Port Royal standard and commercial. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, May 25, 1876, Image 4
Wall's Welcome to Dom.
Thus Walt to Pedro :
There is something I must yawp about ;
bully emperor, it is you !
There is somebody I must ce'ebr&te ; Alcantara,
you are my clam !
Hysterical old Top Knot, it shall be you!
Oh ! I am wondeiful!
Divine 1 am from the crown of my bat'.ered
tde to my heel tape.
Divine the beet juice that swashes through
my arterial system.
Aorta, spleen, vena cava, probo?cis, jugular,
red shirt and suspenders.
All severally divine.
For me the nebula? married ;
For me the ear to, air, sky, universe were
conceived and partnriated ;
For me the plesioaaurus and the ichthyosaurus,
and the oruithorhynohos disported themselves
in tLe early dawn of the Silurian ages;
For me lived the long line of bully good fel
lo we.
From Adam and Gain down to the days of
Andrew Jackson.
I am the ontoome of all these things. I,
swathed in glorious red flannel, .
My feet tread on continents; my bead often
inoonveniecoes the angels.
I, Walt, of Camden, New Jereey, am a rather
big thing!
Say yon the song is of Wall and not of Pedro?
Bally emperor, you've hit it precisely! You
are toothless, inert, bilious, yellow as saffron,
Camerado.
Why sing of you, you infectious old potentate.
When there is Walt to celebrate in verses.
Walt, the remarkable Koemos.
To the emperor or any other fellow.
FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD,
Medical Hints.
Heartburn anb Acidity.?Pure water,
five ounces; carbonate of ammonia,
two drachms; syrup of orange peel, one
ounce. Mix. Hose, one tablespoonful.
Turnip Syrup for a Cold.?Roast
twelve or more fine turnips in an apple
roaster, press the juice from them, and
0 add sugar candy to your taste. Take a
teacupful at nigbt and in the morning.
A New Disinfectant.?Another new
disinfectant has been introduced which
is extremely useful from its solubility.
It consists of a mixture of oommon salt
and chloride of calcium, to which is added
about fifteen per cent, of white vitriol.
If wanted for use in the form of
powder, it may be mixed with cinder
dust, sawdust, or similar mechanical
dryer.
Hair Washes (for Dandruff, Scurf,
Etc.?Rosemary wash: Rosemary water,
one gallon; rectified spirits of wine,
one-half pint; pearlash, one ounce;
tinted with brown coloring. Athenian
water: Rose water, one gallon; alcohol,
one pint; sassafras wood, one-quarter
pound; pearlash, one ounce; boil the
wood in the rose water in a glass vessel;
then, when oold, add the pearlash and
spirit. This wash is even more efficient
than the rosemary preparation for
cleansing the hair, strengthening it at
the roots, and improving it in every respect
Depilatories (to take off Superfluous
Hair.?Lime, twelve ounces;
starch, ten ounces; orpiment, one
ounce. Mix them together. Sulphuret
of arsenic, one ounce; quicklime, two
ounces. This application, being virulent
poison, must be used but seldom.
Orpiment, one ounoe; quicklime, nine
ounces. Mix with a little soap lees and
powdered starch. Quicklime, two
ounces; salt of tartar, four ounoes; charcoal,
a quarter of an ounce. Quicklime,
eight ounces; dry pearlash, one ounce;
sulphuret of potassium, one ounoe. It
must not be applied more than two or
three minutes.
8ar8APartlla. ?Take of sarsaparilla
root, sliced, four ounoes; boiling water,
four pints. Macerate for four hours in
a vessel lightly covered, and placed near
the fire; then take out the sarsaparilla,
and bruise it. Return it again to the
liquor, and macerate in a similar manner
four hours more, first adding of raspings
of guaiacum wood, bark of sassafras
root, licorice root, bruised, of each, one
ounce; bark of mezereon root, three
drachms. Finally strain. It is oommonly
given in conjunction with some
mild mercurial pill. The dose is a quarter
of a pint, repeated three or four
times a day, or half a pint twice a day.
To Capture Hawk* nod Owl?.
A farmer writes to the Ohio Farmer \
that he has succeeded in taking about
twenty hen hawks in a steel trap, by setting
the trap on the upper end of a
square pole some twenty feet high, with
the butt end firmly planted in the
ground. E. Gaylord writes in relation
to capturing owls : When I suspect the
owls are about to commence their mis
chief I get a stick suitable for the plaoe,
and fasten a small steel trap on the top,
and set it up some three or four feet
above. If an owl comes anywhere near,
he will be very sure to settle down in
the trap with as calm and as graoeful an
air as an owl can put on. This is a
trait in the bwl quite peculiar to himself.
He seldom pounces on his victim
the first thing, like other birds of prey,
but first oomes slowly along, and settles
down on some conspicuous site near the
victims, and takes a very calm and oool
survey of all the surroundings. As soon
as all things appear to him to be favorable,
he qu:etly lets himself down
among the fowls, hoping to induce some ;
of their number to flv off or drop down
from the roost, when he, quick as;
thought, embraces the opportunity to
swoop down and carry off the fowl. I
^-^qsed to fasten the trap with a staple, on
top.of the stick, but I find this gives
them a much better chance to tear themselves
out of the trap. Now, I fasten it
slightly on top and firmly to the stick,
some two feet below the trap, with a
cnain or corn.
How It Ptyi to Have Good Cowr.
I herewith send you, writes a oor-!
respondent of the Vermont Farmer, a
statement of the income of eight Jersey
oows for the year ending January, 1867::
Twenty-five hundred and six tj-six
ponuda eleven ounces of batter
made and sold at forty oente per
pound $1,026.67 |
Cream sold 2.00
Eight calves (6 heifers) raised 185.00
Ten piga raised and fatted on soar
milk and twenty-five bushels of
meal 207.50 |
Total $1,421.17
Less twenty-five bushels of meal.... 25.00
Total $1,896.17
My cows are full-blooded Jerseys
and three grades. I feed meal all the
time they are giving milk. In the
summer they have two quarts of oorna
ml-cob meal per day; Fall and winter,
three quarts, one-half corn-and-cob meal,
one-half bran. We never have any soft
butter in warm weather. I feed no
roots of any kind, nothing but meal and
all the good, early-out hay they will eat.
Talie of Uaderdralninff.
P. T. Quin, in his work entitled j
"Gardening for Profit," says a certain ;
German leased twelve acres of land near j
Jersey City for ten years, at 8100 per
acre. It was heavy, wet land, and after
heavy manuring for three years he could j
only make a living. Some of his neighbors,
better posted, told him he would
have to underdrain it. As his lease had
only seven years to run, he was afraid it
would not pay; but as the only alternative
he took the advice. It took 860 per
acre, only one half of what ho had paid
for manure yearly. The result was at
the end of his lease he paid $12,000 for
the land and owned it.
A Husband Trapped.
Writing of the oarnival ball at Rome,
a correspondent of the Memphis
Aralanche says: Bat before I end my
-account I must tell you of a carnival adventure
in which mn American gentleman
figured, that has set all Rome to
laughing. How it became public
property no one can tell, but certain it is
that every one knows it, and I violate no
confidence in its mention.
He went with his wife to one of the
carnival balls. Here he was to meet an
Italian bella donna for whom he had a
tendresse. They were to reoognize each
other by the usual time-worn devices?a
blue ribbon in his button hole, an almond
blossom in her dark hair.
NaturaMy he had not made his wife
the confidant of his little affair, and had
carefully Qonoealed from her the costume
he had selected?that of a Spanish
doD. But he could not guard all the
avenues to his secret, and his wife was
quite clever enough to find an open
one. She found out every detail of his
dress, and kept the knowledge to herself,
together with a .little secret"of her
own, with which she promised herself
some spoit.
The ball was at its height. From one
o'clock to three the American had
danced attendance to his Dulcinea ; he
was hurrying off to get her an ice, when
a little figure in a blue domino, whom
he recognized as his wife, stopped the
[ way.
Phe (in the high carnival voice)?" So
I've fonnd you out, have I ?"
He?" Oh, do let me alone,"
She?" Indeed I won't. I know your
tricks and manners. I've been watching
yonr flirtation in the corner.
Pretty goings on at your time of Ufe."
He?"It don't become you to throw
stones my dear. You are not as young
as you were. Remember your hair dye."
She?"My hair is my own, at all
events. I wonder if your languid
sisrnorina knows that you take yours off
at night ?"
He?" I declare, Maria Jane, you get
more aggravating every day. Its nag,
nag, nag from morning till night. You'll
be as bad as your Aunt Hicklin if you
keep on."
She (laughing very much)?" Indeed 1
As bad aa Aunt Hicklin ?"
He?"Yes; and you couldn't be
worse?unless you were the "?
At this point in the dialogue a second
domino came up, identical with the one
at his side, and to his amazement the
voice of his wife said, sweetly :
" John, dear, it is time we were going
home, is it not I"
" But who is this ?" he gasped.
" Oh! that is Aunt Hicklin."
(Aunt Hicklin, be it remarked, was a
maiden aunt with sheckels.)
" We are just of a height, you know,"
continued the wife, " and we made up a
plan to dress exactly alike and not let
any one know. It's been such fun;
hain't it, aunty, dear ?"
Aunty, dear, took off her mask,
grinned like a wioked fairy, and said she
thought it had. I am informed that the
maiden with the almond blossoms waited
inn TnVin wlin />amo 111
?' TOili 1V1 U^l IVCi uvu LA. J v^iim ***
like a lion, went oat like & lamb, and his
domino was found in his dressing-room
^he next morning torn into small shreds.
Snuff Dippii g.
The Hopkinsville (Ky.) Detnocrat
says: Talk about the opium eater or the
whisky drinker, how much more are
they to be pitied than the lady who is
addicted to dipping snuff ? We believe
there is more snuff used in Hopkinsville
than in any other place of its size in
Kentucky, and its use is steadily on the
increase. Hopkinsville has a reputation
for beautiful women, but how long that
reputation will last 'tis hard to tell.
Some of the prettiest women we knew
ten or twelve years ago are now nothing
but faded dowers. Lips that onoe
looked like wild cherries, and for one
kiss from which a man would almost
give his right arm, now look more like
dried apples than anything else we can
think of. The cheek once full and rosy
is now sunken and oolorless. The chin,
which looks longer, now glories in a
bronze oolored stripe, which reaches
down to the throat.
Snufl is robbing women of their
beauty and depriving them of husbands.
It is more harmful than smoking, and
more repulsive than chewing, and its
use by ladies is almost as much to be
condemned as the drinking of whisky
by men; and if the ladies have grounds
to talk about men drinking and smoking,
they are assured that snuff dipping in
?he eyes of men is about as repulsive as
the smell of a two cent-and-a-half cigar,
or a sniff of "rifle" whisky to the
olfactories of -the fair sex.
We indulge the hope that soon there
will be an anti-snuff society formed,
which will be a twin sister of our tem->
peranoe society. We have no idea how
many ladies in our city will take exception
to this article. If all that use snuff
were to get after us, we would call their
name legion, but we are upheld in our
action by some of the most sensible
mothers in town, in entering a protest
against a habit, the adoption of which
by a arirl is almost as much to be dreaded
by a parent as is the first taste of liqnor
by his boy.
Wanted?An Answer.
If four hound dogs, with sixteen legs,
oan catch twenty-nine rabbits, with
eighty-seven legs, in forty-four minutes,
how. many legs must the same rabbits
have to get away from eight hound dogs,
with thirty-two legs, in seventeen minutes
and a half ? .
ANSWEE.
Lat the three-legged rabbits, like sensible
folks, I
Borrow twentv-mne legs from their neighborsThen
give them a start of a mile and a quarter,
And 111 bet you my hat, if you think that I
" oughter,"'
That in seventeen minutes?add a half if you
please?
A schoolgirl will give you the answer with I
ease
Preserving Eggs. ? The common
way to preserve eggs is to pack them in
salt. A better way is to pack the eggs
in tight vessels or vats made on purpose,
and corn them with a strong brine.
Another way is to cover them with lime
water. In Russia they are dipped into
melted tallow and then carefully laid
away. An easy way to prepare them to
keep is to place the eggs on a sieve and
pour boiling water over them. This is
said to stop up the pores in the shells
and exclude the air, which it is neoessary
to do in order to preserve them.
Packing in s$lt and brine are the safdst.
The eggs nhonld always be kept is a
place
SUMMARY OF NEWS.
| Intertniinc Items from Home and Abrond.
The Mexican revolutionists have taken possession
of Mier the citizens making no resistance.
The insurgents having called on Americans
in New Laredo to pay a levy, cur government
sent word to the ofti :er in command of
the Rio Grande departmont to prevent the
enforcement of the levy Tho Indiana Democrats
nominated James D. Williams, M. C., for
governor, and a full Htsto t:cket. The State
delegation to St. Louis was pledged to Gov.
Hendricks. The platform declares for hard
money, opposes contraction, believes in a
greenback currency, calls for continued investigations,
and opposes any payment of the
Confederate debt The revolution in Hayti
is triumphant, Dominique, the late president,
has fled. Vice-President Kameau and Losquet,
the general in command of the government
foroes, have been shot Montana instructed
her delegates to the Republican national convention
to vote for Mr. Blaine The Boston
Pilot has been purchased by Archbishop
Williams and J. Boyle O'Reilly. They propose
to pay every dollar to the poor people who de
posited money in the former proprietor's
hands. The latter oo-operates A man
named Shack committed suicide by shooting in
Philadelphia, and his wife shortly after took#
prussic acid with the same result Breaks
in the Mississippi levee occurred in Oarroll
parish, I?., and near Hannibal, Mo., doing incalculable
damage New York city's sohool
rolls for March showed 111,530 names of
scholars.
The Ballon Manufacturing Co., of Woonsocket,
B. I , extensive mill owners, have
made an assignment?their liabilities amounting
to over $1,000,000 Two rob%ers rushed
into the Baxter Springe bank, at Fort Soott,
Kansas, during business hours, presented pistols,
stole $3,000, and escaped In four
days in Bagdad there were 145 new cases of
the plague and seventy-five deaths. The disease
has now appeared on the left bank of the
Tigris Fifteen pilgrims were drowned
while crossing the river Vienne, near Parsac,
France Ten thousand dollars in currency
were eichanged for eiiver at the New York
sub-treasury the first day of the resumption.
The total expense of the Philadelphia
exposition is pot at $8,500,000 A party of
whites were attacked by Indians fifty miles
from Custer City, in the Black Hills. Two
men and a woman were killed, three men seriously
wounded, and a colored woman carried
off. Three broken wagons found in Buffalo
Gap indicate that another party has been overtaken
and captured by the eavages
Nebraska Democrats appointed to the national
convention are supporters of Mr. Tildeu
John Dolan was executed in New York city for
the murder of James H. Noe. The murder was
committed last August, and the mardered man
was in defense of his premises at the time.
He begged hard for his life, but the burglar
said he could not trust him, and brutally beat
the unfortunate man to death. Strong efforts
were made to have Dolan's sentence commuted
to imprisonment for life, but Gov. Tilden refused
te interfere. Dolan died easily.
Dallett Bliss committed suioide in Central
Park, New York city, by Bhooting himself in
the left breast and then jumping into one of
the ponds. He was depressed from the bad
etate of his business affairs Five murderers?one
white man, one colored man and
three Choctaw Indians?were hanged at Fort
8mitb, Ark., upon one scaffold at the same
time, in the presence of seven thousand people
Colorado sends her delegates to the
national Republican convention unpledged
Six buildings, occupied as places of business
by nine different tenants, were burned at
Sayville, Long Island Wm. Cooper shot
and killed Mollie Dean in St. Louis, because
she desired him Dot to be so attentive to her,
as she was engaged to another man. Cooper
then committed suicide by blowing out his own
brains The prospects are that California's
grain orop will be exceptionally large. The
fruit product will only be fair, the trees in i
some sections having been injured.
As five persons were descending a coal shaft
in a bucket at Brown's Station, Mo , the rope
broke, letting them fall a distance of one hundred
feet?instantly killing two men and a boy
and fatally injuring two more men Accounts
arrive daily of fresh Indian outrages
and atrocities. A family of immigrants named
Baker, from Pennsylvania, consisting of father,
mother and two children, were brained and
alped within one hundred miles of Custer
City Two carriage factories, two saloons
and three barns were deetroyed by fire at New
Canaan, Conn The foot race of 125 yards
in San Francisco between Crandall, of Providence,
and Horton, of New Jersey, for the
snm of $4,000, resulted in Crandall's winning
by a foot in twelve seoonds By the burning
of Somervilk's paper milk at Britton,
England. $350,000 were lost and five hundred
men thrown out of employment The
revolutionary President Medina's troops in
Honduras, Central America, were totally defeated
by the regulars. Medina died a few days
subsequently While a large number of
men were working on a new railway tunnel
near Neath, South Wales, an explosion of gunpowder
caused the roof to fall, burying a large
number of the laborers. Thirteen bodies and
a number of wounded bad been recovered
at last acoounts? One hundred and fifty
cottages, many of them completely famished,
on the grounds of the Methodist camp meeting
asso> iation, at Tarentum, Pa., were deetroyed
by fire. Loss, $50,000.
The bill giving the queen the title of empress
of India causes considerable feeling ip
England, and it is thought probable that it
will call out a vote of censure for the government
Riots have occnrred throughout
B&rbadoes. Plantations and houses have been
sacked and an enormous amount of property
destroyed. Over forty of the rioters have
[ been abot The Egyptian troops have begun
their homeward march from Abyssinia.
I . England's acreage in wheat is short this
year, and suoh as is planted will not yield
heavily A hail storm passed over a section
of Kansas, destroying orchards and wheat
crops, and killing several cattle Morory
and Smith rode a fifty-mile race in two hours
[ and eight minutes in San Francisoo. Each
i need ten horses Drexel, Morgan & Co.
have been awarded the $5,833,000 of coupon
five per cent, bonds of the funded loan of
1881, on their bid of one hundred and three
oente and seventy-eight and seven-sixteenth
hundredths A landslide containing 1,800
square feet ooourred in a brickyard at Rondout,
| N. Y., and one man was killed.
Strikers from one of the Troy (N. Y.) stove
works attacked non-un on men in their boarding
house, and fatally shot one of them and
severely injured several others A night
freight train on the Canada Southern railway
ran through an open drawbridge into the Wetland
canal, completely wreoking the engine,
tender and eight cars. The engineer and fireman
were killed The insurgent cbief Peko
Paul vies with five hundred men defeated the
Turks and oocupied Suttorina The Prince
of Wales was handsomely received at Madrid
by King Alfonso Don Amceto Esquirol has
been elected president of Ccsta Rica
Guatemala and Salvador, Central America,
have declared war, and a few ekirmishes have
taken plaoe between their troops As
Michael Turner was oarrylng Culver Pattereon
and John 9nell across the Mohawk, In a
rowboat, at Amsterdam, N. Y., the boat struck
the ferry cable and all three were thrown out
and drowned. Snell and Patterson were lawyers
The Metropolitan hotel, at Long
Branch, N. J , was destroyed by fire. Loss,
$70,000 Bernard Flaherty, known to the
thoater going world as Barney Williams, died
iu New York city of paralysis, aged fifty throe
years.
FORTY-FOURTH CONGRESS.
The HuxInfM of <>eoeral Infcrcm Trunkacted.
SENATE.
The House bill to define the tax on fermented
and malt liquors was taken up and passed,
with an amendment providing that nothing in
the act shall have the effect to chango the
present rules of the law respecting evidence in
any prosecution or suit.
Mr. Thurman (DemA of Ohio, called up the
motion to reconsider the vote by which the bill
in regard to counting the votes for President
and Vice-President was passed. After some
discussion the vote was reoonsidered?yeas,
31; nays, 23?and the bill was placed on the
calendar.
Mr. Frelinghuysen (Rep.), of New Jersey,
called up the bill in relation to the Japanese
indemrity fund, and submitted an amendment
to strike out the clause authorizing the President,
after correspondence with the Japanese
government, and in a manner satisfactory to
Kop TipitVi ifi in
11*9 VU UHLIOlCi DftlU AIUIU, M/^VMAVt ni*H *vw .
crease, to the government of Japan in trust,
the inoome thereof to be perpetually used for
the education of labor in Japan. Agreed to.
Mr. Morrill (Rep.), of Vermont, introduced a
bill authorizing the secretary of the treasury
to allow Mrs. Minnie Sherman Fitch to receive
free from duty a wedding present from the
khedive of Egypt, and it was passed unanimously.
Mr. 'Sargent (Sep.), of California, submitted
the following which was ordered to be printed:
Resolved, That the Senate recommend to
the President that he cause negotiations to be
entered upon with the Chinese government to
effect such change in the existing treaty
between the United States and China as will
lawfully permit the application of restrictions
upon the great index of Chinese subjects
to this country.
Mr. Booth (Lib.), of California, from the
committee on pensions, ieported favorably on
the bill to amend section 4,698 of the revised
statutes, so as to aliow a pension of $37 per
month to eoldiera, who have lost both, an arm
and a leg, in place of the $24 per month now
allowed. Placed on the calendar.
Mr. 8herman (Rep.), of Ohio, reported back
with amendments the concurrent resolution
to secure uniformity in gold coin, moneys, and
accounts between the United States and the
United.Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
Placed on the oalendar.
N On motion of Mr. Morrill (Rep.), of Maine,
the Senate insisted on its amendments to the
Deficiency Appropriation bill, and agreed to
the conference asked for by the House.
Messrs. Morrill (Me.), Allison and Davis were
appointed members of the conference committee
on the part of tiio Senate.
The Chair laid before the Senate the Consular
and Diplomatic Appropriation bill, with the
message of the House of Representatives refusing
to concur in the Senate amendment to
that bill. Mr. Sargent (Bep.), of California,
moved that the Senate insist npon its amendment,
and ask for a committee of conference,
and the Chair appointed Messrs. Sargent,
Frelinghnysen and Withers members of the
committee.
' rrAnar
Mr. Wbitehouee (Dem.), of New York, introduced
a bill for refunding the interest-bearing
debt of the United States into United States
consols bearing four percent, gold interest
and having forty years to run. Referred to
the committee on ways and means.
Mr. Cox (DemA of New York, presented the
petition of publishers of New York city against
the excessive rate of the Senate postal bill on
books and other printed matter not issued at
stated intervals, and for tbo restoration of the j
old rate. Referred.
The House resumed the consideration of the
Florida contested election case, and after some
discussion the report was adopted?yeas, 113 ;
nays, 83? and J. J. Finley was declared entitled
to the seat.
Mr. Singleton (Dem,), of Mississippi, from
the committee on appropriations, reported
back the Senate amendments to the Consular
and Diplomatic Appropr aticn bill, and moved
that tbey be non-concurred in. Agreed to.
Mr. Young (Dem.), of Tennessee, offered a
resolution reciting the unsettled oondition of
the Mexican republic, and the many outrages
committed on the persons and property of
American citizens living in the neighborhood
of the Rio Grande, and requesting the President
of the United States to order such military
force to rendezvous at eome suitable point
on the Rio Grande as will be able to enforce
existing neutrality laws, to prevent hostilities
on the border, and to preserve the peaceful
relations between the two oountriee, and also
I requesting the President to direct the general
of the army to proceed in person to the scene
of the threatened outbreak, and to take such
measures as may be necessary to maintain
peace and protect the honor and dignity of
this government. Referred to the committee
on foreign affairs.
Mr. Knott (Dem.). of Kentucky, introduced
a bill to regulate the privilege of a writ of
habeas corpus in certain cates, which was referred
to the judiciary committee.
The House resumed the consideration of the
bill to transfer the Indian bureau to the War
department, and after some debate the bill was
passed?yeas, 139 ; nays, 94.
The District Tax bill, as amended by Mr.
Neal's substitute, providing a tax of one and a
half per cent on all property, real and personal,
was passed.
Mr. Lawrence (Rep.), of Ohio, from the
judiciary committee, submitted a report in relation
to the Pacific railroade, proposing a bill
requiring them to create a sinking fnnd to pay
at maturity the principal and interest of the
subsidy bonds issued to them by the government.
Recommitted.
The House then went into committee of the
whole on the Legislative and Executive Appropriation
bill.
/n \ j
JUT. .riper ^i/eiu.j. ui vuuuiws, tuuveu mi
amend the item for the San Francisoo mint by
increasing the appropriation for wages from
$'225,000 to $627,000.
Mr. Randall moved to amend the amendment
by providing that the rate of wages paid
at the San Francisco mint shall not exceed
those at the Philadelphia mint by more than
twenty-five per cent (allowing fifteen per
cent for the differeDoe between paper aDd
gold, and ten per cent for the cost of living).
Agreed to.
Motions to insert an item of $14 000 to carry
on an assay ofihe in the mint buildings at New
Orleans, and an item of $4,000 for the mint of
Charlotte, N. 0., after a long discussion were
adopted. An item of $5,000 was also inserted
for an assay office at Boise City.
The question of the compensation of Territorial
judges (fixed in the bill at $2,500) gave
rise to discussion, most of the speeches being
against the utter inadequacy of that compensation.
Mr. Cannon, of Utah, illustrated it by
the statement that the Territorial Legislature
of Utah made an appropriation to increase the
compensation ol the United States judges,
who acted there in a dual capacity.
Mr. Hoar (Rep ), of Massachusetts, exprees- i
aJ aatAnidkmsnf af Ww P.onnnn'o ufafA. I
UU mi agwuiguui^u* ?v VAX vniuivu O qvanwment,
and intimated that any Federal judge
who reoeivod compensation from any outside
source deserved impeachment, and offered an
amendment forbiddiDg Territorial judges to
aocept any compensation except that provided
by Congress. Agreed to.
A Thrilling Incident.
A thrilling inoident is related concerning
a passenger train on the Missouri,
Kansas and Texas railroad. One day,
not long since, as it was dashing toward
Evansville, Mr. Chappell, the engineer,
saw, not a hundred yards ahead, a large
tree lying across the track. Instantdeath
seem inevitable; but Chappell
put on the air brake, reversed the lever,
and stood at his post, never flinching,
as the engine dashed into the obstruction.
The locomotive reared up, was
stripped of its wheels, and hurled to
one side. The tender and baggage car
were tossed into the ditch, but the passenger
cars were left standing on the
track uninjured. The engineer ancl the
fireman crawled out of the wreck,
strange to say, both unharmed, and the
conductor quieted the frightened passengers.
It was a miraculous escape for
the whole train, and the credit is due to
the brave engineer, who faoed death like
a Spartan.
Young man, you can't learn anything
new by hearing yourself talk, J
Planting Trees.
There seems to be a general desire?
at least in many parts of our country?
that this centennial year shotild witness
the planting of numerous shade trees.
Special efforts are being made in some
New England towns to accomplish this
result. The time for tree planting is at
hand, and all who engage in this good
work may have the satisfaction of feeling
that they are doing a substantial service
for coming generations. The beauty
and healthfulness of many a city and
village would be greatly increased by
the addition of shade trees.
Take a Newspaper Rather than Whip
Your Wife in Texas.
In the State case against Lewis for
whipping his wife, the defendant was
fined $100, which he is paying in jail.
If he had taken the Montague News,
^ K A i IAAW 4 A! 1<1 T1 A A V* /I ?AA <1 4 .M
biiaii papci kiio uo, auu icuu lb ill I11B
moments of idleness, the devil. would
not have tempted him to chastise his
better half. Just in this instance two
dollars judiciously spent for his oounty
Japer might have saved him over $100.
t is hard to imagine what the devil will
not put into the idle brain of a man who
will not take a county paper.
[JVom tU St. LouU Oloto.]
The Successful Physician.
There ia probably no man to whom the community
owee so much aa to the honeet, fairspoken
physician, who does his actual duty
both to himself and to his patients. Really
skilled physicians are not so numerous that
their virtues need no mention, and hence the
advertisement of Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo,
may well olaim the reader's attention. Dr.
Pieroe is a type of a class of men who obtain
success by careful and well directed effort, not
attempting too much, or creating false ideas
as to ability. The only reliable physician in
these days of complicated disorders aud highpressure
living is the " specialist," the man
who understands the one branch of the business.
Snoh in his line is Dr. Pierce. For the
benefit of his readers be has written a " Common
Sonso Medical Adviser," which is well
worth reading by those who need such a work.
With strict business honor, high professional
skill, reasonable feee, and a large corps of
competent assistants, Dr. Pieroe will donbtless
make his came familiar as "household words."*
Chronic Diseases Cured.?In communities
remote from larger towDsthore seems
to be bat two alternatives for the sick; either
to employ the family physician or to patronize
the patent medicine venders. Those who are
j driven to this extremity, if suffering with
rtKvonirt Jionoan tro mnnl/1 oJvi'on 4a <m!4a 4a
v/*" WM*v UUIVWW) n w nvutu aufwo IV IVilVQ VU
Dr. E. B. Foote, of 120 Lexington avenue,
N. Y. Dr. F. is the noted author of " Plain
Home Talk," "Medical Common Senee,"
" Scienoe in Story," and other popular medical
works which have had a wide circulation all
over the globe. In. Dr. F. we have a physician
who has had extensive experience in treating
the eick at a distance from his office, and,
moreover, hie consultations are free. Any one
of our readore is at liberty to consult him with
the mere outlay of a postage stamp. He is
said to have patients at this moment in Germany,
Great Britain, Liberia Chinese Empire,
and the West Indies. If patent medicines can
now and then hit successfully when adopted
by people who have little knowledge of their
own organisations or of their diseases, how
much more successfully can a physician, after
instituting all necessary inquiries, prepare
remedies precisely suited to the organisations
and diseases of the invalid; jast as a tailor
cuts and fits a coat to the baok. In this more
important matter relating to the health and
life of people, there is all the difference which
exists between Chatham street clothing and
that made by a first-class tailor, after taking
the most minute measurements. Db. Foots
is a recognized success in his epecialty. *
See notice Family Bitters. *
Important to Persons Visiting New York
or the Centennial*
The Grakd Umox Hotel, New York, opposite
the Grand Central depots has over 850 elegantly
furnished rooms. Elevator, steam, and
all modern improvements. European plan.
Carriage hire is saved, as baggage is taken
to and from the depot, free of expense. The
restaurants supplied with the beet Guosts
can live better for less money at the Grand
Union, than at any other first-class hotel.
Stages and cars pass the hotel constantly to all
parte of the oity, and to Philadelphia depot *
to all, particular!/ Invalids, spring Is a trying season.
Indications of sickness should be at onoe attended
to. Fatal diseases may be caused by allowing the
bowels to become constipated .and the system to remain
In a disordered oondition, until tbe disorder has time to
develop Itself. An onnce of prevention is worth a pound
of cure, is an eld and truthfnl saying. Therefore, we
advise all who are troubled with the oomplalnta now
very prevalent?headache, indigestion, disordered liver,
want of appetite, nausea, or feverish skin, to take, with
out delay, Schenck's Mandrake Pills. We knov of no
remedy so harmless and decisive In its aotlon. It at
Aviims etrllrae the mwvt r\ f the AI ass SA an/1 nmHneae
h6*1 thy toae to the system. People need never suffer |
from any disease arising from a disordered condition of
the liver if they would take this exoeilent medicine
when they feel the first indications of the malady.
Families leaving home for the summer months should
take three or fonr bores of these pills with them. They
have an almost instantaneous effect They will relieve
the patient of headache in one or two hcnrs, and will
rapidly cleanse the liver of surrounding bile, and will
effectually prevent a bL'ious attack. They are sold by
all druggists.
The Markets.
m TOBK
Beef Cattle-Prime to Extra Bullocks 08* <3 12*
Common to Good Texans.
MM* ... 08*e t9* i
Milch Ocrwi 40 00 976 00
nogv?Li^6t iHMt* ? ? "
Dr6686d,i??aeai???i?i04??? 10 *9 i*
8heep 00 3 08*
Lam be 15 9 17
Cotton?Middlings......... . 13*9 13*
Flour?Extra Western......... 3 6ft 9 7 00
State Extra ft 45 . 9 7 01
Wheat-Red Western 1 30 9 1 30
No. 2 Spring. 121 9 121
Rye?State.................. ....... 9ft 9
Barley?8tate,M... 86 9 36
Barley Malt 1 10 9 1 10
Oats?Mi* ed Western 40 9 *7
Corn?Mixed Western 67 9 37
Hay,percwt...* 60 9 1 !
Straw, per cwt. Mm#**
66 9 1 15
Hope....76's-12 ?17 olda? 04 9 06
Pork?Me?> ?... 22 86 922 60
Lard 13*9 13*
Fish?rdarkerel No. 1, new 26 00 927 00
No. 2, new. 16 00 911 WJ
Dry Cod, per cwt...... 4 0') 9325
Herring, Scaled, per box 24 9 24
Petroleum?Crude 07*908* Refined?IS*
Wool?California Fleece...... 23 9 28
Texas * 20 9 v?
Australian " 4) 9 4)
Butter-State 24 9 <*
Western Dairy.. 26 <# 32
Western Yellow 22 9 27
Western Ordinary 16 9 2J
Cheese?State Factory 06 9 13
SUte Skimmed 04 9 07
Western 06 9 12
Eggs?State.. 17*# 17*
Auuri.
Wheat 1 37 9 1 37
Rye-State 91 9 93
^ vri-.j HQ A OA
wru?mJLAWl ?v V
Barley?State 03 3 90
Oats?State 88 3 W
BUTTAXO.
Flour . 8 00 3 9 76
Wheat?No. 1 Spring 130 3180
Corn?Mixed 60 3 60
Oats 38 3 88
Bye 78 3 73
Barley 83 3 10)
atLTOfOBX.
Cotton?Low Middlings 12*3
Flour?Bxtra 8 78 3-8 78
Wheat?Bed Western 12" 3 1 90
Bye 76 3 78
Corn?Yellow 60 3 60
Oats?Mixed 43 3 ?6
Petroleum 08 \3 08*
PHILADELPHIA.
Beef Cattle?Extra 04 3 07
8heep 05*3 07?
Hogs?Dressed 11*3 13#
Flour?Pennsylvania Extra 6 ?6 3 8 60
Wheat?Bed Western 11) 3 1 10
Bye 81 3 81
Corn?Yellow 6.1 3 65
Mixed C7 3 63
Oats?Mixed 43*3 43#
Petroleum?Crude ..10*310* B?nn?d?J8*
WATXBTOWlf, WATS.
Beef Oattle?Poor to Choica..,..,.. 4 76 3 8 76
Shfwp 9 (iff 3 6 f0
liavi I 00 3 8 0)
Pimples on the face, rough skin,
chapped hi>ndfl, s<rheum and all cutaneous
affectionfl cored, the ukin made soft and
smooth, by the nee of JuwipebTab 8oap. That
made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York, is
the only kind that oan be relied on, as there
are many imitations, made from oommon tar,
which are worthless.
I Th*otKh the length and breadth
aMlKTiMCl the land tfc* celebmed sill,,
r tl i ljiN VKR TIPPHj? Boot* and
l| M ? JJ SJ3IH Sn?ea sie sold by the millloo, for
4Ubm4 oarenU know they leet twice as
5 ft IJ 98^1 lone aa tb<-ae without Tips. .
Ajeo try Wire QuiUed Holes. 1
Have you eeeo the H9ffiW9
CABLE SCREW WIRE IgrVm
Boots and Shoes ? Millions are
be In c woru; all eay thry are the H^RPRV9
easiest and best Shoe ever made. M't'H.a^J
Also try Wire Qui!ted Soles.
QR Fancy Centennial Cardn, with name. IDs.
&f) A"d> J B J1PSTED. Naeeau. Ro^as. Cc., N Y.
OA FANCY MIXED CAltll-, len tU s. with
?t\f name. 10 eta. Nabbac Cabd Co., Nassau, N. Y.
A PERFECT PUZZIEH. Send lOcte. to the
BOtjUEr PUB. CO., Providence, R. I. Box 1146.
I.A DIES! Superfluous Hair permanently eradicated.
Price oQc. A at am p. Union Toilet Go .IndlanapollaJnd.
OR JKT C A 1.M NUCARDH, with name in cold,
?t} 80 cents. J. K. Harder, Maiden Bridge, N. Y.
6 VERY desirable NEW ARTICLES for Axanta.
Mfr'd by J. Q. UarrWKLL A Go.. Cheahlre, Ooan.
OA Extra Fine mixed Cards, with NuasJO
tj\3 eta., po?t-pald. L. Jones A Co., Naasan, N. Y.
Tkrofltable, Pleasant work; hundreds now employed,
JT hnndreda more wanted. M. N. Lovxll, Erie, Pa.
WANTED AGENTS. SampU* amfVuVU/rm,
yy Bttlrr Own Gold. A. COULTER A 00.. Ohlcaco.
&t>AA A MONTH. Agents wanted. ExceL *ig.
Co.. 151 Michigan Arcane, Chicago. PI.
FKEK Gift of a Piano for distributing oar otrcQlarj.
Address P. 8. PiAMO Oo.. 810 Broad way.NewYorfc
$ C f A AAA aday st boms. Ssmplss worth $1 sent
$0 LO $<6 V free. 8TINS0N A OO.. Portland. Me.
(10 a day t home. Ajrenta wanted. Outfit sad terms
free. A drees TRUE A 00., A mparts. Maine.
$4Ao(?OV.oerdsr. SendtorChrom*Ctoilft
jlU?H. Bcitoso'sBona, Bostot-,AHA:
QOQA PER MONTH TO AGENTS to seU
*J\J mj new " Patent Steam Cooking Machine."
Address, with etamp, T. 8. PAGE, Toledo. O.
A cents Wanted.?Twenty 9zll Mounted Ohromos
xx for J* 1. 2 samples by mall, poet-paid,20c. Coktikintal
Ohbomo Oo.. 37 Nassau Street, New York.
A 960 a Week and Sinenses, or 9100
u54l " forfett 'd. All the new and standard Novelties,
Chromos, etc Valuable Samples free with Circulars.
R.L. FLETCHER. Ill Chambers Street. New York.
T ^AeBEST OFFE R SwUdato Yo5f V
JJ MEN and LADIES. Address, wttbHtamo, X
HHKKMAN TBI,. CO., OBERLIN, O.
iftPfm A WEEK guaranteed to Male and Fe% /'/
male Agents, In their locality. Coats
%D m I NOTHING to try It. Fartieaier* Free.
P. O. V10KKRY A OO., Augueta. Ma
s flmnsfl All Want It?thousands of lire# a: d
A P rli iPv millions of property saved by It-for tons.
A |TPi II I n made with It?particular# free. O. M,
ALU-Oil A V Lininotow A BRO..NewYorkA Oblc \
!> > ! sod Morphine Habit abaolutaly and
11 Vl|IIH speedily cured. Painless; oo publicity.
I 11 III m send stamp for Particulars. Dr. OAJUr
"* dUlll TPS, 18T Washington St., Chicago,111.
aa a A MONTH ? Agents wanted evecyIL
'JKII where. Burineee honorable an I Qrit?n/llll
class. Particulars eent free. Address
uraw WORTH A OO., St Louis. Mo.
A1WTT1F HABIT cured. Chinese mode of
II 11 ll| iVI Gore. Painless. No publicity. Does
II Wr ||l |V| not Interfere with business or p'eee!jf
I II III are. Oure anaranteed Address
w W !* Da. J. B. VlLFORD. Toledo, O.
\flnd Head In a, Paycbomanry. Faeelnation,
JjA Soul Charming, Mesmerism, and Lovers' Guide,
bowing how either sex may fascinate and gain Um lore
and affection of any person they choose instantly. 400
pages. By msll 50c. Hant A Co., 130 8 7tn St.Polla.
AMvfvw Habit Pared at Home. Nopabfluinw
* Petty. Ttme abort. Terms moderate.
III 111 III M*X> testimonials. 5th year of anvl
I will paralleled HUoceee. Describe esse.
Address Dr. f7 R. II ARSiH, Qaittcy, Uleh.
i I a fl
HALE'S w
Honey op Horehound and Tar
fob the cube 07
coughs, colds, influenza, Hoabsssne88,
dlfpicult breathing, and
all Affections op the Throat,
Bronchial Tubes, and Lungs,
leading to consumption.
This infallible remedy is composed of
the Honst of the plant Horehound, in
chemical union with Ta^-Balm, extracted
from the Life Principle of the
forest tree Abies Balsaxea. or Balm
of Gilead.
The Honey of Horehound soothes
and scatters all irritations and inflammations,
and the Tar>Balm cleanses
, and the throat and air-passages
leading to the longs. Five additional
ingredients keep the organs cool, moist,
ana in healthful action. Let no prejudice
keep you from trying this great
medicine of a feme us doctor, who hrt
saved thousands o: ,:ves by it in his
large privato practice.
N. B.?The Tar Balm has no bad
taste or smell. 4
?? *1 nan T./-.MHI I
FBIGB8, OVF uuhb asiar fi ran
Great saving to bay Urge size. *"*
Sold by all DrnggiaU./
* "Pike's Toothache Drops''
^re^n 1 minute.
PRINTERS' ROLLERS
Made from tfaa Patent" Exeelsler" Cwapmdtlon,
will recast, not affected by the weather; price, 30 centa
per pound. Is used to printing this paper.
J. K. COLE. Agt.. 90 firSt.. N. Y.
CUITACn Ooaranteed to do double the work
vfllWAuU of common scrapers. Townships
SCRAPER can take them on triaL Prloe 815.
_4\n? Send for Manualof Road-Making
mwliipw and Ditching, free. Add's Chicago
DITCHER. Scraper and Pitcher Co.. Chicago.
U.lll^ 1 Z?UJ sr&jsssWKsi
Cards, for M Cents. Each card contains
a toene which Is not viable until held towards tha light
Nothing like thetaever before offered In Amsriea Blgiiiducvmcita
(o Apnh. Novbltt Panrnwa Co, Ashland, Ma?
JV jh Klnely Printed Bristol Visiting
M M Cards sent Doet-pald for 26 eta. send
stamp for samples of Glass l ards,
w OfsrUS] Snewflakes. 8cmk Dmmusk.
F.tc. Ws bars over 100 stylaa,
AtftmU ww?*f K. TL fuller A pp.. Brockton. Maaa
riARDS AO white or tinted Bristol, 20 eta; AO
V 8 now flake. Marble, Rep, or Damask, 35 eta; AO
Glass, 40 ota; with your name beautifully printed on
them, and 66 samples of type, scents' price-list, etc.,
sent by return mail on reoelpt of prloe. Dtsooont to
Olube. Beet of work. W. 0. GANNON, 46 Knee land
Street, Boston. Refers to 8. M. PETTXHOtLL A 00.
FDIILY BITTERN. ISDlQttnos is reliered
with one dose. Dyspepsia, Oonstipatiow, Headache,
Jaundice and Biliousness cured In a short
time. Nervous Irritability, Rheumatism, Kidxxt
and Liver Complaints cu>ed in a few daya Cares
Piles. Kr vbipelab, 8ceoptjla,Ulcxrs, Boils and all
8ein Diseases b? pnrlfylns the Blood. They will not
Intoxicate, bnt will cor* abnormal thirst for strong
drink. Try them! M. S. JAMES, M. D , Proprietor,
Brooklyn, N. Y. For Sale by Drngglsta Price IZ.OO.
You Can Save a Dollar
Almost every day in the year and make many a dollar by
having a small Portable Printing Press and doing your
own printing and odd jobs for othera Pie?as, with
Type and all fixtures, and instructions by which anybody
can learn small work In a day, coat bnt a few dollara
83 Presses now ready. Send two 3a stamps for Illustrated
Catalogue. ? ? ? _
excelsior PREsa Co.. Merlden, Coup.
/CAPSICUM PLASTER fob
V Local &. RHEUMATIC PAINS.
Batter than Mustard Does not blister. It Is spread
on muslin and pot op in one and fire yard mils. Its
application relieves Uhbonic Rheumatic affections;
Muscular ai.d Neuralgic pains, oplnai Irrigation:
Mnscn'ar Debility, Rheumatic Muscular or Nervous
(shaking) Paraly-is; Stiff Nice ; Lumbago, Sciatica,
etc. It Is one ni the beet" Counter Irritants " ever
Introduced Made br J. & I. COD?INGT4)N,
1182 BkODTAT (St art event House), NEW YORK.
CMlOPKR?8 COMPOUND!
PHOSPHORUS PILLS.
A Safe, Speedy and Radical cure for Nervous Exhaustion.
Paralysis, Softening of the Brain, Epilepsy, St
Vitas* Dance. Loss of Power, Languor of Mind, Neuralgia.
Depression of Spirit*, Inaptitude for Work, Ooasamptioa,
Kidney Diseases, Spinal Irritation, Locomotor,
Ataxia, Shaking, Palsy and to Vita I lie and Resuscitate
the system from that condition of " Break down n
resulting from Mental and Physical Exceaa and Old
Age. Sent to any address on receipt of price.
GEORGE COOPER, M. D.. 226 E. 10th Street,
New York. Price. IjjH oO per box.
FITS,
EPILEPSY, FALLING FITS
&*SWt&eSB3*~
Spring Debility, *
Spring Debility, *
Spring Debility,
LAHGHOB,. LASSITUDE,
AND Til IT
row state of the system
Peculiar to the SPRING OF THE YEAR, in bum*
d lately relieved by the
PERUVIAN
SYRUP,
Protected SoMoo of Monde of Iron.
One of the Most Eminent Jurists of
New England
Writes to a friend u follows: " I bare tried the PERU
VIAN SYRUP, and the result fully sn stains your prediction.
It has nude a NEW MAM of ms; in/need
Into mj system new rigor and energy. I am no longer
tremolo<u and debilitated, as when yon last saw me, bat
stronger, heartier, and with larger capacity for labor,
mental and physioal, than at any time daring the last
Are years."
An Eminent Divine of Boston says:
" I hare need the PERUVIAN SYRUP for some
time past; It fires me MEW VIGOR, BUOYAMUY OF
8P1RIT3. ELASTICITY OF MUSCLE."
\ ???
From the Trumpet and Universaliat
Magazine.
" Many of oar personal frisnds hare been eased by
the PERUVIAN SYRUP, bat we hare one proof more
powerful than all these, and that la?OUR OWN PERSONAL
EXPERIENCE! Mo authority can pot this
down?no argument can contradict It; and no good
word shall be spared on oar part on til a knowledge ef
this blessing shall be spread broadeaat among the
people."
PERUVIAN
" SYRUP
Supplies the blood with its Vital Principle of
f.ife Element, IB.ON, Infusing Strength, Vigor
md New Life, into all parte of the system. BEING
FREE FROM ALCOHOL, Its energizing effeote are
not followed by corresponding resetlon, but ere perms*
:OOt.
SKTH W. FOWLS 4 SONS. 80 Hantaan A venae,
Boston, Proprietors. Sold by ell druggist* Pamphlets
free. Send for one.
Agents Wanted ! Medals end Diplomas Awarded
" "SkS*"'* Pictorial BIBLES.
ISOO Illustrations. Address for new circulars.
t. J. HOI. HAN 6c I'O., 93Q ARCH Street. Phils.
As parties wOl *> all the? ebhs.ljr. Y. W?ilr
.1J.
J mm iUs>p for pertJcuUn. C.I V J ^ 1
w Ms^ssesisss^ iilii ?
Iff J.... <.*.? ?-/SJ ' "1
TV Q reveries are the heet sJnZWtSSffmM^M,
^ft&St
'flMAaiii&Bowpijag.gg warren Bt^flnstnajimM
&K93 CENTENNIAL
UinVEBSAL HISTORY
To the cloee of the first 100 years of oar National lade*
L^endenoe, Including an aooount of the ooming Grand
?nteonlal Rxbginon. 700 pages, fine engravings,
.ow price, Extra terms. Send for Utrcnlar.
J. W. ZITOLglMWa. & 18 Arch SL.PhUadelpbla.Pit.
A BOOK for the MILLION.
MEDICAL AOVICE AffflStfSffiSroESS
Catarrh, Rupture. Opium Habit. Jtc., SENT FREE on receipt
ul stamp. Address.
Dr. Butts' Dispensary No. 11N. 8th st, 8t. Lools, Mo
nil | Storiestn The PEOPLE'* LEDGER.
1111 Right Large cages every week. SaUbilahed
W w five yeara. Mssa Louise Aicott. Mrs. Mary
J. Holmes, Oliver O <lc. and Naebr eentxv
hot* SENT OH T&AL THREE MONTHS FOR
ONLY 50 CENTS. Samples of different dates sent
b*RKK for a 3-cent stamp.
iliK;CURTI8^nhlUker^ejjton^Inan.
SAVE MONEY
By sending 04.75 for any 04 Magaatne and THB
WEEKLY TRIBUNE (regular price 06). or 00.76
for the Magazine and THB SEMI-WEEKLY TBI
iUNl (regular price 08). Addraaa
THK TKUiPHt. Hew.Terh.
fR AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
Centennial
J IIIAVANU II 0
v nii>IUItI?r Eu..>,
The rreat Interest In tbe tbrll'iag htatory of oaroountry
melee this the fastent sePtc* hook ever published.
U oontaine a fall eooonnt of the (rand Centennial
lixhiblUon.
CAUTION.?Old, Incomplete and Unreliable works
are being circulated; aee that the book yon boy contains
448 llse Engraving* and 1125 Paces.
Send for circulars and extra term* to Aetata. Addrsae
WATIONAL PUHL1 UIMG CO.. Philadelphia, Pa.
Selected Freneb Burr Mill Stone*
Of all sizes, and superior
workmanship. Portable
drlndiag 91111a, upper or
nnder runners, for Font
or Merchant work. ?
Genuine Dutch A?ker
Boltluc Cloth. Hill
Flrka, Corn Shelters and
Cleaners, Gearing, Shafting.
Pnllies, Hangers, etc.; art
kinds of Mill Slachinery and
Millers1 supplies. Send for
Pamphlet. Wraab MU1
Company, Box 143*.
Cincinnati. Ohio.
-ASTHMAmHE
subscribers are manufacturers and proprieL
tors of Dr. R. W. Head's Celebrated Astbma Belief,
which is undoubtedly the beet Asthma Remedy
yet d.scovered. Install relief Is guaranteed or purchase
price refunded. We put up tbe medicine in
boxes of three sizes, which retail for i5c., 40c. and
$1. Persons remitting r 'ail price will have tbe
medicine promptly forwarded by mall, post-paid.
Also samples sent free to any who ntny desire.
Prices per dor., $1.74; $3.50 and $7 00; gross price,
$18; $35; $72. Wholesale agents: John F. Henry,
Ci.rrau & Co., N. Y.; John D. Park k Sons, Cincin
nati, Ohio; Richardson fc Co., St. Loni?,Mo.; Lord,
Smith & Co., Chicago, 111.; O. C. Goodwin & Co.,
Boston,Mas?.; French.Ricbards & Co.,Philadelphia,
Pa. Address ETHEBIDGE, TULLEK ft CO.,
Rome, N. Y.
$m\m
FOR $1.00, POSTPAID.
In order that erei/body ma/ bo enabled to take thla
great Story and Family Newspaper, we have determined
la ofler it till Jan., 1877, for I1.QQ, poetpaid. It lathe
LARGEST, HANDSOMEST, BEST,
and most widely circulated Newspaper In the West.
Bend money addressed
TflM LNDOKR, Omoaao, Iix.
HTN.O IT