Port Royal standard and commercial. [volume] (Beaufort, S.C.) 1874-1876, November 30, 1876, Image 4
FARM, GARDEN AND HOUSEHOLD
Domtstlr Helps.
To Clear Soup.?Let it cool; then
beat tip the whites of two or three eggs;
stir them into the cold soup with the
broken shells of the eggs; set the soup
over the fire and keep stirriDg until the
scum rises. Let it boil four or five
minutes, then take it off; set it aside
until it settles; then strain it and serve
hot.
Hashed Beef. ?Slice and brown one
large onion with a small piece o? butter
in an iron saucepan; then add one teaspoonful
of moist sugar, which also
brown well. Mix in a small cup a dessertspoonful
of flour with a little water.
Pour this into the saucepan, mix well,
and add a breakfastcupful of good plain
beef or veal gravy, 6tirring occasionally.
^?1 ? fcliooo r\on_
CUl your cum urci mw tum duwd, t"-F
per it, aid put into a sauoepan with a
bnnch of page. Let the whole stew uutdl
it boils. Serve np, garnished with
pieoes of toast.
First rate Coffee.?Take a coffeecupful
of the be6t Java coffee, browned
to the color of chocolate, gronnd not too
fine, and mix with it half an egg. Put
this into a coffee pot or boiler and pour
over it oue quart of boiling water, stirring
as you put the water in; boil slowly
for fifteen minutes; then stand the boiler
oa the back of the rauge for ten minutoe
to settle; turn all coffee off from
the grounds at once into an urn or cof
fee pot, that can stand upon the stove to
keep hot. Coffee loses the flavor by
standing on the grounds longer than
half an hour, and should be very hot to
be good. Pat into the cup a teaspoonful
of condensed milk and some boiled
fnilk and turn the coffee into it. No
Fr.nch coffee is any better.
Cooking Potatoes.?Potatoes and all
vegetables, is plaoe of boiling, should
be cooked by steam, else they must be
more or less'water soaked. The simplest
and cheapest eteamer is easily had by
having a steamer made to fit the large
iron kettle that every kitchen has. The
steamer, of tin, made to fit the kettle,
the sides fitting down, say one inch, a
snug, perfect fit; one inch from this rim
is a bottom with holes cut in it, half an
inch in diameter and one inch apart.
The steamer, like a basin with straight
or perpendicular sides, nine inches deep,
a tin cover to fit perfectly tight, the
cover made to run up higher in the
middl? two or three inches. This
steamer can be made for $1.50, probably.
When stewing fruit, put it in an
earthen dish; set dish and all in the
steamer. The fruit then does not waste
its flavor as when 6tewed with water.
Steam puddings, instead of boiling, if
you would retain the flavor.
Laying; Oat an Orchard.
Mr. R. Peters, an extensive nurseryman
of Delaware, recommends the following
plau of planting \oung orchards,
now adopted by many of our most successful
fruit growers :
0 0 0 0
x s * x sx sx
0 x 0 x O x O
X S X S X 8 X
O x 0 x O x O
X S X S X S X
OxOxOxO
O represents standard apple trees,
thirty feet apart, forty-eight trees to the
acre; s, standard pears or cherries,
thirty-five to the acre ; x, dwarf pears,
dwarf apples, dwarf cherries, plums,
peaches or quinces, eighty-two to the
acre. There will be eight rows of apple
trees, six trees in a row, on an acre. Mr.
Peters' arguments in favor of this plan
are substantially as follows; "It is a
great loss to plant and grow an orchard
on the old principle?trees forty to fifty
feet apart. This arrangement provides
for 165 trees to the acre instead of
twenty-seven, as on the old plan, thus
putting on one acre what would require
six acres, planted forty foet apart. It
is easier and cheaper to fertilize and
cultivate one acre than six. The intervening
trees, being dwarfs and close
?!11 _ ?11 Tkfi
growers, W1U IlUl/ lUKnno at au.
trees con be headed so low as to shade
the ground and trunks, which is indispensable
to successful fruit growing.
Grain or grass seed should never be
sown in a young orchard, and with
this olose arrangement there is net inducement
to do so, as the farmer cannot
turn in stock without having his young
fruit trees destroyed."
Prepare for Potato Bus*.
In time of peace prepare for war. Before
the time oomes for planting potatoes
have everything ready for the bugs.
Early planting will prove no defense.
The lugs in the West emerge from the
soil as soon as the frost is out, and may
be seen patiently watching the young
shoots, and even going beneath the surface
to meet them. A correspondent of
the Country Gentleman suggests slicing
potatoes, sprinkling them with paris
green, and placing them in the fields
when the shoots are just breaking
ground. This will destroy nearly all
the beetles before they can lay any eggs.
The farmer may then rest contented
until the first crop of larvee is half
grown, when a tablespoouful of paris
green should be mixed with eight or ten
quarts of water, and kept well stirred
with a broom brush, and sprinkled over
every hilL This is all that is required,
and will be found far more lasting and
efficient than any application of poison
mixed with plaster. This soon falls or
blows off, but the other seems to pene
trate the pores and to remain quite a
length of time, killing both bugs and
larvae so completely that the correspondent
says that he has sometimes crossed
a potato held without being able to find
a single survivor. He thinks two applications
will general^ suffice for a crop
of Early Rose, and if judiciously applied,
the potato bug will cease to be a
terror. Sliced potatoes sprinkled with
poison should be used after the vines
are dead to finish up the last of the survivors.
What Came from the Well.
^ The Salisbury (Del.) Sentinel says.
Mr. Samuel J. Turner drew up from his
well, in the water bucket, a most curious
reptile. The thing, which looks something
like a huge lizard, is about twelve
inches long, and is of a dark brown or
leaden color, with dull yellow spots
over the entire body. It has a head
like a frog, is white under the throat,
its breathing holes are situated on its
upper jaw, in the same manner as a porpoise's.
It has four legs and a large flat
tail, about the same length as the body.
With this tail it can propel itself through
the wa< er at a very rapid rate. It is by
some supposed to be a tritou or water
newt, but Dick says that it is a spring
feeder, and that if he is removed from
the well, the well will go dry, as his
mission is to keep the springs open, and
they generally go in pairs,
L
5EW8 OF THE WEEK. c
C
What la Doing In the Old World and the
New. <3
The Democrat* of West Virginia secured c
the same nnmber of representatives in the ^
[ Legislature they had last year, and will elect 1
i /?<>? 4i/4atc fnr TTnittd Sfatfes Sftliator .
I UiCU VOi.>UIUC*?V *V? V V. ^ ?. ?? ? ??? - - .
I One hundred and forty thousand people at- 8
I tended the Exhibition on Ohio day?ranking c
third in point of numbers The winners of 1
the races at Baltimore were as follows: One 1
I mile for all ages, $275, Inspiration, 1.48 ; mile y
heats for three-year-olds, $450, Ambush, ?
1:47X? 1-53. free handicap for all ages, $450, I
Burgoo, 3.17J The governors of the large ^
Western States which have snfTered from the [
grasshoppers met in convention at Omaha *
and after discussing the subject thoroughly, :
adopted a petition to Congress to aid the sec- I
tions ravaged Gen. Terry disarmed the *
Indians at Standing Rock agency, bat did not 1
succeed in getting a great number of arms,and 1
it is believed the savages hid them A run- {
ning race at Newmarket, England, for the
Dallingham handicap resulted in a dead heat 1
betweeu the American horse Bay Final and '
the B.itish animal Broadside. On running it <
off Bay Final was successful Wm. B. Whit- '
ney, of Chicago, is baukrupt. Liabilities, 1
$425,000, much of it duo in >ow York 8tate. '
The Continenial Life Insurance Co., of 1
New Yoi k, is defunct.
The veseels Alert and Discovery, of the
English navy, which started on a Polar expedition
over a year ago, have arrived at
Valencia on their return. Although not sue- '
ceeding in reaching the pole, they bring back .
an extensive scientific memoranda, gathered .
under great hardship. The Alert passed last .
winter in latitude eighty-two degrees, twenty- j
seven minutes, where the sun was invisible
for 112 da:the thermometer stood fifty- |
nine degrees below zero for two weeks, on one
oocasior reaching 104 degrees below freezing
point. From this point a siedge party was
sent northward to eighty-three degrees,
twenty minutes, but no land was discovered, 1
and after taking observations the intrepid 1
party returned, having lost three men on the I
journey Two aged sisters, widows, named !
Brcdack and Stoddard, residing alone in
Laurens county, S. C., were found murdered.
An ax was the instrument used Tho knit- ,
ting mills at Rome, N. Y., were destroyed by ;
fire The Sioaz commission having stricken (
from tho treaty the clause relating to removal ,
Tn^ian Territory. the Indian chiefs all
signed it willingly By a railroad accident i
near 8carboro, Mo . t*vo men wore fatally and i
a number serious'y iujured A freight train '
on the Jersey Midiun1 road jumped the track 1
just before reacbir g the high bridge at Hawthorne,
and the engine striking the end of the
structire, knocked it from its moorings and
it fell, the train following into the chasm.
The engineer and fireman were killed and two
other employees fatally injured The hur
ricane which caused tuch extensive losses
throughout the West Indiee extended over the
states cf Central America, and great distress
prevails in consequence. Managua, in Nicaragua,
was first inundated and then visited by
the fury of the wind, which demolished fcur
hundred houses, killing a large nnmbcr of
people. Three hundred houses were destroyed
in Blewfield. The government is extending
aid to the suffering populace. The coffee
crop suffers to the extent of $3,000,000, and
the losses at Managua are put at $2,000,000!
In a free-to-all race on Fleetwood track,
New York. Judge Fullerion took one heat in
2:22, Great Eastern the second in 2:20^, and
Rarus the three next and race in 2:21}, 2:23
and 2:20 John Hills and John Fullem,
who murdered Farmer Chiseled iu Atlantic
connty, N. J., last August, for the purpose of
robbing the house, were hanged for the crime,
at May's Landing. The rope abont Fullem's
neck slipped, and he died in terrible agony,
meanwhile uttering most horrible sounds of
gasping for breath, and clutohing wildly with
his manacled hands. A number of spectators
fainted at the scene. Hills died easily.
Thomas Lanigan, of Brooklyn, N. Y., after
spreeing for several days, went home, and
driving his wife and children from Che houee,
threw himself on a bed, where he was snbeeqectly
found dead?having thrown himself
face downward on a pillow, where he suffocated,
being to much iutoxioated too turn over.
A dispatch from Halifax states tb&t an
American built schooner supposed to belong
iu Eastpcr\ Me., was driven ashore and
wrecked on Sable island. All the crew were
loot; five bodies being reoovereJ Three
Methodist ciicuit riders, while goiog their
rounds in Arkansas, were fatally shot by illicit
distillers, who mistook them for revenue officers
There is a difference between the
Pope and the French government?the former
wishing to divide the bishoprio of Lyons
and the authorities not permitting it A
Mr. Sturdivaot, wife and three children were
murdered in their beds, at Perry town, Miss.,
and the bouse burned to conceal the deed.
Two negroes who planned and executed the
crime were captured, and one was hanged and
the other shot by the citizens.
A deficiency of $300,000 has been discovered
in the city treasury of Philadelphia A
passenger train on tho Delaware, Lackawanna
and Wescern railway was run into near Gouldsboro,
Pa., and badiv wrecked. Five persons
wore kiL'od and thirteen wonndod After a
hard day's fighting the Turks drove the 8erviane
from Dejunis, and occupied the heights
on Sunday night, after having out the formidable
army of the Servians direotly in the center.
On account of the privations the Servians have
suffered, and their discontent with the general
commanding, the Russian officers had the utmost
diffonlty in getting them to fight as well
as they did. It was finally necessary to send
tor rruioe miiaa 10 prevent tue euure tumy
from becoming disorganized after the defeat.
Allen C. Laroe, who administered poison
to his y amily in May last near Easton, Pa.,
from the effects of whioh his father and two
or three others died, has been sentenced to
death While Thomas Stevens was quarreling
with his wife, at Hagerstown, Md., the
wife's father, Wm. Hawthorne, aged seventytwo
veers, interfered, whereupon Stevens
killed him Burglars secured an entrance
by false keys to the jewelry store of 8tein
Bros., New York city, during 8unday night,
and, forcing the eafe, took $25,000 worth of
jewelry, leaving nothing in the store but
plated ware. The same night the fancy store
of BesthofT, on Broadway, was robbed of nearly
$10,030 worth of stock .... .Buffalo's census
! snows a population of 143,594 Cuba's sugar
I crop will be greatly reduced by the late hurrij
cane.
The accident to the Centennial train on the
] Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad
i was one of the most serious c f the kind that
j has taken place for a long time. The train
| was an immense one, having fully 1,200 pas- I
I 83ngcrs on board. It was two hours behind j
I time when it reached Lehigh station, about
: twenty miles from Scranton, and at this point
1 a heavy coal train ran into the passenger, tel!
esooping two of the cars through and through,
| and bronkiDg five others. The scenes that eni
sued were heartrending, although by an ali
most miraculous circumstance the number of
: kiil-jJ was but fow. Two passengers were inI
sf&utly killed and some twenty-five very badly
| injured?some of them so seriously that they
; artorwtud died. Every care possible was taken !
| of the injured.,,,. A firedamp exploei^n j
urred in tlie Wadesville colliery, near 8t.
Jlair, Pa.,and three men were terribly burned.
.... The will of the late James Lick, which
levised a large amount of money to Ban Franisco
charities, has been oon.ested by the eon,
fohn H. Lick Gen. Miles had an engagenent
with Bitting Bull on the twenty-fir?t
,ud twenty-second alt., on Cedar creek, and
ucceeded in killing and wounding a number
>f hie wily adversaries. Two soldiers were
rounded. The Indians were forced to retreat,
?nd Gen. Miles followed them* sixty miles,
rhen they separated into two bands, the troops
ollowing that body headed by Sitting Bull in
>erson, which was moving in the direction of
j'ort Peck A forty-eight hours' downpour
>f rain in Orleans, Ind., flooded the surroundng
country so that the water rose to the winlow
tops, and gave the entire place the ap>earance
of a lake. Great damage was done
o property The whaling fleet recently
ibandoned in the Arctic ocean had un ^pard
L2,031 barrels of whale oil, 199 barrels of
" < inn oI
sperm uu, ui5 xuv puuuuo ui ttuaivwuu uuu
13,000 pounds of ivory Later intelligence
Prom the West Indies brings farther accounts
3f damage b, the recent hurricane 4 cry
Df fire in a Chinese theater in San Francieoo
started the immense audience in a panio
stricken rush for the narrow exit. Many were
knocked down and trampled on?the police
taking ont twenty dead bodios.
An Open Polar Sea.
Speaking of the return of the English
Arctic expedition, Dr. Hayes, an old
explorer, says : I have no disposition to
blow my own trumpet, but if, with
their great advantages, this English expedition
could not have accomplished
something more than they did, it were
better had they not made so mnch fuss
about it. The Alert and Discovery are
two fine ships; both are screw steamers.
Never was there an expedition fitted out
by any government so bountifully.
Nothing was wanting. They had every
scientific appliance, and the expedition
cost not less than 8750,000. It was to
go to the north pole an < make discoveries
there, and the British flag was to
be planted on the northern axis of the
earth, and of course the world was to be
astonished at British energy and British
pluck. What is the result# One year
of trial, ice eighty feet thick and no
chanoe of getting to the north pole. In
plain terms, 1 don't believe a word of
it, and I don't believe that the expedition
had any right to return when it
did. Why, I did nearly all they did
with my little bit of a schooner?United
States?which was not much more than
half the size of the Dauntless. I had
no steam, and could not work to windward
among the ice fields of Smith's
sound, and, becoming entangled, I was
forced to go into winter quarters, in a
crippled condition, in latitude seventyeight
deg. seventeen min., at the mouth
of that sound. There I remained ten
months before the iqp broke up and
liberated me. With steam I could have
gone further, but I had no other alternative
than to await the spring, and
travel over the frozen sea with dog
sledges. I marked, as nearly as oould
be determined, latitude eighty-two deg.
?say 480 miles from the pole. * * *
I am a firm believer in an open Polar
sea. It it not a sea available for the
purposes of commerce, but it is certainly
a sea or ooean, as you may please to
call it. Whatever interest attaches to it
is of a purely scientific character. To
oursue science requires patience, and to
go with a great government expedition,
especially to make scientific discoveries,
with the distinct understanding that
there is no other motive, seems to me
to require something more than a simple
44 It can't be done." So far as getting
to the north pole is concerned, I am
sure it can be done, and in failing to do
it after only one year's trial I think this
English expedition has shown a lamentable
lack of English pluck. They say
they had a dreadful time ef it; some
people were frozen and three or four of
them died. That was their own fault
Traveling in the Arctic regions is not
more terrible or more dangerous than
traveling anywhere else. It is a matter
of care and judgment. Accidents may
happen, but it is the duty of a commander
to see that they don t happen.
I believe I have made as long a sledge
journey as any one on record. I experienced
a temperature during that journey
of seventy deg. below zero, and yet
there was never in all the sixty days occupied
by the journey so much as a frost
bite to any of the party, and yet this
was in the exact region where the English
expedition has been, finding, as
they say, eighty feet of ice. The Polaris
was in the same quarter and got
nearly as far north.
Paradise of Money Lenders,
The Pall Mali Gazette says ; India
must be the paradise of money lenders.
Some years ago a Christian capitalist
advanced the sum of ?5 on the personal
security of a Eurasian ooreligionist em- j
ployed as a writer in a government
office. The interest was originally only
seventy-five per cent, per annum, but as
nothing had been paid at the end of two
years the debtor gave a promissory note
for the amount then due, and undertook
to pay 120 per cent, for the future
Three years went by without any payments
being made, and then afresh capitalizing
operation was effected. About
that time the debtor's salary was increased,
and he at once set aside a moiety
of his pay for the purpose of reducing
his debt. In this he succeeded so
perfectly that at the time of his death, a
few years later, he owed no more than
?100. Quite recently, no further back
iudeed than last August, a Hindoo
money lender successfully sued another
mild Hindoo for ?4, being the balance
due on a sum of ?8, the outcome in two
years of an advance of ?2, the interest
being calculated at the rate of seven
and one-half farthings per rupee per
diem. These two cases illustrate the
general poverty of India, and tne infinitesimal
character of its internal and,
so to speak, popular trade. In some of
the remote hill districts coined money is
still regarded as a curiosity to be worn
about the person, business being conducted
on the old principle of barter.
It is not very surprising that in a country
where every ryot is in debt, and
where the interest on personal loans
varies from seventy-five to two hundred
per cent., the land should be rapidly
passing into the hands of money lenders
and usurers. Though not matter for
surprise, it is certainly matter for regret.
The Christian Leader (N. Y.), in
speaking of Merchant's Gargling Oil,
says: "Mr. Hodge is a gentleman of
liberal tastes and excellent judgment,
and the Gargling Oil Company, under
his thoroughly judicious direction, has
become one of the strongest and soundest
concerns that grace the commercial
annals of our State. Other medicinal
specialties, in addition to the Gargling
Oil, are beginning to claim the company's
attention, and of their great sue-1
cos* we have as little doubt sw we have 1
of tbe*r ictripsie
A DAY OF THANKSGIVING.
Proclamation by the President?The 3Uth
Day of November Appointed.
By the President oj the United States : |
PROCLAMATION.
From year to year we have been accustomed
to pause in our daily pursuits
and set apart a time to offer our thanks
to Almighty God for the special blessings
He has vouchsafed to us, with our
Erayers for a continuance thereof. We
ave at this time equal reason to be
thankful for His continued protection,
and for the many material blessings His
1 *? Viaat/iwA/l. Tn addition to
UUUiltJ uao iutvuw t? x/v*> ??
these favors accorded to us as individuals,
we have especial occasion to express j
our hearty thanks to Almighty God that;
by His providence and guidance our :
government, established a century ago, j
has been enabled to fulfill the purpose
of its founders in offering an asylum to
the people of every race, securing civil
and religious liberty to all within its
borders, and meting ont to every individual
alike, justice and equity before
the law. It is, moreover, especially our
duty to offer our humble prayers to the ;
Father of all mercies for a contin nance
of His divine favor to us as a nation and
as individuals.
By reason of all these considerations,
I, Ulysses S. Grant, President of the
United States, do reoommend to the
people of the United States to devote
the thirtieth day of November next to
the expressions of their thanks and
prayers to Almighty God, and laying
aside their daily avocations and all secular
occupations to assemble in their respective
plaoes of worship and observe
such day as a day of thanksgiving and
rest.
In witness whereof I have hereunto
set my hand and caused the seal of the
United States to be affixed.
Done at the city of Washington this
twenty-sixth day of October, in the year
of our Lord one thousand eight hundred
*nd seventy-six, and of the independi
noe of the United States of America,
the one hundred and first.
[L.S.] U.S. GRANT.
HamiijTon Fish, Secretary of State.
Chapped hands, faoe, pimples, ringworm,
saltrheum, and other cutaneous affections
oared, and rough skin male soft and
smooth, by using Jukipkb Tab Soap. Be careful
to get only that made by Oaswell, Hazard A
Co., New York, as there are many imitations
made with common tar, all of which are worthess.?
Com.
Consumption Cured.
4" -'"'.inion ratiraS f mm MtiVfl OrRC
AU VIVA pUJOlViUi) ? - - ? ? ? s
tioe, having had placed in his hands by an
East India missionary the formula of a simple
vegetable remedy, for the speedy and permanent
cure of consomption, bronchitis,
catarrh, asthma, and all throat and long affections,
also a positive and radical core for
uervoos debility and all nervoos complaiuts,
after having thoroughly tested its wonderful
curative powers in thousands of oases, feels it
his duty to make it known to his suffering
fellows. Actuated by this motive, and a conscientious
desiro to relieve human suffering,
he will send (free of charge) to all who desire
it. this recipe, with full directions for preparing
and successfully using. Sent by return
mail by addressing with stamp, naming this
Kper, Dr. W. C. Stevens, 126 Towers' Block,
cheater, N. Y.
From a Druggist and Express Agent.
Lewisbebg, Union Co., Pa., Dec. 23, 1874.
Messrs. Beth W. Fowie & Sons, Boston :
Gentlemen?For the benefit of those afflicted
with dyspepsia or weakness of the digestive
organs, I would state that I have been engaged
in the drug: business upward of twenty years,
during which time I have Bold no medicine
that Has relieved so many as the Peruvian
Syrup, and having myself been afflicted for a
long time with indigestion, I was perfectly
cured by taking one large bottle.
Johnathan Wolfe.
Sold by all druggists.
j The Grand Central Hotel, New
Yore, has reduced prices to suit the times.
| The traveler can now stop at a first-class hotel
I for $2.50 to $3 per day. This is the largest
hotel in the city, and Mr. Powers has taken the
proper step to keep it full. We recommend
the traveling pubilc to give the Grand Central
a trial.
The season for coughs and colds is
rapidly approaoning, and every one should be
prepared to check the first symptoms, as a
cough contracted between now and Christmas
frequently lasts all winter. There is no better
remedy tnan Johnson's Anodyne Liniment.
For all diseases of the throat and lungs it
should be used internally and externally.
Millions of bottles of Burnett's Co
coaine have been sold during the last twenty
1 * j?- J 4.1? 3:
yearn, ana tne puDiic nave reuuereu we vcwjui.
tb&t it is the best hair dressing in the world.
The family provided with Glenn's
Sulphite Soap need have no fear, if it is used
freely, of saltrhenm, scald head, ringworm,
itch or any other of those annoying and disfiguring
eruptions, which children are so apt
to oontract at school. Depot, Crittenton's,
No. 7 Sixth ivenue, New York.
Perfect blacks and splendid browns are
created by Hill's Hair Dye.'
The fact that the proprietors of Sanford's
Radical Cure for Catarrh are permitted
to refer to so well known and respected a gentleman
as Henry Wells, Esq., of Wells, Fargo
it Co.'s express,must weigh neavily in its favor.
Fortunes for All.?Agents wanted.
Address Bullion Mining Co.,176 Broadway,N.Y.
FN VALID PENSIONS INCREASED,
By reoent law. Patents. Trsde Mark*, etc?How to
obtain them. Write (Jenl L. BINGHAM A GO , Atty's
for Claims, Patents, Land Titles, Washington, D. C.
The Markets.
SKW Y0BX.
beef Cattle?Prime to EitraBullcckaJ 1)1X4 10
Common to Good Tcxana Oefc? 07)4
Milch Cows 60 00 $76 00
Hoga?Live............ 03 <4 08V
Dressed 06*#
Sheep ..% 03J4# C6
Lambs . 06 V# 07
Cotton?Middling US'# llfc
Floor?Extra '^oWu, 6 63 # C 40
State Extra n lo (47(0
Wheat?Red Western 1 18 $ 1 27
So. 2 Spring............... 1 30 C9 1 59
p.ye?State.... 86 9 0)
Barley?State M 9 M
Barley?Malt ? i 1(0 # 1 21
Oats?Mixed Western. 81)4# 48
Corn?Mixed Western 59V# 61
Hay, percwt CO 9 90
Straw, per cwt 6J 9 80
Hope .6e??8 #S7 .... 76's 10 # 2J
Pork?Mea j 17 00 ?17 00
Lard 09)4# C9)4
Flah?Mackerel, No. 1, new 17 to ?30 00
" No. 2, new 8 00 <4 8 00
Dry Ood, per owt 5 00 # 6 TO
Herring, Scaled, per box.... 22 # 21
Petroleum?Crude ...16 #16 Refined, 26
Wool?California Fleeoe 16 # 29
Texas " 16 # 29
Australian " .... S3 # 41
Butter?State 22 $ 67
Western Dairy 83 # 86
Wee tern Yellow. ... 28 9 30
Western Ordinary 16 # 18
Cbeeae?State Factory 08 # 14
State Skimmed.. 06 # 07
Western...... 06 # is
Eggs?State.... 28 V 4 29
BUTVALO.
Flour. .....? ? .. 6 36 # 9 76
Wheat?No. 1 Spring 1 31 # 1 82
Corn?Mixed 61 # 6234
Oata.. 86 # SS
Rye 61 # 70
Barley 92 # S3
PHILADELPHIA.
Beef Cattle?Extra 05 V# 0634
Sheep 043s# 05^
Hogo?,Dr?>aed. 0834# 08\
Flour?Pennsylvania Extra.. > 6 10 # 8 SO
Wheat?Red Western 1 28 # 1 80
Bye............ 67 # 78
Oom?Yellow.... 68 # 68
Mlx^L. M # . C6V
v,
HMD?11 11 1 1 I ' I i?Y
Lung fever, common cold, catarrhal
fevbr and na^al discharge of & browish c lor *
in Jiowee, may be checked at onco by liberal
U".e of Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Puwisr*.
88 b Day to Agta. Sample free. H. Albert, Boston Me.
^t.) I'tK K'O Concord OhwIdm iddrtw
J A MP. 8 THORP. Box 487, Vineland. JN. J.
POBTBATIS, rtc., draws by nirtlHry. App?r?v?? h? mii
Uc. ifnUvuM. fimlthorrspb MPs Co., P&lla, Ca 1
CiO K A DAY to Axenta. Sample free. 32 piure I
WAD Catalogue. L. P LETCHER, 11 DeySL.NTk. >
AAPVTQ FOUR 810.00 Chromoe FRKR, ,
Aggg IP J. U. MUNYON A CO.. Pallida., Pa. 1
<?> % A a t)r.y Employment tor ali Cbromo A Nnrslty I
tgl V? Catalogue free. Felton A Qo.,119 Sassaa ??.,N.V.
D Clin I 1/ C DM ??bot $3.00,70 atyles./>/. Cat. frt*. I
IIU VULV UIl WutkbmQuitWobxs,Chicago,111
fCC 4-n Cjfyry a Week to Agents. Samples FREE.
jpoo CO 4 p. o. VIOKKRY. Augusta, Maine
Ciw> OUTFIT KRKK. Bert Chance Yet, Writ/ !
t? U at Onoe COLLINS A PP.. 2 Clinton Plao?.N.Y.
a Week Salary roar an teed to male A femsio S^ud. .
? >' * stamp for olroTilare. F.. M. BMine.Tn<H?g%p'?.,ni1. !
a month. Oniflt worth H I tree to Ageata '
EicelUor M'f'g Co., 151 Mich. Ave..ChLvgo. '
AGENTS wanted, on salary or commission. New bnsl- t
pees. Address J. B. MAMET A Co., St. Lonla, Mo. t
A yTUW A The only sure remedy. Trial package t
AO A L. Smithkiqht. ClevelandTo <
"| OJlA I.arret Novrltles, Tricks, Games, i
I IMIlr PoDnlar Books, etc S^nd stamo for Oats- i
ii'ftqa. Apqah A Co.. Box 4749, Pogtoffioe.'New York.' {
town 6 Pkts. Farm Seeds, Circulars of Blood-**?7"> !
t?mikn<Hi Cattie,S':w>p Hogn,Poultry,etc.,for VJUif ]
? n?2 pt*mps. N. P. BOYF.R. Parkesb'g, Pa. J-ZJ- J
fnemmm Send 25 cents to recure Samples and 1
IX// Agency of popular 32-page Almanac. 1
I %JM M PRATT BROS., Marlboro', Mass. t
|A|I K| 0^ .MILLM for Pumping and Running
wlf I M II Maohloery. Address TORNADO 1
W W B Mi WINDMILL GO., ELBA. N. Y. 1
V1T AN TKD-Agents can easily make 810 per day selling 1
T T our cew article. Apply early for choice territory.
The Lion Fever and Ague Co.. 149 Broadway, New York.
CHEAP MUllC. Full
Dv/Ui?lj X Oaisloauee free by mail.
BOOSfr. V A fU.. 32 Raat 14th Street, New York.
AAT A A :Mowth.~Agents wanted. 36 beu sal ]
XhJ%fill Ins artlolee In the worid. Ons t&mplofree. <
tPUUU Add'*J.?AV BltONMONtDetroit,Mich. <
WATCE1 KM. A Great Sensation. SampU
fk <k Watch and Oul/U free to Agent*. Better ttrq
yw Qoid. Address A COULTER A OO., Chicago.
Aaa A .MONTH, hotel end traveling expenses
**|W(| paid for salesmen. No peddling. Address
y W W Monitor Manut'o Oo., Cincinnati, Ohio.
AAA M Made by one Agent In 57 days. 15 new
5|a*fX A,articles. Samples free. Address,
VUVT C. 31. L.ININGTON, Chicago.
If HIT 1.1 T7 Made rapidly with Stenoll and Key Oheok
III 11II H. I Outtits. Catalosne and samples FREE.
lfiUll 13 1 8. M. Spencer, 847 Wa*h.8t,Boston,Mass.
WA 'WT,Ti,TI energetic salesmen ; hotel and travelilll
A ?aAJ (ag expenses paid by Company. A
rare chanoe for permanent employment Address '
fnlon Industrial WorUe.Ctoclnnatl,Ohio.
X Type and Materials lower than ever.
JLV/UJlV. 8end 1 Oo. for Illustrated Catalogue. ,
NATIONAL TYPE CO. 1
46 So 3rd St.. Phils. Pa <
(J|1 n mi nnn Invested in Well St. Stocks makes
% | ||2)W I fortunes every month. Book sent 1
<j/lUH(PlUUU free explaining everything.
Addreaq BAXThR k CO., Bankers, 17 Wall St, N. Y.
dOfi A \KTT?T?JZ Male or female. N j caplC)OlJ
A YY Hi Hi IV tat We give Steady work
that wlU bring yon #240 a month at home day or ev'g. .
Iwfvtobs' uvtow. 173 Greenwloh Street, New York.
|2?Q OUTFIT KKEE TO AUENT8, men and ,
00 women. Article possesses a great charm for both ]
sexes. Sells at sight to every young lady and gent.
Scientific Novelty Co , 9 Astor Place, New York.
A CENTS.?Twenty 9x11 Mounted Ohromos for
A. 91. 2 samples, post-paid. 20o. Stretched Ubromoe,
all sizes, at low prices. Catalogue free. Continental
Cheomo Co., 37 Naaaau street. New York.
VH We will start >oa In a business yon can
11 \J make 850 a week withont capital; easy
MAVTTV aod respectable for either sex. A QUITS'
mUlS JBi X 8QPPLT Co., 261 Bowery, N. Y.
T Alinnri) Galde to marriage, wealth and
1 1111 L 1< V beanty, never fa Hi, love letters,
U V V UUD wisdom, eto. Book worth 8oO
now mat ed tree by Th* UNION Pub. Co., Newark. N.J'
At H a d> O C * Alr inp? mia? br AlenU lln*onr c :'romo*?
SlllKn^fl Crsyoni, Pictcio and Chromo Cardi. lieu urn11#
m"VnlM. worth S5, ?*nt p ?tp?M for 8&e. IliuitrrteJ
CataTogtirfiree. J. H. BUFFORD' 5 SONS, BOSTON, MASS.
i /I nnn H TOO want th? best eeiUn? -Ocls
A n r 9 TX I11 wo.' id rood a solid gold p stent
aVAUlAI# ?3tw w?wu, iiou v* wv?, x?ivv ? ? |
Qnoa to J. BRli)B A PP.. 7Go Broadway, W. Y.
The N?w Work, Indispensable to F. A. M. Sella
at sis ht. Exclusive territory riven. 8end for
Descriptive Catalogue. Bedding A Co., Pubs.
/\r\ Standard Masonic Works, 731 Broadway, n.y
PARLOR GAME-Locsmacbv, or Wnr of
Word*. universally acknowledged to be the Best
game ever published. For sale by all dealers. < -oples
by mall on receipt of SO cents. Circulars free. Publlahed
by F. A. WRIGHT, Olno nnatt. Ohio.
Dr. h.n. fitdo's family physician.
.Sample 1'opy, Paper Cover, 10 cent*.
Hound in Cloth, with Illnatratlone, 132
guts, 3.5 cents by mall. Addreaa to 714
roadway. New York.
P A T5 TJfT7T5 ff or their sons wanted this fall and
ll *axyjttjjxyywinicr. (1 or2 iucach Co.) to sell
. .. , , a few staple articles of real merit
to the farmers in their own counties. Business pleasant, profits
good. Particulars free. J. Wobtu. 6t, Louis, Mo.
rpri A O ?The choicest In the world?Importers
X Fj i% c, prices?Largest Company In Americastaple
article?pleaaee everybody?Trade continually In*
creasing?Agents wanted everywhere?beet Inducements
?don't waste time?send for Circular to
ROBT WTCLUS, 43 Veeey St. N. Y. P. O. Box 1287.
DITPIFFO PROCURED.
riilLilllJ total cost 855.
Send for Circulars to
KNIGHT & KNIGHT, Washington,D C.
rhfl PA MEW AMD for an Insurable Came.
?p?O" Da. J. P. fitlh, belngsworn,says: Ijr*dis
tod Is isn. iBMtitod to rntaot1! stair laSS; ton Ssntol ?Tjmn,
usloslnlT. to Khmtostism, Nwralfla, Owl, Xldntr s>4 Unr diliitoS.
i (isnato, na. mxaae Ihiomatic axkxsT.uiMy cardial,
lAsr pins. ptrauisl sirs, s? will rsflsd mamtj. Pawphlato, toftssms
ui Msdfssl Adrtoa ssit by mail, sue. Addrsss db. pitlbb.
O BoiU Ps?th strss*. FHIsisteH* MXDlCllfXS AT dbuqqiitb.
EIVIPIjOYMENT.
ANY PKH-O.V of ordinary tnteillgeooe can earn allvlng
by canvassing for The Illustrated Weekly. Expertenoe
Is not necessary?the only requlslt e being, as In all
successful business. Industry and energy. Send for partlonlare.
Cliae. C'lucas <Sc Co., 14 Warren St, N.Y.
PT ni? T? " BOWKER'8 PRESERVATIVE n
v11/1jIVs will keep sweet the year ronnd. A
sample package, * oogh to keep half a brrrel sweet,sent
to any address for 25 cents. Address H. L. BOWKKR
& CO., Obemlste, 132 Mlik Street, Boston, Mass.
" This does the work perfectly. Older can be made as
nice as obampagne."?Boston Weekly Globe.
A BOOK for the MILLION.
MEOICAl ADVICE
Catarrh, Rupture ""pium Habit, Ac., SENT FREL op .rceinf
oi stamp. Address.
ltr. Butts' Di. "nsary No. IS N. 8th st. St. Louis, L:a
ho, for iowa 11
Farm en, renters and hired men of America!
A choice from 1,200,(M)0 acres of the beet lands In
lows on R. R. terms, st 95 and 9<? per acre. Send a
postal card for oar map and pamphlet, or call on the
Iowa R. ti. Land Co.. 0*2 Randolph St, Chicago, or
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. John B. QaLHOCTf, Land Oom'r.
If you want to do your i
own printing, /
t* nti or W1.A* ?*?*Ti 3* * Cir**Wr. Ifm w*
Uook *f Type A*. *?4 tbr*. ~*u.
oil** bo*** 11 *b* ?n**tn la I b* bMMa, lad b*o *1*
cheapest and best hand andhennye
self'-inkliiir printing presses.QHW
W* Mil a r"? for Ttn DOLLASa. *-A a m.iatti
ptiaLaa ftw rivs DOLLAEfl. AAir?i 70TOG
AMMICA P31S3 CO., 63 Knmkj St., York.
oa AGENTS wanted for the great
Centennial histo*:*
It eells faster than an/ other boot. One Agent (old
47 copies in one day. Send for oar extra ti rras to
Agenta. NaTIOMaI. PlXBLiBHOfO Co.,Philadelphia, Pa.
$15 SHOT GUN
A double-barrer gun. bar or front action locks, warranted
genuine twist barrels, and a good shooter, OR No SALK
with Flask, Pouch, and Wad-cutter, for $13. Can be sent
C. 0. D. with pririlece Io examine before paying bill, ben i
stamp for circular to P. 1'iiWliLL A SON. Cincinnati. O
DK. .HANN CURES HIP DINKANE. Spina
Corves, White Swelling, Oontraoted IJmbe, and
Olnb Feet, without catting oords or any surgical operation,
or an honr'6 confinement to bed, and moetly without
pain. Expensive Supporters entirely discarded. No
charge for anything used In the care. Thlrty-elx yearn'
experience. Receptions forenoons, at 124 8.9th St.,
Philadelphia, Tuesday and Wednesday [No. 133 Went
41st 8t,New York, Sunday; 1202 Washington St,
Boston, Thursday and Friday. Send for Uircnlar.
/ ^/'////./
. QO $ <9 N A J? p <J > 5? il A * .
Oft*/^///////*
/#V/ ? / * <? ^
f? $ A? * A? J? * ;
Potter's American Monthly,
Cfi nnn lLLU*TIUTKD; Beet Family Magazine la
III IIllll the Coaotir,*' 93 for 1877. fioopiesone
JU.UuU Jt-ar for $13; 10 ooples for $25; 20 ooplea
.. . ,, for $50; and a c p? of P?!ipr'? lltblw
Subscribers Knorlopeiltn, quarto, 3,000 I!Iu traJ^L?
tlona.prlce 925, gto n to the person send1077
,n*,hl# c'ob- P?r Mie at a'l ftands, |
I nil at 2 > cents a number. 8cecial Terms to
lull. Agent'. J. E. Pongs A Co . Fhlla.. Pa.
FOUK MONTIIrt on 'J'rlttl .or 25 CENTH.
We will send the Great " Hard Times" Paper, the
CRICKET ON THE HEARTH
boar months on trial for onto 25 cents. A mammoth j
IK-prge Illustrated paper (sire of Harperto Weekly),
ievoted to Literature, Komanoe, Useful Knowledge, !
Amusement, etc., eto. The beat, cheapest and tnw I
popular paper published. One dollar p6r year, with j
oholoe of three premiums, or 75 cents without premium.
Specimen copy for stamp. Send 25 cents ror
four months' trial, to K M. LUPTON k 00., Pabllshers,
37 Park Row. New York. I
nrn I fp Every Household Should Keep
fin I st hand to a remedy to cure wlthont call"
" sill A fog the doctor. Golds, Coughs, and Consumption
prevau In almost every family. ALLEN'S
I.DNU BALSAM will cure the oolda and coughs
end prevent oonsumptlon.
Art AN EXPECTORANT IT HArt NO EQUAL
Che Koit delicate ctilld.
uii? la Any Porta,
each bottle ft Is sold b? all
toilers. ?
MERIDEN CUTL
Received the HIGHEST
Th? Patbst Iyoht n Biiou Tabu Emu
MANUFACTURE ALL KINDS OF ^
?xclusl*e maker* of the ''PlTKNT IVORY" or |
;?na old Knife, the moet durable %% I1ITK II AN* mm
)1,K known. Tjh Oldest Mmafaotnrera In America. On,
Uways call for " Trade Mark" " MERIDKN UUTLRRY
a Cutlery. aid b? the MKR1DKN <'ITTl.KRY t ?
REMARKABLE LETTER
From a Gentleman Known and Honored
from the Atlantio to the
Paoifio Coast.
Mesare.WrzxsA Pottbr, Wholesale Druggists. Bos- I
on, Maaa.: Gentlemen,?1 have for tome months nit it
i duty that I owed to sufferlnsrhumanity to write you, ;
atlng the {(real benefit that I have derived trom the
ise or Saxfobd's Radical Cubx vox Catabrh. For
nore than 20 years I have been afflicted with this very !
roublesome complaint. I have tried all the remedies
hat I could find, but without material or permanent
tenefit. Last fall the disease had arrived at that state
hat 1 must have relief or die. The entire membran>us
system bad become so Inflamed, and the stomach
0 disordered, that it was a doubtful matter whether i
[ could go to the Pacific coast, or If I did go whether |
1 should live to come back or not. I saw an adverisement
of this medicine, and although being very
ncredulous about specifics or nostrums of any kind,
ret in sheer desperation I tried this, and was at once
>eneflted by it. The changes or climate, a chronic
liseaseof the liver, and my age?over 70?may prerent
my entire restoration, but the benefit I derive
from its dally use is to me invaluable, and 1 am hoping
o be completely cured, and at last arrive at a respective
old age.
If this statement of my case can be of any service to
hose afflicted as I have been, and enable you to bring
his remedy into more general use, especially on the
Pacific coast (where it is much needed), my object in
rritlng this note will be obtained.
Very truly yours, HENRY wKLLS,
Attroba, N. Y., June, 1776. of Wells, Fargo A Co.
Each package contains Dr. Sanford's Improved In*
lallng Tnhe, and fall directions for nse In all cases.
Price fljOO. For sale by all wholesale and retail
irajnrists throughout the United States. WEEKS
fc POTTER, General Agents and Wholesale Drugfists,
Boston, Mass.
COLLINS' jggj
VOLTAIC
PLASTERS
fog Local Pains, Lameness, Boreneaa,
Weakness, Nombneaa and Inflammation oi
the Langs, Liver, Kidneys, Spleen, Bowels.
Bladder, Heart and Muscles, are equal to an
army of doctors, and acres of plants and
ahrnbs. liven fn Paralysis, Epilepsy, or
Fita, and Nervous and Involnntary Mnroular
Action, this Plaster, by Rallying th a
Nervous Foroes, has effected Cores when
every other known remedy has failed.
SOLD BY ALL DBUGGI8TB,
Price 28 cents.
Sent on receipt of price, 25 eenta for One. !
$1.28 for Bix, or $2.28 for Twelve, to any
part of the United States and Canadas, by
WBEBCB & POTTER, Proprietors, Boston.
80 SOOTH
cents for Southern Herald. Address OAIKEB a
Y1NGLIWG. No. 9 Astor House. New York Pity. I
IN PRESS-OUTFITS READY?THE
CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION
DESCRIBED AND ZLLIWRATFI).
A graphlo pen.pktnre of Its history, grand buildings
wonderful exhibits, ourioeitlea. great days, etc. Prefnsely
Illustrated, thoronohjvpopular, and vey
cheap. Mutt tell immensely. O,000 AgeatS wanted.
Send for fall particular*. This will be the ohanoe of
100 rears to ootn money fast. Get the only rellabk
history. HUBBARD BROS., Puhe. 733 Sanson
Street, Philadelphia, Pa, or Springfield, Mars,
n a rrmTAW Ba not deceived bypramature books,
L A U lIUlM utnmln, to he "officlaL" and tellllU
wbfct will happenTn Aawnt ?nd September.
EUPEON'
If yoa have Rheumatism, Neural;?*
Headache, a Burn, or a Bruise, prociu e
a bottle of Eupeon. It will give ins tar 1
relief as thousands can testify. Fc;
sale by all Druggists. H. A. HCJRLBU'1
8c CO., 75 and 77 Randolph Street
Chicago, Agents for the Proprietors.
NEW WILLCOX A GIBBS
iUTOHATIC
T Afpsf Only machine
Invention, and\5fi^v^tf\R j?: in th^,^lorla
producing .W \f Automatic
Tension and
Trtdc Mirk In b*a? ot *?r7 mnchln#.
SILENT SEWING MACHINE.
Send Postal Card for Illustrated Price List, Ac.
Willcox & Gibbs S. M. Co.,
(Cor. Bond 8t.l 658 Broadway, New York.
3000 Engravings. 1840 Pages Quarto.
FOUR PAGES COLORED PLATE8.
/.mil. nf children havins WEBSTER'S U*A
bridged, and using it freely. End Enother not havtaf It}
the first will become much the most intelligent men End
women. Ask your teacher or minister 1/ It is not so, than
boy the book. End use, end ur*e its ass, freely.
Published by G. <bC. MEKRIA.H, Springfield, Mess
|
"What will
Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient
oare V* ask* the sufferer from s multitude of diseases.
We answer: It will remove from the system the active
cease of moet of the diseases that fle?h is heir to. It
won't mend a broken limb nor close a ballet bole; bat
It may be profitably ased in stomachic diseases. It will
do no one any harm and may do macb good. Try it,
and see if it won't salt yoar case.
8QLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
THREE CENTENNIAL MEDALS AND THREE
HONORABLE MENTIONS ARE GIVEN TO
Boynton's Furnaces
(Cset or Plate Iron).
^SiSl^iSgBk 8OHOOL8. ETO.
MOST POWERFUL AND DURABLE FURNACE
SOLD. OVER 2(),UOO IN U8E.
BOYNTON'S "1870" BALTIMORE FIREPLACE
HEATER.
Extremely powerful In beating. Attractive, brilliant,
durable, economical.
BOYNTON'S "Tile" Open-Grate Steve.
Tbe moet attractive library stove ever made.
Send for drooler*. Fa time tee given for beefing, Oor>
'
H
EET COMPANY
CENTENNIAL PRIZE. :
rABLE CUTLERY.
*iq?1 m&kei* ot the II HI) KI'nKbK HANDl.h.
CO." ou (he bUde. Warranted and eold bj ell Dealer*
I.. 4? Cuewber* rtireet. New York.
* ia* ?*4i4flQ2^3Byfl^^7j
HALE'S
HONEY OF HOREHOOND AND TAR
FOR THE CURE OF
Coughs, Colds, Influenif., Hoarseness, Diffioul
Breathing, and all Affections of the Throat,
Bronchial Tabes, and Longs, leading
to Consumption.
This infallible remedy is composed of the
Honey of the plant Horetound, in chemical
onion with Tar-Balm, extracted from the
Life Principle of the forest tree AbeiS
Balsamea, or Balm of Gilead.
The Honej of Horchound soothes and
scatters all irritations and inflammations, and
the Tar-balm cleanses and heals the throat
and air passages leading to the lungs. Five
additional ingredients keep the organs cool,
moist, and in healthful action. Let no prejudice
keep you from trying this great medi- \
cine of a famous doctor who has saved thousands
of lives by it in his large private practice.
N.B.?The Tar-Balm has no bad taste or
smelL
prices 50 cents and $1 per bottle.
Great saving to buy largf sue.
"Pike's Toothache Drops" Cur?
in 1 Minute.
Sold by all Druggists.
0. N. CBITTENTON, Prop., N,Y.
. j. : 'I h* Beat Traaa wttbon
-r. "--J Metal Dprtnga avt-r Invented
S^t f-kftiiti* ^ No humbug claim of a cer
kAp U P ' !a n radical cure, but s guar
an tee of a comfortable, secure,
and satisfactory appUV
'Sty-? aooe. We will take back and
pay fall prteo fat ali tkal do not emit.
Prloe,?ingle, like cut, *4; for both side-.88. Root by
nail, poet-raid, on receipt of prloc. N. B.?Tkie True*
till cure weore Rupture* tkem an* of tkoee /cr thick ea.
taeaq nt claim are otade. Circular* free. pomeroy
TRUSS CO., 746 Broadwai. New York.
Highest Honors
at the
CENTENNIAL! ^
MASON & HAMLIN .
(Cabinet Organs
Unanimously Assigned the
"FIRST RANK
in the
SEVERAL REQUISITES"
UT sucn incuurnciiio 1
MEDALS OF EQUAL MERIT have been awarded
all article* deemed worthy of recognition, so that It will
be easy for many makers to adrertla* that they hare
eoelved " highest medals." It la by the JUDGES'
REPORTS, ONLY, that competing articles are assigned
their oomparatlye rank In excellence. From these
. reports the following la an extract:
" THE MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN OO.'S exhibit
of Reed Organs and Harmoniums shows instrnments of
the PIRrtT HANK IN THE METERAL REQUISITES
OP INSTRUMENTS OP THE
CLASS ; viz.: Smoothness and equal distribution of
tone, soope of expression, reeonanoe and singing quality
freedom and qniokness in aotlon of keys and bellows
; with thoroughness of workmanship, oomblned with
simplicity of action." (Signed by all the Judges.)
The MASON <fe HAMLIN ORGANS are
\ thus declared to RANK FIRST, not in one or
j two respects only, hut in ALL the IMPORTANT
QUALITIES of such instrument*;
and they are the ONLY organs assigned this
rank.
This triumph was not unexpected, for the Mason A
Hamlin Cabinet Organs ba*e uniformly been awarded
the highest honors In competitions in America, there
basing been scarce.y six exceptions In hundreds of competitions.
They were awarded HI?H?8T HONORS
; and First Medal*?"ARIS l:jg7; VIENNA. 1978: SAN>
TIAGO, 1875 PHILADELPHIA, 1876; and here thus
been awarded highest honors at every World's Exposition
at wrdc'j they have bee a exhibited, being the only
American orgsni which hare ever obtained any award
at any competition with best Fnr pean makers, or In
any European World's Exposition!
Insist on bsrlng a Mi son a Hamlin Obg.*n ; do not
take any other. Dealers often recommend Inferior
organs because they are paid larger commissions for
aelllDg them.
NEW STYLES, with EXTENDED TOPS, very elegant.
and other Improvements, exhibited at the CENTENNIAL;
elegant new oaaes in great vsrtety. Prloee
my lowest consistent with best material and workmanI
ship. Organs sold for oask or installments, or rented
until root pays. Every organ warranted to give entire
satisfaction to every reasonable pa;chaser or THX
. MONXT bxtukned. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES
sent free
! MAIK. A HAMLIN ORGAN CO.-154 Tremont
; Street. Boston; 2& Union Sqn&rs, New York; SO end
82 Adams Street, Chicago.
WOOD'S
IMPROVED
HAIR RtSTORATIVE
What It Does!
It restore*, quickly, Grey Hair to It* k lossy Natural
eolor. It baa the effect of Restoring the Hair to niematurely
Bald Heads. It Removes Dandruff. Humors and
all Eruptions from w WW thr Scalp. It prerents
Irritation, II I 111 Itching and Scaly
Dryness of tb< II I III Skin. It Restores
taded, dry. harsh II M III and falling Hair.
Itrenews.dresses, II 11 | IF softens and gives
vigor to the growth 11 II 111 of the Hair. If
accomplishes more 11 !_| | 11 desired effects In
a short time than 11 f| 111 any Res to retire
ever made, alwajs 11 | | 11 leaving the hair
soft, lively and MM1 M Mm. glossy, whether
used ss a Dressing upon the natural hair or upon the
hair in an unhealthy condition; thus rendering it, for the
Old and Young, an article of unequaled excellence. No
preparation offered to the public produces such wonderful
results. Try It! Try it!! Call for "Wood's Improved!"
as It oontains no In jurious qualities.
It was originally Introduced 30 yean ago by Prof. O. J.
Wood, but the recent change of ingredients in this article
la making a demand for It in all parts of the United
States, Gsnsdas and foreign oo on tries.
ANNOUNCEMENT
TO
CONSUMERS!
The great radical improveir.en - introduces .J this article
has induced us to take the agency and advertise its
virtues to the world. I?.r cfleets as n Restorative v.not
ha* been long sough . or ana wanted for many yean, oeing
more d#cid->.rwb b _ and satisfactory
than has eve. M fore been attained.
No L?-oggiat II I I II in the world
knows lis compo- 11 | III sot- cannot
tmuc it; therefore j| w wmnrou o?_i
', " Wood's Im- || I | |h proved." qo cot
let any anprinci- I | L| III P'?d dealer convincetoo
that he ||>|||| hac a Restorative
or Kenewcr as (rood, or something
similar, as .M-M-i 111.1 there Is none like
it! Insist npon having " Wood's Improved," ana take
no other, for yoor money! It '.rill not be long before all
dealers everywhere will hgve it. If yon should fail to
find it, yon can send $1.00 to us by mail for a bottle, or
$5.00 for six bottles, and we will send it to yon, prepaid,
to any Express Station desired.
Address C. A. COOK 6i CO., Chicago, the
SoleAjgent* for the United States ana Canada*
who will fill all orders and supply
; the Trade at Manufacturers' Prices.
J. B. Kixbsix, Proprietor.
Sold In New York by J. F. Henry, Oorraa k Go.;
Boston. Weeks A Potter: Philadelphia, Johnston, Hollows?
?Oo.,?nd by Wholesa* Druggists C*o?r*U7ITIO
No. 44
WHIN WRITING TO ADY?RTISKIUJ?
HefliPBtof?e??r1 r<n nw u*
a .