, temper and patience are tried. The moral atmosphere is disturbed with the physical. Of course, those families suffer * most where the out-of-door exposure by day or night, is greatest, and where health is less firm. But even good constitutions are weakened, and the doors and windows of the body are thrown open Jto all sorts of interlopers, marauders, and despoil- ers. This is a startling picture of the rav­ ages of this disease. Medical science shouul set its wits to work and throw more light on a subject wliich so sadly needs it. There are still many ques­ tions as to the ignorance of which mod­ el medical scientists can be arraigned with as bitter and caustic words as those in which Gail Hamilton showed its lack of knowledge a year ago. Let the malarial mystery be solved.--Des Moines Regiater. The Brain-Food of Tale Boys. One New Haven firm sells 120,000 cigarettes a month to Yale College stu­ dents, or, for the ten months of the year that the "men" are in town, 1,200,- 000, at an average of a little more than half a cent apiece--a total of about $8,000 a year. The same firm receives $15,000 a year for soda and mineral waters sold to the students, and the monthly cigar account with the colle­ gians reaches $500. And this is the record of but one firm.--Hartford Courant. T n»e Conductor. > . WINONA, Minn., Nov. 29,187®. 1. I had been suffering with a severe cold for several days; was so hoarse I could not speak above a whisper. Nov. 10 I met one or Dr. Warner s agents on my train; he handed me a bottle of White Wine of Tar Syrup; one hour after taking the first dose my hoarse­ ness commenced to leave me. In" twenty- four hours my voice was quite clear and natural, and the cold nearly cored. It is best remedy 1 ever saw. Respectfully, C. W. WABBEN, Conductor, , Chicago and Northwestern B. B. 'Void by all druggists." A totrcra lady, on being asked where her native place was, replied: "I have none; I am the daughter of the Methodist minister. ̂ Rochester. N. Y., writes: *1 • nvm'jt VMU miMect to serious Kidney Complaint Cured. B. Turner, hav* been frrr disorder of the kidneys, and often unable to attend to business; I procured your BUBDOCK BLOOD BITTERS and was relieved before half a bottle was used I intend to continue, as I feel confident that they will entirely cure me" Price $1.00. Tnnnw is an East Indian lady in Paris who can talx in twelve languages. Fortunately she is not married. • ChtrlaUHW »nd Qnaeks Have long plied their vocation on the suffer­ ing pedals of the people. The knife has pared to the quick; caustic applications have tor­ mented the victim of corns until the convic­ tion Bhaped itself--there's no cure PUT­ NAM'S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOB proves on what a slender basis public opinion often rests. If you suffer from corns get the Ex­ tractor and you will be satisfied. Bold every­ where. Wholesale, Lord, Stoutenbunrh A Co., Chicago. THE Fofter your Job, the easier it is to get Hard money. JOSEPH DURRIXLUKOKR, Broadway, Buffalo, was induced by his brother to try THOMAS' ECLECTRIC OIL for a sprained ankle; and with half a dozen applications he was enabled to walk round ajrain all riprht GI&LS should remember, "Where ignorance Is bliss, 'lis lolly to be wives " YOUB health depends on the blood. People who realize this are Hood's Sarsaparilla with the best results. of your ! taking To SAVB a dollar is the easiest thing in the world--don't spend it Personal !--T« Mm Only I The VOLTAIC BELT CO., Marshall, SOch., will send Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltaie Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health ana man­ ly vigor. Address as above. N. B.--So risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. PUXE Cod-Liver Oil, made from select liv­ ers on the sea-shore, by CASWKLL, HAZABD A Co., New York. It is absolutely pure and sweet Patients who have once taken it pre­ fer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market THESE was a young lady quite fair, Who had much trouble with her hair, 8o she boutrht Carboline, And a sialic to be Keen js the head of this maiden, I declare. •ROUGH on Rats." Clears oat rats, mloe, flies, roaches, b -d-buga, ants, vermin. 15c MOTHXB SWAN'S WOBM SYBUF. for feverish- ness, restlessness, worms. Tasteless 26a OHE trial will convince you that it is the best Ask you.- dealer for the Fraser Axle Grease, ana take no other. Every box has our trade-mark. WHERE machinery is used the Drew Oil Cup will save 50 per cent of oil. Write for cir­ cular. Borden, Helleck & Co., Chicago and rough ABHOAP, made York. CHAPPED Hand**, Face, Pim Skin, cured by using JUNIPER 'TAB by CASWELL, UAZARU & Co., New THE habit of running over boots or shoes corrected with Lyon's Patent HeelStiffeners, Ta* the new brand, Spring 'fob MMI Touching the are being given of James QuzetU as •were largely ege of reporting parliaiM^mpjMjatea to an act of downright o^HMtti! com­ mitted on their behalf Burke. When in March, llpl, Lotd Mayor Crosby was sent to the inter for protecting the reporters of thdpfcNt- don Evening Mail, who had been oi® dered into arrest, Burke took up the reporters' cause in the House. Mr. Reginald Palgrave, in his interesting little monograph on the House of Com­ mons, of which he is clerk assistant, tells us how this was done: "Burke could not prevent the committal of the printers, but he made the proceedings look absurd; he made them sick of the job. For twelve long hours---from 5 o'clock one afternoon till 5 o'clock next morning--by twenty-three divisions, by farcial motions, by jest, by every kind of absurd proposal, did Burke delay and make contemptible the attempt to silence the newspapers. The result'of that victory of the 12th of March, 1771, is most conspicuous--the gallery, name­ ly, which ruus across the House above the speaker's chair. A YOUNO man started for a drive of twenty miles with his sweetheart, through an uninhabited tract in Min nesota. At a point about midway of the lonely route the pair had a bitter quarrel. The fellow unhitched the horse, monnted it, and rode away, leav­ ing the girl alone in the wagon. He evidently gave her credit for being a whole team and a dog under the wagon. A Case Not Beyond Help. Dr. V.H.Hinsdale,Kewanae. Ill, Kivises wot in- mark able cure of c nsumnUon. He nys: "A neigh­ bor'* wife wan attacked with violent Inns iliaoaKe, and pronounced beyor.d help from Quick Consumption. As a laft resort the family was persuaded to try Dr. Win. Hall's Balsam for the Lungs To th" astonishment of all, by the lime she had used one-half dozen bottles she was about the house doing her own work. I aaw her at her wont and had no idea she could recover." Watson's Neuralgia Kins. Thla la one of the best remedies for Neuralgia ever Indented. A lady who h«| tried many other tMnga, without relief, tried Neuralgia King and was cured. 59KSSIK Bdlfcll twraJgfa, Sclatieas Lumbago, » iti dm* tout. Quia*/, Son Throat, Swll' m§9 and Sprains, Burnt and $o*Jd$, Gener a/ Bodily Pains, T§§tk, Ear and Headacko, Frosttd foot and Ears, and all otkor Pains end Aches. en earth equate ST. JACOM Ota rimple and ekemp External entails but the comparatirsly trifling outlay of SO Cent*, and every one raflering with pain can have cheap end peal tire proof of ita claim*. < . Direction* In Heraa Language*. * •OLD BT ALL DRUGGIST8 AID DEALEBS IH MED10IIE. •.TOOEIEE&OO.. Baltimore, Md., 17. f. J, rum. Ik Vmantioti a w a mmfe, tire, A trial HOOD'S SAR8AJ>AR1IXA Has met success at home flever a;vo-ded to any other proprietary medicine. It has successfully combated tho strongest competition, and by its superior merit to-d \y commands the largest sale and the greatest oon- iideu<e wherever it has been Introduced. The remarkable resulta in a disease so universal and with such a variety of characteristics as catarrh, prove how efluftually Hood's Sarsaparilla, acting? through the blood, reach every part of the human system. • I am nnder great obligations to yon for the benefit I have received by taking only three bottles of your valuable Sarsaparilla. Having been a sufferer from catarrh for six or eight yean, and having tried nearly all the wonderful cures, sure cores, inhalers, etc.. and spending nearly a hundred dollars without benefit, I accidentally tried Hood's Sarsaparilla; the discharge from my nose was greatly increased the first bottlu I took, then it gradually became less, and in taking less than three bott.es I find myself so greatly improved tliat X write to let you know Bie fa ts. I think one or tw.i bottles mere will makfi a cure that I would gladly have given a hundred dollars for. Let the sufferers of New England know that Hood's Sarsaparilla will Hire catarrh."--M. A. ABBEY. Worcester, Haas. HOOD'S 8AHSAJPAJULLA. Sold by Druggiste. $1; six for $s. Made only to C. 1. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mw. Cures Scrotal*, BrysipoU\s. Pimp loo and Face Grabs, Blotches. Boils, Tumors, Tot- tor, Humous, Salt Rheum, Scold Bead, Sores, Mercurial Diseases, Female Weakness and Irregularities, Dissiness, Loss o/ Appetite, Juandice, Affections oi the Liver, Indi~ gestion. Biliousness, Dyspep­ sia and General Debility. A eoone of Burdock Blood Bitten wilt satisfy t&e eiest skeptical that it m the Greatest Blood fiuifatta eatth. Sold by laedkia* dealers overy ber*. DtoecttaaelaelcvsaUagiaaccs. F>lCB,$i4Sb POSTER, HILBURN 4 CO, PRAY't. Brfkt* H.Y. USSIER [This engraving flie Langs in i healthy state.] A 6000 FAMILY REMEDY! 8TRICTLY PURE. Harmlwa to the Moat PeHeatel •r im faithful m comcxPTioif u* •ween COBEDwhea Mher reMe4lee and Pfcjratalnas have telle* M effect m core* _WnxiAM O. DICMKS, merchant of Bowline •a., writes April 4,1881. that ho wants us to km She l.irjtu BiutN tot* cured JUs mother of Oowmmp- (son, after tho physician had given her up as beara­ ble. He eeye, others knowing her case have taken the Balsam ana been cured; he all so should give it a trial. Wiujam A_ G ax ham a Oo- wholesale droggMa. Sanesville, Ohio, write a* of the cure of KATHUS FKKKXAN. a well-known citizen, who had been afflicted with Bronchitis tn ita worst form for twelve yean. Ttie Loo BAI-KAM cnred hlm, a* ft has many otbeob of Bronchitis As an Expectorant It has No Equal. For Sate by all Medicine Dealers. $66 a week in your own towtt. Terms and >5 outfit free. Address H. H.\ujcrr & Co.. Portland. Me. IIAID£<""1 DOfttal for nr*t'dCatalog. HlTT.L'g nmIw Hair Store. 38&40 Monroe Chicago. 9mm PiiraJsEpi^P^y orFitfin 21 hours. Free to poor, dills Ullt£Dx. KBCSE. Arsenal St., St.Louie, Mo. A ft TISTfflCI niike nionr>y selling our FamilyMed- fl Up N rHJii'inen. No capital required. Btand- AUJUJI1 D<"d Cure Co., 1»7 i'earl St.. N. Y. SAW THE AULTMAM 4 TAYLOR CO., Mansfield. Ohio. AGKNTTN WANTED for the Best and Fastest-Sell-injr Pictorial Books and Bibles. Prices reduced 33 per cent NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO., Chicago, 111. PATENTS Full In* ructlotw and Bar, NO PATENT NO PAT. . K.s. it A. P. LACF.Y, Patent 'At4«>rm-yH,WaakingtonJ).Q I ruction*and Ban<Htook on PaTKXt*scnt flrt*. PATENTS PROCUBF.D by Am. Patent Ajteucjr, 1S8 5thSt.,Cin.,0. FREE For information and Maps of Missouri, kansoK. Arkansas ind TI-JUM, write to JOH N K. KNNIB, 441 Clurk S... Ch.cago For Business at the Oldest & Best 'Commercial College. Circular free. Address C. BAVL I ES, Dubuque, la. $335 WIASROAIIR.-R.'R Address j. •. Brauwi Detroit. Mick. WE Ml HAVE 3,000 MEN AT ONCE. We pay tlwi.O per month f.u' oue or five years. To satiufy tia that you mean business, inc. ose 10 centa and a .tamp for 11: rticuiain. Ad.iress STEWART fc CO-. Lock-Box 5T9, Miuaeapolis, Aiinn. ntn*a nun nnn KuwiMt NMnha * •r hair •• fcaM la » «s t «r I PtM IM •U.,»t»mp«or ailrer. L.A.LSlllTtUCOJi«ltA|U.k,aUUM,llk DCMfilAKIfiSoldS.T on any dis-rtllOIVil O ease, wound or injury. Par­ ents, widow* and children are entitled. Millions an- propria!ed. Fee $10. Increase pensions, bounty, beck pay and honorable discharge* procured. NKW LAWS, wnd ttamp for instructions and bounty table. N. W. nnonuD a Co, Attorneys, BosM&WaahingtonJMl. AIL CUt IAIUL inn I have a positive remedy for the Move dtseaae; the wont kind and of In thousands of cases etandlnir have been cured indeod, so strong Is my fal hi its efficacy, thst I will ten.I TWO BOTTL . getber with » VALUABLE TREATISE on this disss--, to OAT sufferer. Give Uxpn-nn ami P. O. nddresa. D&. X. A. ESLOCCK. 181 FearllW New York. AOESTS! BOOK AGElVTSt SUNLIGHT AND SHADOW are now waiting fbr it Minister* say "Qad need . The Umperaaeeeanse Is now "Aoomtsp.'and this W tha M selling book erer vmed. Now is tha time to vork fer Holiday atttrery. Send for circulars and sea our Special fknst a>S. HETTUtTOIf * tT •. Clark St., CklMc*. Ola GANGER c w ^ T X T t r m a . Established. 8?-'; Incorporated, !>«4>. Fur the Cure ofCianeere, Tumors, Deen, N<>rofula and SKIV DI!-K.*SKN. without Ihe use of kutie or i oss or BLOOK. and little pain For DTFOBXATION. ciBot-i.Ar.S AMI KKFEUKKCKS. address OK. r. I>. ppsn. Aurora. Kaae Oe., 111. o/.e? : i l l Î2( ^^FWELL On»mai ' ere tb» aa w2JH jsnsxrers! SS5 Every Day Cn beeeeily mditttw Well Angers ft Drill* On* Baa and one hone imtni W* iwssM Iks Beet eei Bartfcl LOOMS ft iriu. TlfFll, OWL Fitters Hoetetfer"s Stomach Bitten giree steadineea to tike nerves, induces a healthy, natural flow of bfle.prerenfta constipation without unduly purging the bewela gently stimulates the circulation, and. by promoting a Tig-irons condition of the physical system, promoted also, that cheerfulness which is the tamest indication of a well-balanced condition ol all the *"1""' pown. W For sale by Druggists and Dealers generally. $5 ti eiss- BARKER'S (REEK CORN CUTTMS MACHINE DHV(1 in over 800 oorn factories. Manufactured by VOLNEY BABKEB.Portend. Me. P.O. Bo*883. M ACNETIC Insoles! Warm the leet, perfect the circulation, and prevent ool«l a, rhramatiam and disease. MAGNETON APPLIANCE CO- Sole Manu­ facturer^ 318 State Ht .Chicago. Ill For sale by all leading Druggists and Shoe Dealers, or sent to anv addreea on receipt of $1 per pair. Send foruhiatrated paper gtrtng cuts of Msf- BAXVUIIKM; have noevuiin tfcewwll. WS DRESS THIS CARD IR MOURNING, mortals Snis M lata MI MW. for tua Card will M •( TtlM IS jrott. HUM this papor wbtn wrifttaf. K f j n r c.u 7 r* r. L T" eal eai*. I bais i er rj.UL.reo 8ICXNI Handy to care the SusdbaeraaseaM •aea for a triatlss a •smedy. Gin Kxpn . fcothiaff tor atrial, sad I wll can yea. Addraae Dr. •. O. aOOV. WVMri St. Wevle tawxrs&yp* utw end will tern in three each nlcht from 1 to health, if snob a tiring 'Sk'j'oHSSSI "ST'S*. formerly Bftafifi Ms* ehflMl^KCta ai HUfji IM LL( BTPOMWK OOMIWYIMLLIW Catarrh. If yon suffer from either Bronchial Catarrhf and win ml your address, a physician ia regular practice for more than 30 years, •will nail you, FREE, valuable information con­ cerning Heme Treatment. A*ddrcs» ThbB.Y.Sfac«,$2t irtthtleaeof «iisiliiiuaie FVm sM Efeaaat eaaa. Mfriaeaa tone, twdrti aart «st Cfr» eolar. with testliiialsls.Brsei Asa OtFayaea OMttWwXIheil jlDDTOi! Otutw offer* the surest nieanaot making regwar 1 It member lleportR Club 13 i>u») shareholders back their money la arsHa past three month*. Mill leartttK ortgtaal ammiai liumeyin CluU.or ret tinted oil demand. ammiafnaraB. Bhairs, HueeclL Explauatorv i-irrularssent fl-ee. Iteliabh;eoi 1 eapondento wauted everywhere. Address It. E. Kawnau, a Co, Com'u llclits., 177 A 17t La Salle 8t_ CKHUOO. UU PENSIONS, TO WHOM PENSIONS AHM wm EVERY SSLBIET EE"£W: of the United Statee, either by accideut or otherwise, gets a pension, the lose cl a finger, or the loss of the use of a an^er, the loss or aa eye. the loss of a toe, or any gun-shot wooad. or other siojL Also ruptured Ttdns, or diseases of the lungs. If yon are entitled to a pension don't delay «. Let me (Ue your ease whiletherals ret time. BOtfMTY,gftsuSMeSr £ account of wo«md% rupture or any in larof Pension and BtrnTtyict* P.H.MZOCRALD'S C.&Ciaim Agency forWest«rn8o<diera INOIANAPOUS, IND, CENTS 1*05 THBSB wmm. sn • I HI The new Tolnme •••• DBMORBST'S MONTH IT M*«Asma for 18BS ia the best and the cheapcst Fatnll; (nineleeni iuomu' I) of printed on the finest tinted paper, eiae8K »« inches. The three numbers now md] 19 weigh 1>4 pounds and cdMteln 310 pej now mdjr ofvotanaa clear print." "New Novelette*, Storied, _ ] P<H>try, 'J'ravels, and valuable lnfonaaUcaj day and for the hoasahnta.- " familt* 111 THnat -- itnas • i Htntn Pictures. 'w.'jCNNnTOS M5MOI 17 Sast 14th Street, New York. Twenty Cents; yearly subscription, Twal Pacific Herlliwitll Ont»i,Wailii|l»il! OArstbekNt letd ftrEi Mild, eqnakle asd healthy *ll«at*| laada of areat fertility, prsdsniaff ' Ilea ef Uraln, Fralt and Cnusaea is fill nbundaaret aa iaetka«MH» Timber t waatCaal Fielda aad atlMMr 1 depuvitat cheap ami «aiek tram rn: Ira a da aad riwr satigallia t sifrrt with all aarta ef the warM, < Ita proximity ta the Paelfle Or aaw. NO DUOIICIIM, IICHBCT MO IHIUKICANB**. WIURl.WIKim, OTIIRR UEMTBIJCTIVK PHKNOBUMA. The Laada af the Puifle Nerthwsat 1 an average yield of wheat pwaaW fi la exeeaa af tkat sf any ather aaetlaa 1 Halted Nates. Na failure »f crops aa* eter a 1 Lairad. | OreaM Wheat comatanda a Wshar p«i«a than that af aay ather caitaOgr ta the peel asarket. .In immense arett ef enw frrtttt and O'rrrrntiKnt Idind*, trstnisa nm thr iruuk fises ftKe »srtt«raHw. Oi* « reffif Jfalwwtf t A'is(yWlSt"aa< i Orrffim £ fJnltfbruim JB. M. Oa'l mmO II AMNMIM FRMXTFTST to tHI N MI I IL raHi|| att(|a Co umUtn and it* tributaries,ttre aie ajere# for tale at I<otr Price* axd *a Keay A---- " open to pre-emption ottsf Hematoma J The firta: Columbia r enormtnnly itierrawd ky th - .' orth-rn Pacific & tt. mm*I IA« -Xailicay & .Varigstioa Cs.'* ugttmm revdert eertatu m rapid ineremse toOti •f lMnds note open to purekaee or ta aiM under th- I'nitett Htatee is " For IViaphlataand MaaadeaeMi casstr>i iw reeeareea, cliasate, travel, rataa aad rail lafarasattaa, 1 A. 8TOKSS, «eseral Kastsw >»--%>' AS Clark istrcac, r movement of papultMmm ta 1 t-efrltn mw *fa aisfnaa seCtf / tuerrmea ky Me dsanMiaa 1 ft MM GRAY*!* 8PRC1FIC TIAM aad all Otowi that lotWw aa a •sITaasH ^ f unuTAtaL^^ mature 0.<i Age,aad asaay ettardtasaaaathatlBi Oonanniptioa aad a Praaaa»a«a Osasa. parttcalantaoarr " to send fiae by oaaU to «*a llxIMu ia ' ~ " Inaanity or eTTfu?l| .1 send tn Mediciaa is soTd by all 4 six puki ceipt of t THE MAY MEMCtMS CO., Baft*, N. T. On aocognt of eocntsrfslto. wa kaw adeptsd the Ttl low Wrapper; the only gsaalaa C.N.U. No. 1-S3. WHEN WKrriNO TO ADTBRriSKWk pi aae a.,y yoa aaw the auve.tiitiiitp in tl>is paper. WHAT WILL THE WEATHER BE TO-IQRROW1 OPool'a Signal Service Barometer ••••••oagTORW CMM AND THRRLTOMCTKR 'f M H«BI deteot aad indieate oometlf anyehaa in adranoe. It will tail what kindoT stona ia i diractioo--iaralaahle te aarigau aniwrdiag tr r~|-- ^TiTn 1 •iatha TOUi iBTfe with ailTSfpUtad trimminga, ete..sai asmsat Wa wfll eaad yoa aaaaspU < aaSasaBrtisas!, Capt, CHAS. B. Koaus. Ship '̂ Sgg^TSatosd in good ordsr. ead ssust, say that , •vary iaatranHtnt vr:;rrarted S l-4w.de. If not satisfied va wa will rafaod your money. . a,...rJfcfc, * MAmr. PtMssTsUsa where leai

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy