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HAYINGS AND DOINGS.
Out oh the Pi,t,~
J. Hmlth In doad. That One young man
Wo novor ahall moo morn;
Ilo'd Imatt a member of tho club
Hinoo eighteen elxty-fonr.
Ilia note wm Homan, and Ida eyee
Continually worn peeled;
Ho made a nplnudid umpire, and
A beautiful left Hold.
Bin hair wan rod and “ shingled" clone;
if noli nunbnrnt wan bln faro ;
Ho never ahone with more effect
Than on tho neoond bane.
Though not a matrimonial man,
He dear!? loved a match;
And, Ilka bln Mater, bad but fow
Buporiora “on tho catch.*’
Kehriko fairs era held in Iowa to
•’par off elinroh debts. It's ten oonte
per kies.
Extravaoanor in merely oomparative;
a man may bo a spendthrift in copper
it well an gold.
Arrr.At'HK walla on 111000*11 ; tho floklo
multitude, like tho straw that floats
along tho stream, glide with tho eurront
■dll, and follow fortnno.
Out of ono hundred men yon run
■gainst, yon will And ninety-five worry
ing thomselves into low spirits and in
digestion about tronblo that will never
oomo.
In Bavoy tho rivora Arno, Drnnso and
Fier havo been poisoned to kill fish,
which the oncer fishermen, who operate
in thin stylo, gather up dead on the
aurfaoo.
Ev*nv rear of onr lives wo grow more
convinced that it is tho wisest and best
to Ui onr attention on the boantlfnl
and tho good, and dwell ns Util© os pos
sible on the evil and tho fa]so.
Am Indinna man, with n turn for sta
tistics, calculates that his faithful dog.
ton years of sgo, lins oost him ft2M.BG
for hash, and $25 for lieonso. Tho flog
is now for salo. Price, ten cents.
Adirondack Murray hasn’t put much
spirit into his sermon lately. Tho fact
is, when a man haa to tako onro of eight
fast horses all tho wock ho enu't put in
many hoavy licks for tho Lord on Hun-
day.
At a recent meeting of a society oom-
possd of nion from tho Emerald isle, a
member mado the following motion :
‘‘Mr. President, I move yoes whitewash
tho coiling groon, in honor of tho owld
flag.”
Wihr growing is an important indus
try in tho oolony of Victoria. Australia,
and tho government has forbidden tho
importation of European viuos for fonr
of introducing some of tho prevailing
diseases,
Tim editor of tho Guardian of Health
writes, "O for the flro of our grand
fathers I” Most men are satisfied with
tho iwottled ooa! hills of the present
without aighing for n grand father’s fuel
to owe for.
FuuoAi.irr may bo termed the daugh
ter of prudence, tho sister of temper-
anoo, and tho parent of liberty. Ho
that is extravagant will quickly be
come pocr, and poverty will enforce do-
pondonoo and invite corruption.
An extraordinarily large turnip was
dug in a garden at Balt Lake the other
day, which, on being out open, disclosed
■ Iwgo-ficed frog, woll and hearty,
wliioh tumbled out and hopped off, just
as if he was not tho oreattiro of a won-
dorful phenomenon.
If tho old man will insist on taking a
smoko aftor going to bed at night, tho
sooner tho house is insured for twioo its
valuo tho moro ooiuplnoont will bo tho
footings of tho relatives who Htand by
whon tho flromon hunt among tho rains
ior hin bones.
Ninktkkn yonrs ago a Teunoasno fath
er rofuaed to let his young darghtor go
to a ouiuly-imll, and she disappeared.
Tho other day nho returned, lifted olov-
ou ohildron out of tho wagon, aud en
tered tho house and took off hnr things
aa coolly ns if slio had not been gone
ovor a day.
Hkwino machines are opposed in
China on tho sooro that they ohenpen
labor. Beveral tailors in Hong Kong
who triod to introduoo thorn wore
mobbed. In America Ohiuoso ohonp
labor is derided, and in China Ameri
can ohonp labor by maohiuory is foroi-
bly repudiated.
M. Ditouoix, oliiof veterinary surgeon
of the French army, gives tho oquiuu
population of Europe iih follows: Hus
ain, 1,800,000; Austria, 0,100,000; Eng
land, 2,066.200; Germany, 2.500,000;
Turkey, 1,000,000; Spain, 050,000; Hol
land, 800,000; Belgium, 200,000; Swit
zerland, 110,000; aud F.auoe, 8,03:1,000.
Mant years ngo Gardiner Brewer, tho
reoontly deceased Boston millionaire,
offered his daughter an unuual income
of $10,000 upon condition that slio
would remain single. Miss Brewer lmd
anftloient Benton brains about her per*
aou to aeot'pt the offer, though sno’s
boon bead ovor oars in love so often
that tho bare rcoolleotiou of it makes
her dlaay.
Thr British, Frenoh, Belgiau, Ger-
mau, Swedish, Dutch, Norwegian,
Turkish, Grecian, and Syriau branohos
of the Evnugelionl AUianeo havo issued
an invitation for the universal obnerv-
■noo of the first week iu January, 1875,
from the 3d to the 10th, for prayer in
behalf of the whole world. Subjects
are designated for each day. A similar
programme will bo prepared for the
United States.
r Amono nouie notes on duels the New
York Post gives the following: *' Rich
ard Somers, a lieutenant in the navy of
tho United States, a gentleman ot mild
manners and of a kimlly nature, in
dulged in three duels in ono day, aud
lost so much blood from wounds re
ceived during the flret two that ho was
obliged to remain seated throughout
the third engagement. Ho iB said
to have perished iu the Interpid tire
sketch, before Tripoli, in 1801.”
Oiuoaco statistics show that 80,000,-
000 bushels of ooru have been shipped
eastward through Chicago alone sinoe
the beginning of the year. Tho vast
amount-, os well as tbnt which has gone
by other routes and to other markets,
has netted tho farmers of Iowa and Illi
noia probably thirty cents per bushel,
and on the sometliiug over 200,000,000
bushels of com raiBod in tho two states,
probably given them from $6,000,-
000 to $8,000,000 mure profit than usual !
ou the ooru sold within tho last seven or :
eight months.
Thrur whs a man in Oswego, Kansas
who thought that he had fallen into a fat 1
tiling. He discovered a well full of»
medical water on his premises. He had I
it analyzed, and it gave iodine, bicar
bonate of potash, chloride of lime, and !
tv mi pound extract of- buohu, with n I
trnoe of old Dr. Townsend's sarsapa- '
rilla. The fortunate owner hegau to i
think of building a hotel, and in his ]
mind'a oyo lie saiv uo end of lhoumatte
and dyspeptic patients from all parts of,
the country playing bluff and drinking I
the water. Alas! au enemy examined
thatnolIa l.UU. Two dofunot
oata wofe thuo, aud an oquallv defuuoi ,
rabbit added to the potency. The hotel
will not be built,
FUNERAL KITES.
How lbs Dead or* IM»|W»*tl of by Plflnr-
«nt IVopl»#.
Wa areaoaoonatomotl to bnry onr doe<1
that it ia only by an effort that we can
conceive of onraolvoa as disposing of
them otherwiae. Yet the praotioo of
mankind haa difforod widely in thia re*-
poet. And In overy nation tho tradi
tional mode aoqnlroa a sanctity, from
association with tho moat aolomn and
tender moments of life, which indnoes
ns to look with horror on ««ny alterna
tive method. When Darina found an
Indian tribo who ate the bodlea of their
dead, they worn not less shocked at tho
idea of burning oorpaes than tho Greeks
in hia train wero at tho horrible oannf-
haliam of tho Indians. Even when the
breath has left the mortsl frame, the
oold remains of thoso we have loved
are not less dear than when tboy were
animated with life; but custom slonc
creates tho direction in wliieh that love
msnifesfji itself, and each direction is
alike but nn unavailing protest against
the inexorable law which dissolves the
nshos of the departed into fleeting gases
and crumbling dust.
The Egyptians embalmed their dead.
Tho Hebrews buried them out of thoir
sight. The Greeks sometimes buried
and sometimes burnt, the latter mode
gaining tho Ascendency os civilization
advanced. Tho Persians, if wo may
trust tho hints 'of earlier and the naser-
tiona of later writers, seem to have
gathered their dead together on the top
of a low building, and there left them
to tho birds and winds of heaven. Bu
rying, burning, embalming, these arc
the three great alternatives adopted bv
humanity for the disposal of their dead.
Bnt there ia scarcely any modification
of tlieso methods which lias not fonnd
its adherents ; and there is scarcely nnv
oonooivnhlo substitute for them which
has not been practiced somowharo, The
ponturo of burial has been varied, in
many places it being thought deooroun
to bury in a sitting attitude. Borne
Rod Indian tribes exposo tbrir doad on
ilio blanches of troos ; tho Ethiopians
inclosed them in pillars of crystal.
Maritime nations have sometimes hon
ored thoir chiefs by laying thorn instate
in a ship nr oanoo, and burning or set
ting it adrift. Sacred rivers aro tho
chosen burying-ground of some ; others
commit thoir doad to tho sea alono.
Home leave the corpse till it decays,
and then bury the bones : others remove
the flesh from the bones immediately
after death, and then dress and adorn
the skeleton. Bnrlal alive in by 'some
thonght a mark of nflVotion : exposure
to wild beasts is tho chosen custom of
by no means barbarous moos. The In
dian tribe above referred to finds many
parallels. Nor was it always thought
nnocasary to wait till death snporvonod.
There is grim humor in tho pioturo
given by nerodot.ua of a tribo where,
whon any one fell sick, " his chief
friends tell him that tho illness will
spoil his flesh; and lie protests that he
is not unwell; bnt they not neroeing
with him, kill and eat him.” (Thalia,
09.) Horrors like tlieso, however, can
scarcely bo classed among modes of
sepulture ; nor, perhaps, is it neoes«ary
to mention tho tribes that drink thoir
dead, haviug first reduced them to pow
der. Buflloe it to say that thoro is no
mode of disposing of dead bodies so
singular, or so revolting, that it has not
boon adopted in good faith by some
among the interminable varieties of
savago races.
Among oivili/.od nations, however,
burial (under which wo may’iucludo em
balming) has divided with oromation
the allcgianoo of custom. It would be
improper to rogard tlio first as tho char-
aoteristio of Bomitio, the sooond of
Aryan rnora, For, though Lucian speaks
of burial . tho mark of barbarians,
burning of Greeks, It is beyond ques
tion that burial remniuod to the last an
alternative in Grooee and Rome. It
would rather appear that burial is the
first rude suggestion of decency,
prompting tffd mourner to lay the dead
body rovorontly away rathnr than leave
it to moulder unheeded ; and that sa
burial is reoognized to bo incomplete,
omPalming and oromation are tho two
alternatives suggested. Tho Egyptians
regarded fire ns a wild boast; and, as
Herodotus tolls us, they preferred em
balming to allowing tho bodies to be
torn by wild boasts or consumed by
worms. Tho Groeks proforrod the alter
native "of speedy destruction. Cronin-
tion was with them, though not tho uni
versal, tho aolomn and honorable form
of sepulture. A corpse oast up by the
sea might be buried by a benevolent pnan-
or-by( throe handful's of dust wero hold
equivalent to burial, and laid tho wonry
ghost) ; in time of danger, or far want
of monup, a body might bo oommitted
to tho earth. But mourning friends
who wisliod to do the last, sad honors to
tho deoeasod followed him to his funeral
pyro. and cherished the ashes which
survived tho Hanio in vases of oostly
make.
The New Italy.
Tho fact is that Italy, though its gov
ernment is one, contains within itself
differences as groat as thoso which exist
between England and Ireland. Tho on-
erpy of the country bolongs to tho north.
Not only is this the oaso at present, but,
speaking roughly, it has been the case
for centurion. Tho great names, wliioh
are really what we in England under-
standby Italy almost belong to the upper-
half of tho peninsula. If the traveler
would know wliat Italy really is, he
must movo about both in the north and
in the south, both in tho towua and in
tho country. Ih the north, especially
iu tho towns, ho will find activity, intel
ligence, moderate trustworthiness and
fhir punctuality. In the south ho will
need great patienoe and fairness not to
give up tho Italians altogether as a set
of rascals. The political feelings of
those dissimilar districts aro just what
might bo expected. The northern Ital
ian has sufficiently ndvauood to under
stand aud valuo freedom ; the southern,
>pt under unusual conditions, knows
trict. It is, perhaps, known to few of
tho many English who intend to visit
Romo in the coming winter that the
lino hitherto used will then no longer
lie the diroot routo. The oonst lit
from Genoa to Bpezzia. which English
engineers pronounced impossible, and
wliioh the greatest English firm of con
tractors refused to have anything to do
with, Is actually finished, end will bo
opened within the oourso of a fow
weeks.—London New*.
Ilogs and Their Disenses;
On this subject tho Nashville Union
and Amorican says:
There is great need of a first-class
treatise on hogs, thoir diseases and
treatment. The animal was domestica
ted in Europe in pre-hintorio times, and
although naturally of a very hardy con
stitution, yot, like man, is now anbjeot
many maladies. The meoslc
oomes from a cyst worm (cystieecrus
oellnloeaj, and this from the eggs of tho
tape worm voided in hnroan excrement,
to which hogs find access. Triohime pass
from porkers to a homo in hnman flesh ;
tape-worms go from tho hnman
system to a homo in tho flesh of swine.
Hog cholera and obolora in man
nearly related, but do not spring from
tho srimn organism. Both, however, wo
doubt not, are produced by parasitoa,
which, to a great extent, aro preventa
ble. Balt, ashes nnd sulphur a little
overy week or of tenor, in oornmoal, to
hogs, is a preventive fed and may i
move cholera germs from the system.
High-bred awino aro quite liable to
lung eomplaiuts and sorofulo, tho seeds
of which aro not woll understood, al
though hereditary in tlioirl character.
As somo aristocratic families of tho
S onus homo easily run out, so all of
omesticated mammalia may, by im
proper keeping, exposure and dofeotivo
breeding, loso their natural vigor aud
soundness of ooie litntion, and die pre
maturely. Parasite enemies of hogs, |men
and oattlo are evidently on tho iuorease.
Short and Sweet.
An Iowa editor who attended a party,
was smitten with tho charms of a fair
dnmsol who wore a rose on her forehead,
and thus gushed about it:
Al*ovo hnr homo
Thoro h h roito ;
Below that roan
Thoro in a homo.
Whereupon u rival editor thus apos
trophises tho Iowa olmp:
Ahovotho
Thoro Ih m fool
Bolow the fool
Thoro ia a aloo
Htool, fool,
Fool,
Old a
Damphool.
The Mottoes
Oranob m the Cabinet. —It is confi
dently asserted that there will be a change in
the Cabinet, and that before the flret of De
cember. It ia known that tho President and all
heada of dopartmonte have bought largely of
igl w .
tickets for tho next Grand Gift Couoert of the
Public Library of Kentucky, to draw Novom-
l*or HO, and they flattor themselves that they
Who Will It Bp.?— 1 The postpone-
lent of tho Gift Concert of the Kontucky
i of t
fl.OCO. Who will got It?
Header of this paper, can receive,
/w, a copy of tho beet Agricultural and Fam
ily nowHpaporu in thia country by addressing
Mooro a Rural Now-Yorker, 78 Duane atroet,
Now York.
As economy is tho order of tho day,
tho choapcat collar you oan woar ia the Elru-
wood. All the edges being folded, inakoait
look Jlko linou, and tho peculiar flniMi ia ao
thoroughly peraplration proof. It will keop
clean longor than any oil
Hunt freo,
oliar.
B*!
TABLE KNIVE87AND FORKS OF;* T T KINDS,
AND EXCLUSIVE MAKERS OF G
FASHIONS. "Smith’s Illustrated Pattern Bazaar.”
reoeipt of neck and
eight, weight and prico, oui
. , Modol *2 Hlilrt. Fitted by patent
ed model. Stylish and substantial. Addrsi*
Modol Hlilrt Co.. 31 South8th Ht., Philadelphia.
Oo to Riverside Water Cure. Hamilton, 111.
' to Look Young Nfitern.
iimo vile Hair Restorer* but simply
MsffitolU lUIrn upon your fsce, m<|
freckIm, tan, aslloi
Dr. Dnu’l U r
Bo oompletoly havo tho Modoos dis
appeared from public notice that tho
visit to Yreka, Gal., of a small delega
tion of thoir tribo on a twenty days’
leavo of absoncnjfrora their reservations,
has excited considerable interest in
thoir fate. From the Yreka Journal we
gather tho following facts regarding
them at the present timo : " Tho tur
bulent, discontented, war-liko Modoc
disappeared when Onpt. Jack, Hobon-
ohin, Boston Oharloy, and Black Jim
wero executed on tho Bonffold nt Fort
Klamath, aud those now iu existeuoo
aro louding quiet and poacoable li
tho different reservations to which thoy
have boon assigned. Bohonohin’s fol
lowers arc living at Yainox, a bleak and
dreary district seventy miles northeast
of Fort Klamath. They number about
120, including women aud children.
Jack’s people, numbering about 170
perrons, aro sottlcd in the Indian Terri
tory, under tho chieftainship of Scar-
faced Charley. Homo sixty of tho tribe,
who lmd not been engaged iu the hostil-
iti^H against, tho whites, nnd
friondly to them, are living in tho
oouutry of the Modoos, which formerly
was a part of Siskiyou, in tho lava
gion. There is uo perceptible inore
In thoir population, aud in a fow yc
they will undoubtedly lmvo ceased to
exist ns a distinct, tribe.”
Try It.—A tonic and alterative ire di
cine, tho invigorating and regulating
properties of wliioh actually lengthen
life, and add to tho capacity for its en
joyment, is within the reach of every
member of tho community. No invalid
who has had recourse to Dr. Walker’s
Vinegar Bitters will hesitate to oonoodo
to it tlieso invaluable qualities. It ia a
stomachic and a corrective of unrivaled
efficacy, yet being freo from alcohol, it
it. not an exoitant. Its anti-bilious oper
ation is more direct, npoedy, and cortaiu
than that of any of the dangerous min
eral salivants, and as an aperient, it
gontly removes any obstructions tbnt
nothing of different governments, ex
cept that they tax him differently. It
is, therefore, to the north of Italy that
the lover of freedom and progress will
turn ; aud there ho will Mud a spectacle
pleasiug to his soul. A system of rail
ways has been created, affording accom
modation whioli compares favorably
with that of many European countries.
In tho streets of Milan and in the port
of Genoa lie will will find stir and bus-
lie enough to porsuado him that he is
back iu England. New edifices are ris
ing, now streets being laid dowu. New
ve-sela are being added monthly to tho
commercial marine. Arouud, the oouu
try is a perfect garden. The display of
articles of feminine dress at tho weekly Gambling was invented by the Lydi-
marketsof the smaller towns testifies to I aus when under the pressure of n great
the substance of the cqutadiui. Villas j famine. To divert thomselves from
str.d tho hills for miles iu the neighbor- i dwelling ou their sufferings they invent-
hood of the miters of wealth. And as ed dice, balls, tables, etc. It is added
if the power and capacity of the Italian | that, to boar their calamity the better,
tuind were to be most signally exhibited ! they used to play a whole* day without
on the northern and southern an ! intermission, that they might not feel
pro aches of its most favored domain, the effects of the wa. t of food. The
the magnificent engineering works of; invention intended as a remedy for
the Mont Conis and of the Genoa and ; hunger is now n very common cause for
1‘isa railways belong to .this same dis- j that evil,
tation or pain. Iu faot, its wonderful
remedial effects are unaccompanied by
drawback. Of all medicines, it is
the most harmless nnd salubrious. As
an appetizer, it is far ahead of any of
the alcoholic nostrums that moment arily
atimulatc the palate ; while as a means
of renovating a weak and torpid stom
ach, it stands alone among modern rem
edies.
Exportt or Musical Instruments.—
Official records of custom house returns
at Washington show that the total value
of musical instruments exported from
the United States during the year end
ing June 30. 1874, was $520,827. Of
this, $258,176 whs for piauoB and $292,-
151 for parlor or reed organs. Of this
latter amount $163,169, or more than
one-lmlf of the whole, was of tho cabinet
organs made by the Mason A- Hamlin
Organ Co., which bid fair to become a?
famous in Europe ns they lmvo long
been in America. This company cer
tainly havo reason to be proud of the
faot that the European demand for their
organs is larger than that of all others
combined.—lioston Traveller.
810
$5:820 K^SSiTO^fafe
CJ m".Vvu n , ,M , a u A wm 1 Of'i< f *’i 1,1 h
$ 150^2.1 ^Hd‘a** n «UtnpYJr
ROOFING H
l»ny it. A;>pl/now. V.\V«bl»erAC»T Marlon.
DESCRIPTION OF THESE ENGRAVINC8.
' a ‘p.MwTu.'i«” r —— ™" 1 '.»> f I■ ‘>T11 MODEL
f ^«n-Aii 8iM» l -p2t^rD* , wi r t r i; rLoi'iruo
*• Boy i Halt—su8to<1 ynsr»—P«ttero. wuM I.OTII MOlftjL, tt)
>OTII VIODP.I.,
2515. I '*»t WtUl-AII Hl*cd I’atteni. with UI.QTH VIODKI.. * c. i.t*.
J*™* p*Mklrt-lkiatirul-FMi«n. wllfc CLOTH UODKI.. - • .
T-i llj. I.N-ly « (.vraklrt'-l.at.-*t an.I M(*lSlyHeS -Pattern, wltu C I.OTII MODF.I..
( lo.k-M.irpaaa.fa all Oth.-r. -MiSIx-. Pattern, wilt < MITII .UODKI., .ViceDU.
'IfMlf. Lnly'a Waljtln* ( .at i.r.laex.-i VII Sl*«a -Pattern, with CLOTH MOlIKI.. M CFBta.
iperrer. CLOTH UODKI, with .-v.-ry |. at tern, whir n .ti-.ara Ju»' h..j* p-it lUc garment lo
K' ther. »tt.-r tx-lngcot l.jr ttir pitiern. Tliey ar.- PKIIFKCT (U I l»KH.
Iletl
WHOLESALE
iU #31
For $2 »-
^.-nd |3-
III l.e enU-
11 OO For *3 wortl. eentl #2 25
The neraon who -en.la #3 f»r#4 worm ..r ;
tied to the Bazaar t ,,r •'«•* >»«r FREE,
SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR
Smith’s Illustrated Pattern Bazaar,
Only Ono Dollar ami Ten Cents h Year,
And a splondid PREMIUM to oach Subscri
ber FREE !
l*r Any TWO;.r the :. ow p.ttcrna .„».t BmitJO's In
stant Dross Elevator «*ll i..- mull. -I KltRK. ua I'rcminm.
OR ONE ih.im.r' ...- riti:i:. t<> !>■• t.»«i
i.eve tour B< *, pp
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Chromos . >m.m,
GET UP A OliUB I
■ one Chrornq extra 1 throe nui.Krih.-ra (fs.ooaud
two ' hmiii.ia i'*tru for Hv.- r:ih». ilhi-rr \V|. will glv«> throe Chroraoa extrn for
1 four ( htoni.." .-xtrit for Hu’hl riih.rrlli. r- Each SubSCrl-
MAKE 1 'MONEY Roiij
Set
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t I 25 OO
Addu M, v.-ry plain, *'
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tub
RhICAGO | EDGER
M on KVKHY itUBHcllARf
I -OOO In gold on lad BAZI \i;
« BA/.AAR. with tb. that
DON’T BUY
Dr. J. Walker's (nil(bruin Viu*
(•Ciir Hitlers aro n purely Vegetnblo
prcjiaratlon, iniulo chiefly from the na
tive herbs found on tho lower ranger? of
tho Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, the medicinal properties of which
are extracted therefrom without the use
.if Alcohol. Tho question is olmorU
of th j
iuiparalleled ;
»f Viniiu
. lltat the
Mil
covers his honltli. The
hi*Kid purifier nnd a lifo-j
n pet feet Renovator n
i.f the system. Novel
history «.f tii.i world has
w Liver aud Yi.-H.ural Organ■*. iu Bilioiu
Thu properties of Du. Walker’s
. i)iu
, Altai
A U J5!P
#1.000 I*>C 1C IVKKK
inullu ih
l Indurp-
OPIDM«:i?sa£ll
,Vhl
School Teacher!
Von rnii/oul*l»ymir«*l*rr l.y acilng “The Crn-
tennlnl CJaietteer of the tinlltd
MASON & HAIU1
Cabinet Organs.
Unexcelled by any Weokly Literary
Publication, East or West.
CANVAHSKBS WANTED IN EVKItV
TOWN IN TIIK UNITED STATES.
ri.nl.lnt full Itifi.t/iiMloii, Me " Hp’.Minpii 1 ,''ii "
furnl»Ii.'d mi applicatlnn. AJilrraa
T1IK I.KIXlKR COMPANY, CHICAGO, II.I,
ANOTHER CHANGE. HW
\j wo have 13 000U REASONS why thoy
di yonr work
DFI" * mT WFTCOIICERT wkk ”™ „,, jclea „
in »ii, or Tim j JjTliry urf Uhr.ipesl lo buy.
Flint Library of Micky. 5»sxa;r.,
i l heir operation i» prrfrti.
postponed to ! flicy always have a food draft.
NnvrMDZD on ioia rf Th, y mnilr of the brat innlrrial.
NOVEMBER 30, 1874. ^NTiiry roast prrffcUy.
T"” f \ l liry require hut lilllr fuel.
Drawing Certain at that Date. ^Tliry nrr very low prierd.
l LU filet are easily manngrd.
UST OF GIFTS. i ^y^riir» arc suilrd lo all loralitic*
one or«nd o»i>h out #2x0,000’ OH Kvcry Btovf |uaraDterd to give naliafttr 41
?Co r rSSdc^hoif!.:Sold by Excelsior M&nufg Oo
Ou# Or*lid C*Ih Qlft HJ' 000 AT. LOUIS. UO., AND UT
sowboifu. saolooo ;.ch: imloSS r,ok
PUIU IIAHKHK
U’OHO*
Mil the ’in-gut' rou-
until for •ellTug
.V IIA .III.IN OIIUA
may havo aeotimulaied in tho lower iu- ruie. , \ , u# , iwor»»r\^iolIrg»n ¥£« h^her
tofitine, .without prodneiur either irri- ^
VsO.\ »V IIA I*
I AMIN A. HAMLIN till-
1 Saturday gyeuiug Post, 1875
THE OLDEST LITERARY PAPER IN AMERICA.
>k charge of th# Pout, and u«ltber monVy*oor
h-p >•_ '■ AJII Hi-.ii,' J^, ■" I,, uuk,. it I!,,;
. f c!I w!u!KH£ a Kltorui|pr>p8'. ,t0
A Now Era in tho Prices cf Books
Send for Cataloguo coutain-
I ina many of the most vilii-
■ ablo booka on all subjects.
IN Adirtss *• lit Godot? f*rDiffui:a cf
III Uafal SccT’.edjo," CINCINNATI. C.
*-psT( HOMASCY, or .Soul Chaimln*.’’
Bod
N E
MU
■ NKS8 KDUCATlONi a
PKAtmCAL 1
-uglily maoAK»d
KCIAL. AND
I NASHVILLE BRVM k STRATTON
BUSINESS COLLEGE,
j TELEGRAPH INSTITUTE,
THE LEADING COLLEGEs'
THO. K. lilt A M I.KTTK,
Agent amt Manager,
I’ll bile Library building, LonUriUe, Kr.
BECKWITH
$20.
Portable Funiilv Sewing Machine,
30 DAYS’TRIAL.
W# will lend to any addreas.C O.D., one of onr
macblac* with prtvUrge of examination before tak-
ssr-“to.
Berhivit’.i Sov. lug Warlilno Co.
New York: 802 Broadway.
Chicago: 231 lYnhash Ave.
AGENTS WANTED WR THE
TRUE HISTORY
OF THE
BROOKLYN SCANDAL {RUPTURES
POSITIVELY CURED.
a»;-f
STEINWAY
Grand, Sqoare ant Dpwrishl Pianos
Belie, Ac/ * fdr Seto'iatttee, B
m Waabtngto
W. H. NIC0L8 & CO.
iMjttgTSSSatttL
tecvIpL ot £) ou. Try tAw». A
Gratefkil Thousands proclaim Vrx-
ROAR IiiTTBRS tho most wonderful In-
vi gorant that uvur sustained the sinking
system.
No Person ran toko these Hitters
according to directions, and remain long
unwell, provided their bones aro not do
st roved by mineral poison or other
means, and vital organs wasted beyond
repair.
IHHous. liomitloni and Inter
mittent Fevers, which aro so preva
lent in tho valleys of our great rivora
throughout tho United States, especially
those of thq -Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri,
Illinois, Tonnessco, Cumberland, Arkan
sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande,
Pearl, Alabama, Mobilo, Savannah, Ro
anoke, James, and many others, with
their vast tributaries, throughout our
entire country during tho Summer and
Autumn, and remarkably so during sea-
soiis of unusual heat mid dryness, aro
invariably accompanied by extensive de
rangements of tho stomach and liver,
and other abdominal viscera. In thoir
treatment, a purgative, oxorting a pow
erful influonco upon these various or
gans, Is essentially necessary. Thor#
Is no cathartic for tho purpose equal to
Dr. J. Walker’s Vinegar Hitters,
as thov will speedily removo tho dark-
colored viscid matter with which tho
bowels aro loaded, at tho samo timo
stimulating tho secretions of tho liver,
and generally restoring tlio healthy
functions of tho digestive organs.
Fortify tho body against disease
by purifying all Its fluids with Vinegar
Bitters. No opidemic oan tako hold
of a system thus fore-armed.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head
ache, Pain in tho Shouldors, Coughs,
Tightness of tho Chest, Dizziness, Sour
Eructations of tho Stomach. Bad Taste
In tho Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpita-
tation of tho Heart, Inflammation of tho
Lungs, Pain in tho region of tho Kid
neys, nnd a hundred other painful symp
toms, aro tho offsprings of Dyspepsia.
Ono bottlo will prove a hotterguaranteo
of its morita than a lengthy advertise
ment.
Scroftaln, or Kind's Evil, wifito
Swolllogs, Ulcers, Erynipolas, Swelled Nock,
Goitre, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent
Inflammations, Mercurial Affoctions, Old
Soros, Eruptions of tlio Skin, Soro Eves, otc.
In Iboao,^ ox in all other constitutional Dis
eases, Walrek's Vinegar Bittbrs lmvo
shown their great curative powers in tho
most obstinate and intractable cases.
For Inflammatory and Chronic
Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit-
tontnnd Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of
tho Mood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder,
theso Bitters have no eoual. Such Diseases
aro caused by Vitiated Blood.
Median leal Diseases.—Persons en
gaged in Paints and Minerals, such ns
Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-boaters, and
Miners, ns thoy odvanco in life, aro subject,
to paralysis of tho Bowels. To guard
against this, tako a dote of Walker’s Vin
egar Bitters occasionally.
For Skill Diseases, Eruptions, Tet
ter. Salt-Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples,
Pustules, Boils, CaVbuncles, Ring-worms,
Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Itch,
Scurfs, Discolorations of tho Skin, Hnmors
uud Dikoaaos of tho Skin of whatover name
or naturo, »ro literally dug up and carriod
out tho ByBtem in a short timo by tho uso
of these Bitters.
Pin, Tapp, anil other Worms,
lurking iu tho system of so many thousands,
aro effectually destroyed and remoVod. ,N>
-°r tuedicine. no vermifuges, no an-
thelminitics will free tho system from worms
like these Bitters.
For Female Complaints, in young
or old, married or single, at the dawn of wo
manhood. or tho turn of life, theso Tonio
Bitters display so decided an influence that
improvement is soon perceptible.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood when
ever yon find its impurities bursting through
tho skin in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores;
cleanse it when you find it obstructed and
sluggish in the veins; cleanso it when it is
foul; your feelings will teli you when. Keep
tho blood pure, aud the health of the system
will follow.
r. ii. McDonald «fc co.,
Dni^gisU and Gen. Apts.. San Francisco. California,
“ Da B 00 f^°l Waa .¥ I ife' l ‘ jn 11,1,1 C%»riton Sts.. N. Y.
Sold by all Druggists and Dealer*.
DR- WHITTIEH,
!<o. 617 St. Chirles Street, St. Leal:, ki,
MARRIAGE GUIDE
Burfi?'DISPINs|irY. U l2 y K(
•Eighth Street, 8t. Louis, Mo. ^ - -