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Address of the Colored People of AlabannC To the People of the United States: The awakening or a just appreciation in our minds to the inevitable boon of freedom prauted to 4,000,(100 of our rac e by the valor, fidelity and liitrh moral conviction of the people of the Northern States has inspired the colored people of the State of Alabama, in convention assembled, to plaee before the world thtdr true condition at the present time, and also to invoke your aid to amelio- rate it. It is nevessiiry for us to all votir at- tention to the condition of the colored people at the time when, as a " war measure," Pres- ident Lincoln issued his Emancipation proc- lamation, or, more properly, our condition two years after its promulgation; for but very few of us in Alabama knew that we had Ir-ci- i made free until after the surrender of the rebel armies. At that time we were help- less, wretched slaves, dependent on the will of the masters wlioownetl us, as absolutely as any chattel property could be held. The laws of Alabama a. id the inclination of the people made it a crime for any person to in- struct us how to read and write; and every devire that could be thought of by the slave- holder wa resorted to in trder that we miht be reduced to the condition of brutes, except- ing only the, leaving to us of the power of speech, for without that our value would Lave been less on the auction-block- . Thus, having by hostile laws and immoral owners been brought to as degraded a condi- tion as it was possible for human beings to be lowered to, nsudden edict bade us rise up and become " free men" as well miht the strong man have hid the helpless babe of a few months' life to. stand up without sup-jMr- t. bo In Ipleus were we. More helpless, in- deed ; forthtjbab'j would have all to learn, his limbs would be untrammeled, he would know nothing of the cruelties wrought by capricious owners. Our limbs were fettered, our senses blunted or impaired, the life that we had leen trained to at the whipT'inir-jxjs- t had made a night of despair settle upon our 60ul. We scarcely believed that we were human bcinirs when the tidings of our free- dom were lirt imparted to us. lnouru.ter helplessness the Government of the United States did in a small degree extend its pro- tecting arm to us, iu the shape of the Freed-men'- s Bureau, which was the means of saving many thousands of helpless creatures from disease and death. But the lease of life of that refuge of safety was too short to have the etl'ect of placing us very far on the road to become intelligent and useful citizens. Never having seen the rights of man respect- ed by their white masters, excepting when enforced by the rifle and pistol, nor taught to resject any person but a rich slaveholder, the freedman had to be taught cUilizatioii as it was undersUiod in the free States of the North. This was a most dillicult task for want of ex- ample combined with precept. Immediately after the slave States had ac- cepted, nominally, the Thirteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, the Legislature of Alabama passed various acts. . which became laws, that in every respect, ex cepting the right or sale of our persons, re- duced us to practical slavery. These laws, known by various names, were of f ueh a char aeter as proclaimed to the world that the ex slaveholders' belief was still "the negro had no rights which a white man was bound to respect." The believed then, ami does believe to this dav, and has taught his children to believe, that we were his prop erty, his chattels, stolen from him by a pow crful enemv, w ho had invaded his country and to deprive us of everything we earn and yossess is a matter of right, and that it is his duty to treat as an alien enemy every whit man and intelligent colored man w ho may at tempt to improve us. To remedy this evil, if we understand it cor rectlv, the nation gave us the ballot; and bv the adviceiof man v of our race who had learned something, and the ollicers of the Freedmen's .Bureau, we exercised, at the peril of our lives the right that the Fifteenth amendment to the Constitution naa given to us, ana by our votes placed in office those men whom we consid ered were most friendly to the elevation of our race and all mankind. Some of the men whom we had chosen were inexperienced and unfortunately, fell into the traps prepared for them bv the wilv lover of shivery, who had sworn to make toth emancipation and recon struction utter failures. Murderous leagues were formed by the ex slaveholders, sworn to prevent not only tin negro and " Kadieal" from voting, but a No to prevent the instruct ton of the colored people Leagues sworn to deny their own existence. to hold no oath made before a civil tribunal sacred.to break open any jail in the State where one of their number should be confined, and by all the ties that a common cause (love for the accursed institution slavery) could sug- - rrt in upfnmrtlttili tlir ft'll nimMKO Tlie owned the land, supported the public press, and held, even after recon struction, the majority of the judicial and administrative offices in Alabama, all the powers of which were directed against the colored people of the State. Yet in despite of all these drawbacks the colored people have worked hard continually since the close of the war, both in the cotton and com fields, a the amount produced of each of tnese staples has not fallen off (except when eaten up by the cotton-worm- ), and the only labor to be' had in the cotton-bel- t of Alabama was the much-abuse- d colored men who had for merly been slaves. Notwithstanding this faith ful work not more than 2 per cent, of the colored people outside of large towns and cities have had eitherclothesenoiigh to wearor food that a Northern laborer would eat. The forced Ignorance of our ieoile rendered them easy victims of the fraudulently-incline- d cot ton-plante- r. The law books of Alabama are rilled with law tht are not enforced when the colored man is in the question. The Constitution of Alabama provides for equal rights, immuni- ties and privileges for all classes of citizens, abundant funds for educatioual purposes, but all these guarantees are mere words set upon paper, to le scotled at ty the tyrannical ex- - slaveholders, now calling themselves the Iiemocratiti and Conservative party of Ala baiua. During the past two years a cry of down with the negro, commonly known as the 4 Kace issue, has been taken up bv al most everv class of in Ala bama, and through the excitement produced by this race appeal hundred of our jieople have been murdered, thousands nave been driven from the farms upon which thev have lived, and which they had rented and culti vated, without being permitted to take a pound of cottpn with them which they had raised, or the provisions which they had stored. The local civil authorities have been in league with the s, and the sen timent of the communities has applauded the acts. Those of our own race and white loyal men whom we have chosen to represent us hare cither been driven twav or brutally and cowardly assassinated bv the Ku-Klu- x or White League organization, and the lest men in the Stute, the finest legal t.ilent, have volunteered to defend the few men who have Iteen arrested bv the United States authorities, charged with committing these terrible crimes. Corrcsiondents of some of the New York newspapers who have' been sent to Alabama to rejKirt the condition of flairs have been the guests of our spoliators and their sympathizers, and have reiterated through their influential journals all the falsehoods that had been coined and retailed by the press of Alabama. The only exceptions to this rule of one-side- d re- ports so far, as we are informed, have been the reports of the correspondents of the Chi- cago Intcr-Octa- n and the New York L'rjnMic. It is to prevent a false idea of the lamenta- ble situation of the greater number of the colored jeople living in agricultural districts of Alabama from being entertained by Titir Northern friends, and to ask aid from them in a plan that we would risk to adopt to lienetit the colored people and give them a fair chance, untrammeled by the hostility of those who look with hatred or contcii upon all efforts to better his condition made by the colored man, that we address the e of the United States favorable to the real eman- cipation of the negro from practical slavery. We have therefore organized an Emigration Association and given to them authority to take such steps as will best effect the early settlement of a colony of colored families in the far West, which, in case of success, may be a nucleus around which mauy thousands of the hard-workin- g colored families of Ala- bama mar build up for themselves bappy homes. The continued spoliation of the colored people of their earnings has rendered them unable to pay for the transportation of their families to the localities w here they desire to go; and we therefore ask the assistance of all lovers of freedom and enemies to human slavery to carry us to a portion of the country where we may have an equal chance in the struggle for life and fortune. To carry out the foregoing object we have appointed commissioners to risit Northern cities and solicit aid and lecture upon toe true condition of the colored people of Alabama at the present time. The foregoing address was adopted by the unanimous vote of the convention, forty coun- ties of Alabama being represented at the time of its adoption by regularly-electe- d delegate. A resolution was then 'passed, asking Re- publican and Indeiendent papers favorable to the amelioration of the condition of the col- ored people of Alabama to publish this ad- dress. Philip Joseph, President of the Convention. The First Sign. That the late election is just what it was felt to be when the result was known, an expression of dissatisfaction, and not the deliberately-declare- d preference of another policy, is plain enough from the fact that the Democratic party has au- thentically declared no policy since 1868. The adoption at Baltimore in 1872 of the Cincinnati platform was well understood to be a desperate trick. The party voice was silenced in the hope of forming a coalition which would destroy the Re- publicans. It failed, totally, and the Democrats left the field, taking with them the larger part of their allies. Of course the Democratic party does not wish to be judged upon its platform of 1838, which demanded virtual repudia- tion and violation of the national faith in the taxation of the bonds, and which rejected the Reconstruction cts as un constitutional, revolutionary and void. But that these opinions are changed there is no reason to suppose. Mr. Sey- - mour was the Presidential candidate of the convention, and Mr. Henry C. Mur- phy was the New York member of the JMatform Committee, and these two gen- tlemen are the most prominent candi- dates of the party in Jsew York for the Senatorship of the United States. It is undoubtedly true, also, that those who would heartily sustain repudiation, who would break laith and tax the bonds, and who would repeal the amendments and all the settlements of the war, are to be found among the rejoicing hosts of Dem- ocrats. But it would be thought fool- hardy to announce the platform of 18G8 as the present manifesto of the party. The congratulating Democratic ora- tors, we observe, extol public virtue and the necessity of reform, but prudently forbear distinct allusions to the purposes of 1beir party, or tc its last authonzed utterances, or to its perfectly well-know- n traditions and tendencies. It is one of the sarcasms of politics that while Mr. Tilden, amidst the pop of 'cham- pagne corks and the consumption of partridges and pate, exhorts his younger Democratic friends to engage honorably in public life and not to allow that poli- tics are corrupting, his older Democratic friend, Mr. John Kelly, who procured the nomination of Mr. Tilden, and who is the chief ot the chief Democratic organ- ization in the State, nominates "Jimmy" Hayes, coerces justice in the Croker case, and does his best to defeat consti- tutional guarantees against corruption at the polls. Under this leadership young Democratic gentlemen with a taste for punch and Parmesan are ex- pected to press on toward political pur- ity. Hut if a Democratic policy is not to be found in the national platform of 1808, still more hopeless is the search in the State platforms of this year. They de- nounce Republican rascality with great vigor, and they cry aloud against the Credit-Mobilie- r, and the salary-grab- , and carpct-baggcr- y, and Sanborn jobbery, and Southern satrapies. IJut beyond a demand in some of them for "home rule" and lor revenue reform there is no hint of a policy. Maine declared for free trade, but Pennsylvania did not. New York demanded hard money, but Indiana and Ohio reouired paper. All condemned the C'ivil-Kight- s bill and un- constitutional legislation. In this utter want of unanimity, when, in the midst of Democratic denunciation of the salary-grab- , that strenuous grabber, tSen. Banks, was elected by an immense majority, and when Democratic Missouri, with a cry for rags and repu diation, answered with 40,000 majority to the 50,000 of Xciv York demanding hard money, it could hardly be said that the Democratic victory meant admistra-tiv- e reform or a sound financial policy. Since, then, the election meant only dissatisfaction, although it gave power in the Douse of Representatives to the Democrats, what indications of a policy have been visible since the election? There has been but one distinct proposi tion, and that was made by Mr. (ieorge Ticknor Curtis, of New "iork, and has been generally adopted by the Dem ocratic newspapers. Ihis is a proposi tion to repeal what he calls all the un constitutional laws of the last twelve years. That there should be any uncon stitutional laws whatever is to be regret- ted. But if a party propose to purge the statute-book- , why does it limit its ac tion? Why does not the author of the proposition include all unconstitutional laws? Ihe reason is evident, lo re tain and extend its power the Demo- cratic party must conciliate its old allies in the Southern JStates, and to do this it must Uo all that it can to paralyze the amendments, since it cannot repeal them. The Democrats were driven from power fourteen years ago. The legisla tion of the last thirteen years is Repub- lican, and it is that which is to be set aside under the plea of unconstitution ality. 1 his is another way of reaching the end foreshadowed by Mr. Eaton, Democratic Senator from Connecticut, in a speech after his election, and which was exposed by a very sagacious politi- cian, Truman Smith, of the same State. Mr. Eaton said that he, "with other honest Senators, ' would take away " the federal bayonets from our brothers in the South" and leave them the right of "local Mr. Smith points out that this means simply declining to enforce the amendments. But if the law enforcing them were repealed the result would be the same. And this proposi- tion, it should be observed, the only dis- tinct statement of a policy to be pursued by a Democratic Congress, proceeds from two gentlemen w ho w ere among the most bitter, persistent, and politically malig- nant Copperheads of the war. We use he word to define precisely their political status. Thev were of the same school as William B. Reed, of Philadelphia. This is the spirit which in the moment of suc- cess inspires the Democratic party and shows unmistakably that it is still gov- erned by its worst traditions. The end of such a policy is plain. The Democratic party h already declared the amend ments themselves unconstitutional. It has receded from that position, but the conviction remains, and it will easily find every law unconstitutional that enforces what it would repeal if it could. The party orators and papers profess to ac- cept the amendments and they will not propose to abrogate them. But in every practicable and plausible way they will nullify them. The system of practical peonage proposed at the last cession of the Texas Legislature, and which was adopted by one house; the declaration of John Forsyth, the chief Democratic editor at the South, that " the Democracy will sweep from the statute-boo- k the whole system of military and African reconstruction as utterly null and void, and of no effect," and this riotous strain from a Democratic paper in Ohio arc illustrations of a spirit that must neces- sarily be found perilously powerful in the Democratic party: We will use the power to smash the Con dynasty, clean np the statute-book- s by remliug away the whole chapter of Black Republican leg- islation, to place tin; sovereignty of the country once more in the hand' of the oiily race able and tit to use it wisely and well, reinstate the white man in his place of power and supremacy, and re- mand the negro to his proper position of snbordi-DHtioi- i. Wc will have a national convention o nil the States to revise and amend the Constitu- tion of the luited Slates, and there will be no niggers in that convention. The Constitution as revised will he the Constitution a it was in ISM). Thus the only sign of any policy to be pursued by the Democratic party, should it recover power, is a proposition to e, so far as possible, the settlements of the war. And the practical question for every intelligent American citizen to meditate before the opening of the cam- paign of 1870 is whether it is wise to in-fu- st 'he National (Jovernnient, with the enforcement of the amendments and the regulation of the finances, to a party of such leadership, spirit, tendencies and traditions as those of the Democratic The Massachusetts Repub- licans defeat Gen. Butler. The New-Yor- k Democrats cling as closely as ever to Fernando Wood. That single fact illustrates the difference in the spirit and the intelligence of the tw o parties. Har- per' Weekly. Killing Time. Considering how fond we all are of life, and what a transient gift it is, does it not seem odd that ennui should ever cross our path, or that we should ever be put to it for means with which to con- sume lime? When the universe offers so many riddles to be solved when there is so much to see, so much to know, so many thoughts to be thought out is it not strange that we should ever have a spare moment lying unemployed on our hands, rather than that we should be con- stantly seeking and inventing devices for getting rid of the surplus hours? Not that we 6hould never step aside from the serious pursuits of life, but in our sports how often are we ponderously sensible of the lagging minutes, and heartily glad when they arc passed! Fortunately for most of us, a certain portion of each day is necessarily devoted to the labor of earning TUr daily bread; but after the merchant has closed his ledger and the shop-ma- n has put up his blinds, after the artist has turned his easel to the wall, and law and order have been established in the housekeeper's province, and the gardener has left nature in undisturbed possession, there yet remains a respecta ble remnant of the day, pliant and ready to be molded to our uses, but which we usually make haste to employ in the most shiftless and profitless manner, or not to employ at all, merely Animated by the dt sire of passing time, as though w e did not know that it is the material with which we build for eternity; and if we waste the material, will not the struct ure be incomplete? lor the surer anni hilation of time we form conspiracies "to help each other out of the difficulty, and then turn round and complain of the brevity of human life. Ihink you that in threescore years and ten we might not find leisure for every elegant accomplish- ment and every solid acquirement if we knew how to economize the precious stuff, or cared to learn the method, and did not fritter it away as if it were of small account and utterly inexhaustible? Consider what profit might accrue even from the average life if no moments were " killed," not merely unoccupied, but unfruitful of thought; for each of us is aware that the idle hand is at times a necessity of nature, but the mind that is busy entertaining lofty ideas is too well pleased with its company to wish the hours away, and that it is only the sick or vacant brain which complains of tedium, and urgy s its owner to fill the vacuum with empty gossip and a tliou-san- d trifles with which we could dis- pense. How many novels do wc lead which leave no more impressions than foot-print- s on the eand, only because we have some hours at our disposal which we would fain strangle secretly, like the princes in the Tower, with the hope of escaping conviction; how many rubbers at whist do we play without giving attention to the science of the game, only because it will while away an evening; how many after-dinne- r naps are undertaken in the same worthy cause; how much over-eatin- g, drinking and dressing, not to mention gambling and lower methods to ears polite; how many abominations in worsted and wax work bear witness to the waste of "the stuff that won't endure ," how many in- trigues have been begun and carried on in a mere spirit of ennui; how many dis- putes and quarrels have killed the cost- ly gift for which its possessor could lind no better use; and how many flirtations and broken hearts are the result of this sad propensity of heedless minds! In truth, we work harder and more dili- gently at this trade of willful murder than at any other, and while we hold upon existence with a most pathetic grip the material of which it is made hangs heavy on our hands, and w e are begging every passer-b- y to relieve us of it, while wc estimate it at its true value only when there is an immediate pros- pect of losing it, when we would gladly barter all other possessions for a fraction of that which we lately found so bur- densome. In lact, this matter of killing time lacks originality; the Romans killed it in their baths, at their gladiatorial sports, at their toilets the I'ompeiianlady devoting the entire morn- ing to that pretty craft and is the modern belle far behindhand? It has been accomplished through all the ages, by kaiser and peasant, rich and poor; and with what eclat was at the Hotel de Rambouillet, at the charm- ing retreat of Coppet, where Mine. De Stael hastened the years of her exile with every brilliant device, or at the Rocks, where Mine. De Sevigne abridged the absence of her daugh- ter by every indolent employment ; nor need we flatter ourselves that it is an ex- ploded custom or one that is losing ad- herents when we meet people who com- mit the offense every day of their lives; people w ho sit through classical concerts and Italian operas not because they en- joy them, but because they help pass the time respectably ; people who go to the sea-shor- e or the mountains not so much for change of air and prospect as to be- guile ennui; who go to church not for consolation but for dissipation ; who, in short, embrace every opportunity of ab- breviating the time from the cradle to the grave, not reflecting that for every idle hour, as well as word, must we ren- der account. Harper's Bazar. A Wonderful Motor. If Mr. Keeley, of Philadelphia, suc- ceeds with his new motor, the transporta- tion business of the country will certain- ly be revolutionized. What it is re- mains a mystery to any but the inventor; but if it be all Mr. Keeley claims for it the scientific world has been in ignorance of a very powerful agent or a most po- tent combination of agents already known. He says that with two gallons of water he can generate sufficient force to draw a train of cars from Philadelphia to San Francisco and back, and yet he uses no fuel nor does he employ chem- icals of any kind, electricity or magnetic currents. It is surmised that the "force must be obtained by the rapid decompo- sition of water into its constituent gases, but he denies that he uses any of the customary methods to accomplish that result. In the machine he is now con- structing he has developed, he asserts, a pressure of 7,000 pounds to the square inch; and when it is remembered that the pressure to which steam boilers are subjected is seldom more than '200 pounds to the square inch the enormous leap Mr. Keeley claims lo make with his new motor may be partially appreciated. It is plain that should such a powerful servant be added to the resources of man steam engines and much of our present machinery would become antiquated af- fairs; coal would lose its inijiortance; mountains could be tunneled or leveled like ant-hill- s, and in fact all the processes of civilization would be changed; unfor- tunately, however, for those who would indulge in roseate anticipations of our commercial future, Mr. Keeley's ma- chine, as he calls it, is still unfinished, and it may be a long time ere his dreams arc realized. Albany (2V. '.) Journal. Fatting Hogs on Cooked Food. Some of the agricultural papers have lately denied the great advantages of cooking corn for swine. Omitting our own experiments, we refer to a few oth- ers. The two best farmers iwnong our neighbors at Union Spring, who weighed and measured, arrived separately at nearly the same results as lo the great superiority of cooked meal over corn in the ear. One of these found that when corn was worth 62 cents per bushel fed in the ear it was worth 87 cents in dry meal, and f 1.12 to fl.5 in cooked meal that is, it was about double in value. The other farmer merely scalded his meal. He was in the practice, in preparing his feed, of pour- ing ninety pounds of hot water on six- teen pounds of meal, then allowing this to stand from twelve to eighteen hours in a covered tub before feeding. The whole swelled so as to make thick pud- ding, although the bulk of the w ater ap- plied was three times as great as. the meal. He found this scalded meal one-hal- f better than meal soaked in cold water, and at least double in value, of corn in the ear. George (Jeddes told us that his experience showed cooked food to be double in value over corn in the ear. A skillful farmer in Wayne County, who had tried it many years, placed it between twice and three times the value. Results will of course vary somewhat with the manner of conducting the ex- periments. Country Gentleman. A farmer living near Georgetown, Ky., has two pigs that regularly draw their sustenance from a cow. The cow will low for them as for a calf, when the little porkers will answer the summons, and, rearing up, support themselves by Intertwining their forelegs, and in that position take their repast. AGRICULTURAL AM) DOMESTIC It makes a deal of difference w ith your cooking how you slir up sauce thickening for gravy or pudding. You use flour or starch of some kind, mixed w ith w ater or milk. Wet the flour witk very little w ater or milk, and beat thor- oughly together till every lump disap- pears, then thin with more water or milk and heatr well again. Let the milk, or whatever is to be thickened, be actually boiling, and stir as fast as possible while you slowly add the thickening beating rapidly for two or three minutes. This makes the gravy or custard wonderfully light and foamy, especially if there are beaten eggs iu the comjiound. If you try to mix a little flour with a good deal of water you w ill have a long, hard siege in getting out the lumps. Salt should be added before the thickening goes in. Scarlet Fever. In this disease the parent and school-teache- r are often con- cerned to know how long a time must elapse before it is safe to admit the con- valescent children to mingle with other children. And the answer is that for a month, at least, the body of a scarlet-feve- r patient is casting off scales from the 6kin, and from the nose, throat, bow- els and kidneys discharges which are poisonous and convey the disease. The chief danger, however, arises from the skin, as this is the main outlet for the blood poison to escape, hence every scale it throws oil can curry the infection. Farm Jourtuil. Because only a few potatoes were left from dinner that is no reason why they should be thrown in the cow's pail. Peel them if not done already and bake them over in the oven. Or siice them and warm them with bread which is even better than potatoes warmed alone. This is the way: Put bread crumbs soaking in milk upon the stove. When hot add the sliced or chopped potatoes with salt, and stir all well together till thoroughly heated or cooked. Then season as you w ish w ith a little butter or cream. Gerritt S. Miller, of Madison county, N. Y., writes to the Country (Jentleman that his llolstein cow, Clown Princess, in 177 days in 1871, gave 9,081 pounds of milk; in 305 days after calving in 18T2, she gave 11,700 pounds; ahd in o05 days after calving in 1873, she gave r',o73 pounds. At one cent per pound her milk for the last year would have brought $12:1.73 A half-bloo- d llolstein cow-owne- d by J. M. Young, of New Jersey, in 177 days, from September, 1873, to February 28, 1874, gave l,00T pounds of milk. Our hours of rest, as a rule, should be the same every night. It is not sale for even the most robust and healthy to long violate the law of regularity in this matter. The man or woman who retires and rises at irregular periods, varying from two to four or six hours, as many are accustomed to do, cannot enjoy good health, or live long and happily. Every- one should adopt a rule to retire at a cer- tain hour, and adhere to it as strictly as possible never deviating except i emergencies. Cracker Dessert. Choose whole soda crackers and lay each upon a sepa- rate small plate. Pour upon it enough boiling water to soak it w ell, and leave none upon the plate; cover with a dress- ing of sweetened cream, with a spoonful of jelly in the center if you choose, or dip upon it a portion of nice fruit, canned, stew ed or fresh, as is convenient. Store hogs can be wintered thriftily on finely cut clover hay, corn fodder and potatoes, if these articles are steamed or scalded with hot water and a little bran or meal sprinkled on. The fodder will be greedily eaten if prepared in this w ay. Matutaehuneltx J'lowfoiian. Which Fowls Eat the Jlost .' This question has been asked and an- swered many times; but now here, as yet, in print, have I seen it to my satisfaction. Writers invariably try to solve this (pies tion so as to make it an argument for some particular breed, and that one is gener- ally the breed in which they are most interested. Another reason is that they are constantly giving the favorite coop of fowls all Ihe tit-bit- s, which they do not count as anything. But to answer the question rightly would be to say: The hen that eats the most, as a rule, is the one that produces the most. One bushel of corn, or its equivalent in other food, will make nine pounds of live poultry, or seven and one-tent- h pounds of dressed poultry, or twelve and one-hal- f pounds of eggs. One has only to weigh his pullet at six months old to know how much money he has expended for her; and if he has not furnished the food he will know just how much she has foraged oil" his neighbors for his benefit. Most farmers have a feeling that the corn which is fed to fowls is thrown away, and that their pocket-book- s have been depleted so much. They should rather look upon the transaction as so much grain exchanged for eggs or poultry, the profits of which are coming to them to better till that pocket-book- . Fowls are machines to produce eggs and flesh, and we might as well expect cloth from a factory that has no wool or cotton as to expect eggs from hens not supplied with food. When I see an un- usually hearty hen I am led to sajr, " Put it in, my lady; you are either making eggs or meat," and I know as long as she does it I shall not be in the strait of the boy who was after the woodchuck of a Sabbath morning, viz. : " He had got to have him, for heWas out of meat." Liberal feeding means liberal profits; fowls scantily led pay scanty profits; neglect means" loss of what you do give them. As a rule, feed well or kill the flock. This should be the rule, for the results are as sure to follow as day is sure to follow sunrise. . K. F., in Poultry World. Change Seed. Harvest is over, and many are market- ing their wheat and corn. Now is a good time to look to the question of the change of seed. Vegetation, as well as animals, deteriorates unless prevented by the watchful and scientific attention of man. Wheat, oats, corn and potatoes need frequently change of location more than change to another kind of seed. Grain grown in the cold atmosphere and clav soil of Canada, Northern New York, or Vermont, when taken to the warmer soils and atmosphere of the Middle or Western States, produces far more luxuri- antly than seed sown in the same soil for a dozen years. It is the general remark that wheat is failing and yielding less to the acre every year, even where new and virgin soil is used. Change of location is what is wanted. Nor is it necessary that the change should be so great in distance. The transfer of seed a few miles from one variety of soil to another oltcn makes a very perceptible differ- ence. Now is the time to attend to this. It may not be necessary for the farmer to travel so far but that he may return home at night and make an exchange with a fanner, and both be equally ac- commodated. In some cases it may be done by letter, and the transfer be made by railroads Ten or forty cents addi- tional for freight w ill be more than twice made up in the increase in yield. But generally the increase in quantity is not the main advantage. The improvement in quality more generally attend.? change of seed. If this matter is attended to in time it can be done well and economi- cally There is not enough attention paid to the question of seed corn. This is the great staple crop of the West. The dif- ference each year in the quality of seed reaches in the result high in the millions. There is little doubt that the average for entire Iowa could be raised ten bushels if this question was as thoroughly can- vassed by all farmers ".3 it should be. An advance of ten bm-he- is per acre would make a ditt'ei i c , 1 the crop of twenty-fiv- e million bushels. All around us we see corn planted that raises only small and dwarfed ears, and is persisted in for the reason that it always gets ripe. In short seasons like ours that is an im- portant consideration. But the energy of farmers, the attention of agricultural societies and of scientific experimenters should produce a larger quality of early corn. Too little attention in this way has been paid to so important a crop as corn. Often the large variety of warmer latitudes is brought here, but an early frost checks its career. No sufficient effort has been made to produce early corn of these large varieties. More pains and twice the scientific skill are applied to the efforts to get a potato earlier than the rose, or superior to the peach-blo- But in value the potato crop is only a mite in comparison with corn. Mind is equal to this question if it be di- rected in that channel. Iowa is on the northern border of the corn belt, and re- quires more attention to seed than in Kentucky or Tennessee, yet the average yield in our State is above either of the States named. But there is no cause why our average should not be increased 25 per cent. Iowa JSttile llegister. Knowing' and Doing. Talkino w ith an employer of men the other day, and of the merits and compar- ative know ledge of some of his employes, he gave us the test by which men are judged in this practical age by practical men. It is the shortest "and directest mode of reaching a conclusion with ref- erence to the value of ni"n that we know of. He said: " You tell me that Mr. II. is a man of great knowledge in his line of business. It may be; but there is John , whom I suppose you would call comparatively ignorant, who pro- duces ten times the result that Mr. II. does. I assure you We care little for a man's knowledge unless it is productive. It is like a mountain of gold, located where it cannot be made available it is of no use." Prof. Sweet, in an address before the Mechanical Engineering Association at Cornell University, once said: "Men arc-pai- d for what they do, not for what they know." This is a forcible argument in favor of the most thorough practical training in combination w ith the acquire- ment of technical knowledge. It means that a man may have a complete techni- cal knowledge of the laws of mechanics and be unable to make a machine that he may be possessed of the principles of all of the sciences relating to agriculture and horticulture, and yet not be able to manage either a farm or nursery suc- cessfully; that he may be learned in the science of government, and yet be a most miserable legislator, etc., etc. the reassert inn of all that has been proved, over and over again, to be true that the man practically educated in any kind of business is surer ot sub- stantial - and enduring success in that business than the tine who possesses vastly more theoretical knowledge con- cerning it, and yet has not been taught how to manage it in all ils practical de- tails." This is one reason w hy the Rural New Yorker litis repeatedly advised young men who asked w hat school we would recommend them to attend in order that they might learn farming to hire out to the best farmer they can lind and go to work on a farm. This advice is not given because we in the least undervalue technical and scientific education, for every young farmer should employ these aids in his daily work; but we would have, so far as practicable, the acquire- ment of knowledge and its application simultaneous. But if we were going to drop either from our education we would not drop the practical. The theoretical and purely technical should be made, as It is, subordinate to the practical. A Shawmut avenue grocery store i ornamented by a new placard which reads: "My Back is Up! Fresh milk only six cents a quart!" Boston Globe. A, in his honeymoon, calls his w ife his saint; B, ten years married, sadly echoes, his ain't. The huge, drastic, griping, sickening pills, constructed of crude, coarse and ulky in- gredients, an: fast being superseded by lr. 1'icici's Pleasant I'urgative IVllets, or Sugar ('0.1 ted. Concentrated Root and Herbal Juice, Anti-biliou- s ('ranules the "Little Giant" Cathartic or Mutl'im tn farw Physic. Mod- ern Chemical Science enables Or. Fierce to extract from the juices of the most valuable roots and herbs their active medicinal prin-liplc- which, when worked into little Pellets or Granules, si arret 11 turcr than mustard w, lender each little Pcllei as active and power- ful as a large pill. While they are much more palatable and pleasant in effect. Dr. Ika A. Tuayeu, of Baeonsburg, Ohio, writes,; " I regard your Pellets as the best remedy for the conditions for which you pre- scribe them of anything I have ever used, so mild and certain in effect, and leaving the bowels in an excellent condition. It seems to me they must take the plaee of all other ca- thartic pills and medicines." Lyon v. Macomiiek, druggists, Vermillion, I. T., say: " We think they are going to sell like hot cakes as Boon as people get ac- quainted with them, and will spoil the pill trade, us those that have used them like them much better than large pills." Newpapert, Sliver and China Given Away for Chrlatnia. The Excelsior Jfatjazine is giving away newspapers free for one year to their sub- scribers, and in 6ome instances papers with their chromos framed. Every subscriber who orders through said magazine a sewing ma- chine will receive gifts of gold or best triple plate silver tea service, etc., or china dinner et of 101 pieces. Send twenty-liv- e cents for sample copy of magazine, or inclose stamp for circular. Agents can make enough on this In fore Christinas to keep them for one vcar. Office 0J, No. 157 La Salle street, Chi- cago, 111. The Latest Tihumphop Tempekanci: -- We congratulate the temperance v tld on the success everywhere attend g the use ot Vinegar. Bitters. Cer-nl- no preparation containing alcohol :i3 accomplished such cures of malu-iou- s fever, biliousness, dyspepsia, rheu---'i- ! ism, lung complaints, constipation, ind general debility as we hearof from all ;ii li ters as the results of this famous . - g( table specific. No true philanthro will regret to see spirituous liquors pelled from medical use if they can safely dispensed with; and that they r.i not necessary in any case of sickness, vliatcver its character, appears at last to live been demonstrated. If public pinion is capable of making any upon the minds of the Faculty 'lieywill ere long introduce the most lopulir of modern medicines into the and prescribe il in their prae-ico- . The million.- have given the article 1 fair trial; it has more than answered icir expectations, and no theoretical op- position can shake their faith in it. 13 Safe, Permanent ano Complete! Wil-hoft- 's Tonic cures Chills and Fever, Dumb Chills nid Bilious Fevers those Titans that kill their thousands where this remedy is un- known. It cures Knlargement. of the Spleen. It cures Hypertrophy of the Li-- er. It hurts no one. It cures all types of Malarial Fevers and is perfectly protective in all its effects. Try Wilhoft's Tonic, the great infallible Chill Cure. YVheki.ock, Finlav fc Co., Proprie- tors, New Orleans. Fok Sale py am. Dkcgc.ists. This notice is addressed to ladies only. If you want to make your husband, father or brother a handsome Christmas present, give him a carton of Klin wood Collars, "iiou can g-- l them at any gents' furnishing store, be to get the El in wood, because it looks and fits better thau any other. Anna S. Getsingek, of Honesdale, Pa., writes the following: "After suffering for nearly two years from neuralgia in the breast, passing up" into the throat, face and head, I was entirely cured and restored to health bo- using Dr. L. Q. C. Wishart's Pine Tree Taj Cordial." Of course everybody knows that the Shei wail House is the best hotel in Chicago. Hut we desire them also to know that its rates have materially reduced. This will stiil further increase its already deserved jopii-iarit- A I'ROTKfDl o toe is not a sightly thing, gav nothing about health and comfort. SlL-VK- R TIPPED Shoes never wear out at the toe. For sale by all dealers. A-- Dybai.i.'s lines, candies- - mailed Iree to all parts at tide per Vt. Address Dy ball, Chicago. rax North w bstkun ! esB-Ni- i. o.'s " K'nifhcd " Nail i 'be lt:rt in the world. VettttMt Pnlmonarr Balutnit Molt ip- - rroved, reliable iM well-know- n remeUy tor C'oukIi, Colds nd Consumption. Vet the (Anoint Price l; small jUC Ccti-k- Bko. Co, Uttnton. U'll WRITIM: Til AIIVKKTlK 1 lennn ay you aw the BdverlUesnent Id i hi paper. k wrrir. AirenH wanted everywhere. For JM outfit viic. Fkitcii It WiWK, Dayton, Ohio. l ots for sale (K down, 5 per ra .uitj till Cihicaoo exchange. M. C. Spauiding, Chicago. IU -- , i I TTT i J AddreM Goodspeed'i Em-- O I $210 AMonth. tfZXXZ: V J J Oculars free. K. Waller & Co., tU Louis, Mo. 4)f" IKR I Y 'niil-!or- i "r :iO a il-- y BivTuml cvm-tfeK- . We otter il and will pay It. Apply uotr. C.. Weblr V Co., Marion, o. gm rm f A MONTH Agents wint.el every V'lJt3l where, liuxiness honorable ami first JX iiJ 1 rlii". I'iirtic'i'ars se!it fr-- e. Andrea MUUu JolIN WOKTilJe CO., St. Coins. Mo Men or Women ?! a AiikvrS f ! forf oteU. The Sn-r- t'rre. Write at once to CO WEN & M.. Eighth street. New v" "v Try Us P 1 Bplendid Chromo 9 Landscape Car.ls sent for iV, A'jeiitx wantrA Add'8 Cherry Co.. W adaworUi, O. HTCUTC OCTivrn bv ?ITSIVY A I Ell I O K.VAKTS, Vli La Salle st reel, Chieniro. I'uiiiphlet lor inventors Bent free. tF Fatjcnt SUITS A SeKl lALTV. COM CDVorFITS ennvi hv t he use of now' ileplic Keme-licH- . Trial l'iu-ka- : Ihl' 'ggTSteiglASM i:kk. Korcirenliira, evidence of hiic-cc.-- lit., u.Iuk -s KO.sS llKOTHEIis., Kichmond. Iud. TITCTI rIOXKY IV IT SCR EI Just I I I I lout. I'sel'ul. HandMinie. heap. ell THE I ecrywhere. or IVJ West reiii i"r t m 10 .1 AN. 5 '.arclav .St.. N. V.. 4th bt., Cincinnati, Ohio. ( 10 "f ST A XT KflPI.OTJIET. At home, Male or J ieinuie. t.jOa week warranted. Nocapital reiiuired. Particulais and valuable sample sent tree. Address, with 6c return stamp, C Koss, WilUauiuurh, N. V. The Millerand Millwright A monthly Journal of 18 paeeo. Every Miller ami Millwright xhould take it. Address S 1 pkon A ( : At: lt, Cincinnati, O. l.rt) per annum. Send for sample copy. OUR NEVY Laiies Kriksd" containn 7 articles needed bv every T.adv l'atent Spool-Holde- r, SeWsors, Tliinifile etc. miauin-lec- d worth ft. fd. Sample t'ox. hv moil, SO cents. Airetits wanted. I'l.UMlj KHS. Eighth street, I'hiiadclphta, l'a GUNTHER'S CANDIES! cb briited tlirMv-!uKi- t the T'nion. V pressed to all parts at fill et a : u 1 -- tiud n:id upward.-- . Ad- dress i l '!" 11 '.11 f!ilVt-iioMf-r- , t'liicugo. The A mrrirnn Nrn-itr- r I nioii nunibrrs ovi-- r 1.UH) papers, aeparati-- into ftevni subdivis-10T1- For separate lists and cost of advertising, address S. F. SANBOF.N, 111 Mouroo St., Chicago. BUST HOLIDAY GIFT, FOR PARENT, CHILD, TEACHER, PASTOR, FRIEND. Welsier'sDjalirMpfl Dictionary. 3000 ENGRAVINGS; IS 10 PACES Ho. CDFI? f Ppeclnipn Copies of the best Aprl- - m bd cultural l'aer lu the world. AMERICAN FARM JOURNAL. Slitt-r- Large Piti- - for only 7.1 renCx per yean Save-you- inoin-y- . Specimen Copies frea to any address, send Postal Card to JMK.-- K V JO ES, Toledo, OUo. 1 ou will like the paier. WnTW lyWS. independent, hoiiet and tearli,s newspaprr, of broa I columns, especially de-iu- for ihe farmer, the mechanic, Ihe merchant lid the professional mail, and He ir w ies ami children. We aim to make the XVcc-Ul- 11 11 tiie hest family newstaM-- r in the world. It is t ii 1 ol a nd insl rueli ve rend- ing of every sort, hut pi in nothing 'o the most scrupulous and delieal e last-- . Price, l."JO per year. pohtaKK prepaid. The cheapest paper pub- lished, 'lry it. Address Til r. New York it v. Jjli,r,,iJfc.T'm. Address 21 Of. Jl IIVC, Kit. - II mlw-.-rr- IVnlfr f!1 H.--- ' - iT V : Hh.ir---- r ; n..-., fl.X TH' - &2 &-- " T " -'.- !.--. . VJ.",.. Sii'-- - !7 .itiilai.troo. Ad.h .. ii.w. iiiM.&co. i1;.-.- - 1 Is (he only machine that rsn k nil all Pues of work ami nar- row Mel w id'-- it: tliar can tliapi and .'SjP!.KrK( without Seamless Ilo-sier- v, (i loves and M i ileus. ir k nit llieio ill nil W0111.11 niskeS.Of a day with it. ,u-?i- f IV Mftnip Ptr pjunple of tvurk iuM j: lai rl pric-- U J. K. Wootllicul, .Auiil, o-- W. .M;ulisjii Chicago. ASTHMA I CATARRH. H wii: hi uK i. .( t vnttit y u c-- liic mi, J h with AM1IMA, I riinwt-- iy coim- - l4iititliti itMits himI herlx mi inlmltu:? th m- - I for! dlmlfly r WonlM t ul rtinMiv n.l snif cur for A xihma an! C'atarrli. WtrTntfti f rh-- ntvti'rit pnroxyftiu tite ptth-n- l ran li rlnwii to r(tt nii'l oiNlrrtiiliiy. Irutrt;ijt!) ar? Kiiitplietl witti niilf for v rk k bold ly 1ru;.sf infp. I':triit,.' liv mail ft. Ll.t Aj.l9 C rrrb, OhJo. sOesolseERS. "We have Rrrnnprod witli IKSMONJ) & CO., 915 Knre at reel, Philadelphia, by which each subscriber to this paper 1 s ent it led t o receive a book of choice selections from the poetical works of BYRON, MOCRE AND BURHS, liy sending 10 cents to the above address. FREE to iBOQK "AGENTS AN KI.K;MI,V-i:orM- ) iV.v.; HOOK or th; bet and cheapest Family Klble ever pub- lished, will be sent free of chame to any book ci-n- It contains Over TOO One Scripture Illustrations, and nsmds are meeting with unprecedented success. Address, sta'injr experience, etc., and we will sho w what our atrcnts are doiiiK, NATIONAL PL CO., Chicago, 111., or St. Louis, Mo. The Cincinnati Weekly Star ! Including; postaire and the flne'v-illiistrate- d Star H per year. A ill -- Monopoly 1'iie (iranirrr's 1'apr r com. unities larre paaesof ex- cellent reading matter. The farmer, merchsint and me- chanic in any part of the country will find this the best of the weeklies, to say nothini of the low- - price. Afrentsare orb-re- Inducements superior to anything: heretofore attempted, specimen copies free. Ad-dre- ts "THE STAIi," Cincinnati, Ohio. sec C. will i I , pay for your Nnnir- Slamn. made of the bent Vulcanised Uubber. Also, Itoxen, laIs anil Indelible Ink. Anv style of tyH-yo- tlesire w iil lie used. The stamp works to perfection on CARDS, as well as in marking clothes. Address Rubber Stamn MTr.lfH E. Madison-eL- . Chlcneo. N. B. Xo attention paid to orders not accompanied bj cash or stamp for reply, fcpecial terms to Agents Hi! My ILLUSTRATED SEED CATALOGUE for 1ST5 is sow ekadt and will be mailed, FREE OF CHARGE, to all applicants. English and German Edition. Address JOHN KERN, 21 I Market St., St. Louis. Jf"State where you saw this advertisement. sio PER DAY. TosellthellOMK SIHTTLK SKAA IXG JII.V CI I INK. PKH'K Reader:! vut can mako money selUmr the NOME Sll irTT'L.K" whether jou are KXPIOItlKM'KO in the business or not. If you wish to buy aisKYVLNU .M A II IN K for family use. our circulars will sluivy you now- - to suvu money. JOUNSOX, CLAKK & CO., Chicago. III. ecKiy own merits, send for my quarterly matrazine, (tt costs you nothing,) containing certificates of hundreds that have been permanently cured. I claim to have discovered and produced the first, original and OXLY CCRK FOR OPir w EAT1XO. Ult. S. It. (OLLI.VS, L.sl Iorte, I nil. mum 1 HAPIT CURKD at Home. Vo Terms iiioih'ratc. Time short. Four years of success. Describe case. iHitestliiionuils. Address Dr.FJi..Marsli,Quincy.Mich. and exnenBes a month to afrenta. Address Snnn A.U b Mlcb. OPIULVI BOYS LOOK HERE! 1 Iil2 teb AGENTS IITM Habit Cured 1'ublicity. lODDAIlIX Jonesvilie. E A T E KS TTTORO TTG TT 1ST CUKEI. Chuap.ouick : nostitrerine. 6 yrt wonderful success. Inscribe case. Dr. Aruistrong, Berrien. Alicb. Prisli:? Press FOR A CLU B OF FIFTFKV Sl l'.si lin i lis TO "Ol ll OWX FUIKSIIJK." Send three-cen- t stamp for Sample Paper and Terms. Address Our Own Fireside Publishing Company, 176 William St., New VorK. N1AL TTx hkdStatesGt AZETTEIIR Miows the crand resultsol out tirst 1MI years. tXHk for every American. Sells everywhere at sipht. Farmers, Teachers, Students, Lawyers, Merchants. School Directors. Mechanics, Shippers, Salesmen, men of lcarnincand meu who can only react, old and yuunir. all want Ii forevervday reference & osol A whole library." lioun (rlvhe. Not a luxury, but a necessity. nOr- - Ocean. The most recent, complete, t nisi wort hy. "A'ation, The lloOK Pi ulishko. Send lor Circulars to ZLLU LKii, MeCCIUJ V Cluuaa.au. MM J i I Dunham & Sons. Manufacturers, I J J Warerooms, 18 East !4th Street, Established 183. KW YORK. Send for Illustrated Circular and Price List. $14.60 Shot Guii.C- - A CURE ASSURED tss.k, LrrVuiif uiuuner of treatme Addresa Box &7. way express agent. Send stamp for lo iii uoio-- without Ihe seoflhe kuire. Send stamp Tor Ml. cure. IHt. I. II. (ill ATII.l lKSl'-LU- bTBKKf, NKlt KoCllTl', CINCINNAII. tub o.Ni.Y Self-Threadi- Machine,CZZL2; IN TIIH WOKI.IJ. pi AMKIIICW KKWIXli M.( IliNK CO.. il'i W almdi Avenue. Cli i j;o. J Optic's Magazine, 1 875. "Vow is the time In Snlwi lle The New Vol- ume willconlaiu New store-sh- il: .c r optic, Kbi Helloes an, i others, besides many nev features, all of hleh are duly set forth in our Prospei t ns. Term". year. In advance. numbers mailed free on LKK SI1K1M.UI), I'uttlUlieiM, ISooIou. 1 875. Postpaid. S 1 .60. THE NURSERY. A Jfnnthta Murfozine for ' Younqert Kenter. lLLCsi iivi-KO- . HTScm-- I leu cents loraSaiif pleNuinWr. SnbTlIt and the laat two numbers of this year FltKK I L. SHOREY, 30 Broiufitll Street, Hoaton. JO. m L ii i EASY. particulars 11 1 . a v application. SOWib'd) JOHN CALLING CARDS NOBBY DESIGNS. A(iKTS -- WINTBD. Send stamp for Circular. Wedding and ordora spe- cialty allow prices. undercook Ot t o.. Designers and Kntri. -- tato and Madison tits., Chicago. Adjustable Dash Lamp, FOU MfillT IHtlVnO or HI TI.i; Can used on any shaped lish or on nnv kind of Vehicle. t;ives a powerful li:1it loriJ.t'eet aheiiiL Mums kerosene i w 11 bout chimney. Splendid llarn Lantern. Try one. Price C.O.I . Prlv. ileco of examination. A'so, Improved Sta(.T-('oac- h Ijimps. IVUII b atA.M-l- - 'Tl-K'C- COMMOT, At r!4Mrt C onn. STEINWAY Grand, Spare and Upriatt Pianos. Sup-rU- ir to nil olh-rra- TCvpry Pluno "ViirriTtt'i f.r Five Vnirn. I Mum r:.t. uUiloUfs, willil'ricu .Lint, inailt'd irt'u n Bitplic'itioii. Nus. 10T, 1 & Ul Ka- -t 1 tilt btm U Krw r . uH to thr pBMirr-H'f-r.. for !'- - pi t "ruriuuc n rut mjlt(. M artfi.ll.mpi' l rtHfmi t! nU ihr (Mll.llf! Iinli'l lift I. N H ti I VI in oui- - kv ai1)) tin in irt- - ? .V'tlift tmt hit kmlrLo jt a. ini - i tiTvl""rr, Kt ;.: Vi'-t- i 11' "ftwti. itl that I hvp rn parlivr or ut, t . (.r .i v ti v I.uMic tiatr Ih fct Pkt.-iix- .f a !! t ;.v- ri ;r n :. "f i ihii ! ortl n . front me urice U."' o ut ) m it H' "4t III. Mt i.'rinl;j i tK rli- -: I - - tlu- - fVmaUf im-- yrt ri-- : n. fnf. & ih I)., tint I 'Iu oHio. an. tMBs to fim s .1 fitiH..v kUte. M cur- - "f U ptu m Till r. n - at) iiwitinm "'M . k. 'l itin j nan' iti tj'TitHH'tion Willi t"n-- -r 'i r " rwn lifting PIT nniiia- r ., I ( tt.- - f taw- tin- uMif !' .ut "l-- ivrM. n i" i " tbT wi 'rv: iftii, m 'Ii- tts.isufc'f tnl IN' u j'nil- i -.r !,- a. t f. H' l I I IS.- lit. l. .1 ll ,i-- ...t n i... ii I.T 1. .1. Cheap GOOD Reading. TUf COMrr.KTE AVORKS f Cikhkt, W:thitit;toii Irving, Itickens. Tlmclerii.v, 4'lia-- . Ke.xle, IHimas, Vf I k ic ol n, .1 in s l'n v ne, II ; I home. Waller Mull, iiilliony Trolliipe, Man yall, Ac., Ac. iic com plele to'uiiie iii ll iliel every Iwiinri-lis- . i'iie ONLY III t'KVIS f r volume: TO M II-- S lCIIII.i;s. $;.!- - I'KKANNlvH lor 2i vol- umes, m.i itiil. wnrl h from IO t $.!. li'r-- I lian ci iii lilim ry. ol. I, "11m- - Itcst of II unliaiitlM," ly .1 allies li ne. m ral v. Se-- i men coiiie lOcca. Ii. si NOW for the New Vfiir. .,iilrcs, IloiuiclN-v- , Lord & Co., IMilicrs - I ik silo Library," lark A Adams fl.,t'hie:!o, FOIl JVE.VRLV TIIIKTV YK.YUK TIIH RICHMOND PRINTS llavi! been held in ':'. .11 by tho-- o who ts a i . They are T .n il in all Me Movcltlcsofeliam" lt'K and in "iw-r- , at i e ntx lei- - Milled ! the wantb of many perin.. AnUiiu the latter arc the " STANDARD GRAY STYLES, " Projierfor the houc or street beautiful In designs and ika-int- ; iu coloring. " Chocolate Standard Styles, " In preat variety, and widely known as nuM servicea- ble iiiitus. Nothing belter lor daily wear. 6. ur U iififl ti'-ir- e. Your retailer should have Uieiii,aniii-urc.ai- i iinii ion ami approval will coincide. T1XK "FAMILY FAVORITE.' SIMPLE. DURABLE. RELIABLE. "Made of the lnatoHala. rrts InterchnnpeaMo and few in number, easily learned, doing a great va- riety of work w ithout extrasttachinents. Ve emphatically deny the statements madebynti tils or other maehiuos coucerninif our goods Jud our busi- ness standiux. SEED Mil MacMiiK Co., J 3 State St., rhirngo. 111. THE PIAf 0-HA- E? Cabinet Orsan, PtMltl Drrrmhrr. IS) I. Anpwand beautiful musical Instrument or Im- provement upon the ( abinet uran beint a combiti:i-io- u of the pianoforte and oi an. To a complete Five-X'tav- e Double. Rt-e- oi van is added a l'tauo-Harp- . the ones of which are between those oftbo pianoforte nd liarp. it has a pianoforte action ; is pla d by I ho iine l.evs the or.Mii. slid may be used separately jr w ith one or ail the stops of organ. It is not lia-M- e to (ict outof order and does not reqmr tuninu. Haviiiif thoroughly tested this beautiful improvement, we oiler it with jrrcat connd-ne- to Ihe public. I'rieo of l'i ANo H AKi' CABINET ORGAN, beimt a Dor hi it RitkkOiki an. Si x Stops: w ith V'V HrMAVA, Af SW EI.I., K.VKB SWKLL. v Pi three and a ball octaves; lu Elegant Upright Resonant Case, tJUU Circulars free. MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO., 23 Vn on Square, Xevr York j 131 Trrmont St., Iloston; 0& fe4 Adams St., Chicago. fc1 J", the mm el EDOER TITF5 CHEAPEST AND BEST PAPER IN" THE COUNTRY. PER MUSVI A certain and snrt cure, without Inconvenience err T i and at home. An antidote that stands purely on na Unexcellea by any W iiiterary GIVEN A Manufacturers, BEST-SKLLIM- l & CO., Party Tit Publication, East or West. CAXVASSKUS VAMI.I IN 1IVKKT TOWN IX Tl'.r. UMTi:i vriTKS. The most Liberal Premiums and f'l otTeie I by newspaper. Write f. iii'iif full i' f.irei.itio.-- . U . Hp. to AT "nriilPhed on li. aiioe. A.t.lres "IIK i.KOUKH fi.r.NY. llI- K.i - t e rt e r .r a I'll" nl. i inn it I ' ie: TRYING ON TIIE BOOTS! This feilow is in trould". And no won-ler- ! For I lie new bi..is he has bought, wi.ihfut '.iri-- t tr:n them on. uill mil wt. lie in I If h t learn a lr..iii the little fellow wh o S'-- the hli-- r to the i'ub i ier of Hie Young Folts News: ' f"-r- r ir llreviiiif lo ur-- of the Yor.NO foi ks'N w... I send for a HMH iinen ony I ,,1 w t i i I it 0 in,. it way In try i"i tn 'l html l fore flHf til' tn. F'ieiM.1 k R." .u. ,nui u ......lln-- r I. 'Iter. AS tollows: " Jj.'tr - v lilt lo Kiv In- eaniined the nunihers w liich you him. ha tout the It x'tt ou. and likes the lit. .o p.. vim! send him the i oi NO Folks' Nkws for one vcar. Fi;ki.hiks r tiiki:. Seud a thri-e-ce- ni.iinp for a iuien opy. Trf nn th In tirxt. They are sure lo lit. i'rice. only M.--4- . and 'warranted to hi t f.-- r one year, wlih a fiandsoine Chromo tnven " lo Im ' .i." The sH-- r for one year, nostane paid, and thr; ch"i,-- e .f four I limiine., or the paper, with either t hromo inn"' te-t- , il.Vljnr with Chromo . mounted. t.7:or with ;'ir Chromos. mounted, '4.33. Mounted I nro-m- ;ire ready for franntm. .Sf: tn tt r, fr 1 vi7v.vi-r- t tt'tmhrr. ALFKKI) 9I4HT1K., Piibli.hrr. XI Siouth Seventh Street, i'liilaUclpbia.. noi'BLE BAKREli GC'Sf; warranted resl English barrei, paieiil lre--h- , a igKH sn..ler. wnh r litsk. and V bent t;. o. !., wiii pMvllejn? to ex- - suiine Pelore payinn hid. upon iay iiuf express ciiHrjre potti (JoOuu dealers, lUlt SluaU, tst, ixiuis, M-- . Dr. .7. Walker's California Yin- - C'ar lliltoi'S aro a purely Veetubl preparation, miulo chlelly f"n tlio na- tive herb found on the lowei ..i:iijc:i of tlio Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor- nia, tbo inedicinal propcrtios of which are extracted therefrom without tlio tiso of Alcoliol. Tho question H almost daily asked, "What is tho causo of tha unparalleled success of Vinkgau 15it-tf.i3- ?" Our answer is, that they removo tho causo of disease, ami tho patient re- covers his health. They aro tho preat hlood purifier and a lifo-givi- n principle, a perfect lienovator and Invif:or.ior of the system. Never before in tho history of tho world li.is .1 lccn couipoiiiided jiossessinp tlio rciii.ul.alilo qualities of Vi.nkoar I'.ittkks in l.caliii'r tlia eick of every dist-as- ntan is licir t. Thoy aro a pentlo I'urpativo as w.-l- l .n a Tunic, relieving Conpesti"n or 1 nii.nMi;i m of the Liver and Yiccrul O.g.it.-- in Uilioua Diseases. The iro(Miios of Dn. Wai.kkk's Yiseoar IJittkks :to AinTienl. Diaphercl if, Carminative, Nutritions, Laxative. Hiiin-tic- , Sedative, t'ouiiler-Irriian- t feudontic, Atlefa-tivo- . and Anti-Biliou- Uraf Kal TIi o-- i sards Vi. 3JGAK jIJTTEIlS tho l'.inst V ojpierh.l that ever em ti.lnod tho tinking accordm.i; to directi'mf-'- , andieinaiiijoiij unwell, provided their bonn aro not ed by mineral poison or other tueiun, and vital organ.; wasted beyond rep'v.r. Jtilious, l.cuiiKont anl Inter- - 111 it 1 w hich aro fo proTn. lent iu the valleys of our grout I'.'.oii throughout tho United Statoa, frpfcially (hose of tho &iissi;--Mpp- i, OJiio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland,. rkan-Ba- s, lied, Color ado, lini::os, Iiio (iinndo, 1'earl, Alabama-- Mobiio, Savannah, Ko-ano- Jamea, ;:nd many others, witlj their va.- -t tributaries.' throughout oui entire eouutty duriiv' Mic Summer and Autinim, and l fvnnrkably so hn imj- - sr; pfins or jimifjual h'Mt ami divM--- , lira invariatdy aienm-nuiii-.- l !y t xtensi v. 1 do-ram- ,'''; uui-- s of t!i" stomach and liver, and other abdominal viscera. In their treatment;, a purgative, exertic.c a ov-erf- ul inthn nco npeii the.-i- u variua or- - u esst nli;:liv r.cct-s- . is no cathartic 1 .?r tho pun . Thero e f oual to 1)K. J. WALKfli'S VfNLuAll lIUTHKtf, as they will sjeedily remove t lm d.trk-eolore- d vi.-ci-d matter with which tho bowcld are loaded, at tho sarie !imo strfiiulatin (he and Koneridlv Kct'ieti'ins d i.'i0 liver, if -- loriiij' th healthy l'uuctins tif tho digestive ;;:.,in'-. Fortify ih li7y n:? iKivf dif.iso bv imrif'. i'mr id! it. f!iii-- i wi;h Vint.o n I'.xttki;.'-.- . ro 'pidemi-.- ' em Ld ) hidd ci a, I !ni:i Ihsju ji' ia or i;,ii-redio:- , Head-ael- n' Pain m the Shoulders C''!,f.;'".', Tihtnoss of tho Chest, Hizzines:-.- . .Sm:r Ernetations of the, Stomach, J5;m1 Ta. lo in tho Movdh, I'.ilioiw Attacks, Palpit of tho Heart, Inllarnr.iat of tin Lungs, 1'ajn in flu; region of the ti ne s, and a hundred other painful mp-tom.- -', aro tlio i of !);:' V:u One bottle will prove a better guarantco of its merits than a lengthy advei tiso-me- nt. Scrofala, or 'iiMi's Evil, V.'hio Sweliinp.-t- , Ulcere, 'Lryiju-la-'- , S.vcliod N'cvlf, Goitre, Scrofulous Iidl iiniiiriti'ti Iudol tit Inflanunation.i, Morcari-- A IIUlis Old Sores, EriitioiiS of lL SLin, S"fi il In these, uh iu all otiu-- coiis'itui. cj, "Walkku's Vimo.mi LTrn.i:.i havo shown their prer.t f iiratiio piv(-r- ii the moKt ohslinato and intractahlu ii.;c . For lnl!aisnnatory and (.'Iitonlc RhCV.iatisin, Gout, IJil'mus, Roniit-tentan- d Intermittent, Fcver i, Diseases ol tho I".!ood, l iver, Kidneys a:.d BItvidnr, Bitters li.-.- ve no e'j'i'd. Such Diccuj'j ar caused by Viiir.ted Blood. Met'IianiVal lMse-ase?- . rersons m-ig- od in I'Jints ami Mineral?, rick as I'lumber-t- , Type-setter?- , Gold-liealem- nd Miners, as they advam.-- iu life, a to sii!ij-n- t to paralysis f tho Bowels. To jiniard apainxt t hi;, take a dose ( f AVALKEuV VtN-KOA- R B ITT khs :eea iii'iu'ly. For Skin J'i.v'asj'S, Erupt Tet- ter, Salt IM.euiii, Id-it- i Spot-.- rurtnh's. I5i;!-- (,.:r,t!nee., liir.-- wtm., Scald-head- Smci Byep. j:ry..i;)i'ii--- . Itch, Sc'.ffV, Bisii-ViiMtioii- f the Skin, Humors and Diseases of ll; Skin of whatever nam ft or nature, aro liicraHv dup n and carried out of the pysteifi in a short Umo by tlio 'Jso of these Lifters. Tin, Tapo, nii nll-c- r Vv'orms, lurkinp in tho system I sn th'i'iseuidi, ora clloetually d. ;:l.voytd and d. No svKtem of liied'u iue, r, crmd'ie'-i- ;:o will five tLohyslcb- - fiom worniu like these Bitterf. For Foinalc rompT;: It:f s, in young or old, married or sitie, :U the e i va if wo manhood, or tho turn of MV, those Tonic Bitters tli.-fd.i- so decided an that improvemjut soon j ihh. Cl'iins(lli( VitiaitMl r!o:l when- ever vou lind its impiuiJie burst im. through the skin in I'nnpic-i- , JOi uptioiip, or Son;; cleanse it when yi;u find it oIstru-t.e- tnl plnfrgish in tlio veins; clenno it when it il f ml ; your feeling v. il! t!l vou when. Keep tho LKm-i- I ptiro, and ttie l.utifth of ihe ujvtsiil will follow. it. ii. MriHivu.n A; hi, rrnrt-- i i ninlOn. Airtj.. Si i Kriim-- i l.!ifrrol, Olid e.ir. of V'ii..liiiu:t'ii up i 'iim iioi' S N. Y tll ly all Uro-j.'l- t - ml U iiltri. Wisliarfc's Pine Tree Tar Cordial ! Nature's Great lleiuedy FOR ALL Throat and Lung Diseases. For Sale by All Drug- gists and Storekeepers. t.' nft lnx- At bor A. V. t 4N7-- K. P. K. 'I'lii-- ' FA I'KK 1h prlr.te.j with 1 N K m sua fact mej by I o Li. KANK A CO.. I i I Oe;trl)(.ra tt., !ii- - Vo by A.N.K.Bt.'lobu,') Jokua btCi.e ii

Nebraska Herald. (Plattsmouth) 1874-12-24 [p ]. · rendered them unable to pay for the transportation of their families to the localities w here they desire to go; and we therefore

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Page 1: Nebraska Herald. (Plattsmouth) 1874-12-24 [p ]. · rendered them unable to pay for the transportation of their families to the localities w here they desire to go; and we therefore

Address of the Colored People ofAlabannC

To the People of the United States:The awakening or a just appreciation in

our minds to the inevitable boon of freedomprauted to 4,000,(100 of our rac e by the valor,fidelity and liitrh moral conviction of thepeople of the Northern States has inspiredthe colored people of the State of Alabama,in convention assembled, to plaee before theworld thtdr true condition at the presenttime, and also to invoke your aid to amelio-rate it. It is nevessiiry for us to all votir at-

tention to the condition of the colored peopleat the time when, as a " war measure," Pres-ident Lincoln issued his Emancipation proc-lamation, or, more properly, our conditiontwo years after its promulgation; for but veryfew of us in Alabama knew that we had Ir-ci- i

made free until after the surrender of therebel armies. At that time we were help-less, wretched slaves, dependent on the willof the masters wlioownetl us, as absolutely asany chattel property could be held. Thelaws of Alabama a. id the inclination of thepeople made it a crime for any person to in-

struct us how to read and write; and everydevire that could be thought of by the slave-holder wa resorted to in trder that we mihtbe reduced to the condition of brutes, except-ing only the, leaving to us of the power ofspeech, for without that our value wouldLave been less on the auction-block- .

Thus, having by hostile laws and immoralowners been brought to as degraded a condi-tion as it was possible for human beings tobe lowered to, nsudden edict bade us rise upand become " free men" as well miht thestrong man have hid the helpless babe of afew months' life to. stand up without sup-jMr- t.

bo In Ipleus were we. More helpless, in-

deed ; forthtjbab'j would have all to learn,his limbs would be untrammeled, he wouldknow nothing of the cruelties wrought bycapricious owners. Our limbs were fettered,our senses blunted or impaired, the life thatwe had leen trained to at the whipT'inir-jxjs- thad made a night of despair settle upon our60ul. We scarcely believed that we werehuman bcinirs when the tidings of our free-dom were lirt imparted to us. lnouru.terhelplessness the Government of the UnitedStates did in a small degree extend its pro-tecting arm to us, iu the shape of the Freed-men'- s

Bureau, which was the means of savingmany thousands of helpless creatures fromdisease and death. But the lease of life ofthat refuge of safety was too short to havethe etl'ect of placing us very far on the roadto become intelligent and useful citizens.Never having seen the rights of man respect-ed by their white masters, excepting whenenforced by the rifle and pistol, nor taught toresject any person but a rich slaveholder, thefreedman had to be taught cUilizatioii as itwas undersUiod in the free States of the North.This was a most dillicult task for want of ex-ample combined with precept.

Immediately after the slave States had ac-cepted, nominally, the Thirteenth amendmentto the Constitution of the United States, theLegislature of Alabama passed various acts.

. which became laws, that in every respect, excepting the right or sale of our persons, re-

duced us to practical slavery. These laws,known by various names, were of fueh a charaeter as proclaimed to the world that the exslaveholders' belief was still "the negro hadno rights which a white man was bound torespect." The believed then,ami does believe to this dav, and has taughthis children to believe, that we were his property, his chattels, stolen from him by a powcrful enemv, w ho had invaded his countryand to deprive us of everything we earn andyossess is a matter of right, and that it is hisduty to treat as an alien enemy every whitman and intelligent colored man w ho may attempt to improve us.

To remedy this evil, if we understand it correctlv, the nation gave us the ballot; and bvthe adviceiof man v of our race who had learnedsomething, and the ollicers of the Freedmen's.Bureau, we exercised, at the peril of our livesthe right that the Fifteenth amendment to theConstitution naa given to us, ana by our votesplaced in office those men whom we considered were most friendly to the elevation of ourrace and all mankind. Some of the menwhom we had chosen were inexperienced andunfortunately, fell into the traps prepared forthem bv the wilv lover of shivery, who hadsworn to make toth emancipation and reconstruction utter failures.

Murderous leagues were formed by the exslaveholders, sworn to prevent not only tinnegro and " Kadieal" from voting, but a No toprevent the instruct ton of the colored peopleLeagues sworn to deny their own existence.to hold no oath made before a civil tribunalsacred.to break open any jail in the State whereone of their number should be confined, andby all the ties that a common cause (love forthe accursed institution slavery) could sug- -

rrt in upfnmrtlttili tlir ft'll nimMKO Tlieowned the land, supported

the public press, and held, even after reconstruction, the majority of the judicial andadministrative offices in Alabama, all thepowers of which were directed against thecolored people of the State. Yet in despiteof all these drawbacks the colored peoplehave worked hard continually since the closeof the war, both in the cotton and com fields,a the amount produced of each of tnesestaples has not fallen off (except when eatenup by the cotton-worm- ), and the only laborto be' had in the cotton-bel- t of Alabama wasthe much-abuse- d colored men who had formerly been slaves. Notwithstanding this faithful work not more than 2 per cent, of thecolored people outside of large towns andcities have had eitherclothesenoiigh to wearorfood that a Northern laborer would eat. Theforced Ignorance of our ieoile rendered themeasy victims of the fraudulently-incline- d cotton-plante- r.

The law books of Alabama are rilled withlaw tht are not enforced when the coloredman is in the question. The Constitution ofAlabama provides for equal rights, immuni-ties and privileges for all classes of citizens,abundant funds for educatioual purposes, butall these guarantees are mere words set uponpaper, to le scotled at ty the tyrannical ex- -slaveholders, now calling themselves theIiemocratiti and Conservative party of Alabaiua. During the past two years a cry ofdown with the negro, commonly known asthe 4 Kace issue, has been taken up bv almost everv class of in Alabama, and through the excitement producedby this race appeal hundred of our jieoplehave been murdered, thousands nave beendriven from the farms upon which thev havelived, and which they had rented and cultivated, without being permitted to take apound of cottpn with them which they hadraised, or the provisions which they hadstored. The local civil authorities have beenin league with the s, and the sentiment of the communities has applaudedthe acts. Those of our own race and whiteloyal men whom we have chosen to representus hare cither been driven twav or brutallyand cowardly assassinated bv the Ku-Klu- x orWhite League organization, and thelest men in the Stute, the finest legal t.ilent,have volunteered to defend the few men whohave Iteen arrested bv the United Statesauthorities, charged with committing theseterrible crimes. Corrcsiondents of some ofthe New York newspapers who have' beensent to Alabama to rejKirt the condition of

flairs have been the guests of our spoliatorsand their sympathizers, and have reiteratedthrough their influential journals all thefalsehoods that had been coined and retailedby the press of Alabama. Theonly exceptions to this rule of one-side- d re-

ports so far, as we are informed, have beenthe reports of the correspondents of the Chi-cago Intcr-Octa- n and the New York L'rjnMic.

It is to prevent a false idea of the lamenta-ble situation of the greater number of thecolored jeople living in agricultural districtsof Alabama from being entertained by TitirNorthern friends, and to ask aid from them ina plan that we would risk to adopt to lienetitthe colored people and give them a fairchance, untrammeled by the hostility of thosewho look with hatred or contcii upon allefforts to better his condition made by thecolored man, that we address the e ofthe United States favorable to the real eman-cipation of the negro from practical slavery.We have therefore organized an EmigrationAssociation and given to them authority totake such steps as will best effect the earlysettlement of a colony of colored families inthe far West, which, in case of success, maybe a nucleus around which mauy thousandsof the hard-workin- g colored families of Ala-bama mar build up for themselves bappyhomes. The continued spoliation of thecolored people of their earnings hasrendered them unable to pay forthe transportation of their familiesto the localities w here they desire to go; andwe therefore ask the assistance of all loversof freedom and enemies to human slavery tocarry us to a portion of the country where wemay have an equal chance in the struggle forlife and fortune. To carry out the foregoingobject we have appointed commissioners torisit Northern cities and solicit aid and lectureupon toe true condition of the colored peopleof Alabama at the present time.

The foregoing address was adopted by theunanimous vote of the convention, forty coun-ties of Alabama being represented at the timeof its adoption by regularly-electe- d delegate.

A resolution was then 'passed, asking Re-publican and Indeiendent papers favorable tothe amelioration of the condition of the col-ored people of Alabama to publish this ad-dress. Philip Joseph,

President of the Convention.

The First Sign.

That the late election is just what itwas felt to be when the result was known,an expression of dissatisfaction, and notthe deliberately-declare- d preference ofanother policy, is plain enough from thefact that the Democratic party has au-

thentically declared no policy since 1868.The adoption at Baltimore in 1872 of theCincinnati platform was well understood

to be a desperate trick. The party voicewas silenced in the hope of forming acoalition which would destroy the Re-publicans. It failed, totally, and theDemocrats left the field, taking withthem the larger part of their allies. Ofcourse the Democratic party does notwish to be judged upon its platform of1838, which demanded virtual repudia-tion and violation of the national faithin the taxation of the bonds, and whichrejected the Reconstruction cts as unconstitutional, revolutionary and void.But that these opinions are changedthere is no reason to suppose. Mr. Sey- -mour was the Presidential candidate ofthe convention, and Mr. Henry C. Mur-phy was the New York member of theJMatform Committee, and these two gen-tlemen are the most prominent candi-dates of the party in Jsew York for theSenatorship of the United States. It isundoubtedly true, also, that those whowould heartily sustain repudiation, whowould break laith and tax the bonds, andwho would repeal the amendments andall the settlements of the war, are to befound among the rejoicing hosts of Dem-ocrats. But it would be thought fool-hardy to announce the platform of 18G8as the present manifesto of the party.

The congratulating Democratic ora-tors, we observe, extol public virtue andthe necessity of reform, but prudentlyforbear distinct allusions to the purposesof 1beir party, or tc its last authonzedutterances, or to its perfectly well-know- n

traditions and tendencies. It isone of the sarcasms of politics that whileMr. Tilden, amidst the pop of 'cham-pagne corks and the consumption ofpartridges and pate, exhorts his youngerDemocratic friends to engage honorablyin public life and not to allow that poli-tics are corrupting, his older Democraticfriend, Mr. John Kelly, who procured thenomination of Mr. Tilden, and who isthe chief ot the chief Democratic organ-ization in the State, nominates "Jimmy"Hayes, coerces justice in the Crokercase, and does his best to defeat consti-tutional guarantees against corruptionat the polls. Under this leadershipyoung Democratic gentlemen with ataste for punch and Parmesan are ex-pected to press on toward political pur-ity.

Hut if a Democratic policy is not to befound in the national platform of 1808,still more hopeless is the search in theState platforms of this year. They de-nounce Republican rascality with greatvigor, and they cry aloud against theCredit-Mobilie- r, and the salary-grab- , andcarpct-baggcr- y, and Sanborn jobbery,and Southern satrapies. IJut beyond ademand in some of them for "homerule" and lor revenue reform there is nohint of a policy. Maine declared forfree trade, but Pennsylvania did not.New York demanded hard money, butIndiana and Ohio reouired paper. Allcondemned the C'ivil-Kight- s bill and un-constitutional legislation. In this utterwant of unanimity, when, in themidst of Democratic denunciationof the salary-grab- , that strenuousgrabber, tSen. Banks, was elected by animmense majority, and when DemocraticMissouri, with a cry for rags and repudiation, answered with 40,000 majorityto the 50,000 of Xciv York demandinghard money, it could hardly be said thatthe Democratic victory meant admistra-tiv- e

reform or a sound financial policy.Since, then, the election meant only

dissatisfaction, although it gave power inthe Douse of Representatives to theDemocrats, what indications of a policyhave been visible since the election?There has been but one distinct proposition, and that was made by Mr. (ieorgeTicknor Curtis, of New "iork, and hasbeen generally adopted by the Democratic newspapers. Ihis is a proposition to repeal what he calls all the unconstitutional laws of the last twelveyears. That there should be any unconstitutional laws whatever is to be regret-ted. But if a party propose to purge thestatute-book- , why does it limit its action? Why does not the author of theproposition include all unconstitutionallaws? Ihe reason is evident, lo retain and extend its power the Demo-cratic party must conciliate its old alliesin the Southern JStates, and to do this itmust Uo all that it can to paralyze theamendments, since it cannot repealthem. The Democrats were driven frompower fourteen years ago. The legislation of the last thirteen years is Repub-lican, and it is that which is to be setaside under the plea of unconstitutionality. 1 his is another way of reachingthe end foreshadowed by Mr. Eaton,Democratic Senator from Connecticut,in a speech after his election, and whichwas exposed by a very sagacious politi-cian, Truman Smith, of thesame State.

Mr. Eaton said that he, "with otherhonest Senators, ' would take away " thefederal bayonets from our brothers inthe South" and leave them the right of"local Mr. Smith pointsout that this means simply declining toenforce the amendments. But if the lawenforcing them were repealed the resultwould be the same. And this proposi-tion, it should be observed, the only dis-tinct statement of a policy to be pursuedby a Democratic Congress, proceeds fromtwo gentlemen w ho w ere among the mostbitter, persistent, and politically malig-nant Copperheads of the war. We usehe word to define precisely their political

status. Thev were of the same school asWilliam B. Reed, of Philadelphia. Thisis the spirit which in the moment of suc-cess inspires the Democratic party andshows unmistakably that it is still gov-erned by its worst traditions. The endof such a policy is plain. The Democraticparty h already declared the amendments themselves unconstitutional. Ithas receded from that position, but theconviction remains, and it will easily findevery law unconstitutional that enforceswhat it would repeal if it could. Theparty orators and papers profess to ac-cept the amendments and they will notpropose to abrogate them. But in everypracticable and plausible way they willnullify them. The system of practicalpeonage proposed at the last cession ofthe Texas Legislature, and which wasadopted by one house; the declarationof John Forsyth, the chief Democraticeditor at the South, that " the Democracywill sweep from the statute-boo- k thewhole system of military and Africanreconstruction as utterly null and void,and of no effect," and this riotous strainfrom a Democratic paper in Ohio arcillustrations of a spirit that must neces-sarily be found perilously powerful in theDemocratic party:

We will use the power to smash the Condynasty, clean np the statute-book- s by remliugaway the whole chapter of Black Republican leg-islation, to place tin; sovereignty of the countryonce more in the hand' of the oiily race able andtit to use it wisely and well, reinstate the whiteman in his place of power and supremacy, and re-mand the negro to his proper position of snbordi-DHtioi- i.

Wc will have a national convention onil the States to revise and amend the Constitu-tion of the luited Slates, and there will be noniggers in that convention. The Constitution asrevised will he the Constitution a it was inISM).

Thus the only sign of any policy to bepursued by the Democratic party, shouldit recover power, is a proposition to e,

so far as possible, the settlementsof the war. And the practical questionfor every intelligent American citizen tomeditate before the opening of the cam-paign of 1870 is whether it is wise to in-fu- st

'he National (Jovernnient, with theenforcement of the amendments and theregulation of the finances, to a party ofsuch leadership, spirit, tendencies andtraditions as those of the Democratic

The Massachusetts Repub-licans defeat Gen. Butler. The New-Yor-k

Democrats cling as closely as everto Fernando Wood. That single factillustrates the difference in the spirit andthe intelligence of the tw o parties. Har-per' Weekly.

Killing Time.

Considering how fond we all are oflife, and what a transient gift it is, doesit not seem odd that ennui should evercross our path, or that we should ever beput to it for means with which to con-sume lime? When the universe offers somany riddles to be solved when there isso much to see, so much to know, somany thoughts to be thought out is itnot strange that we should ever have aspare moment lying unemployed on ourhands, rather than that we should be con-stantly seeking and inventing devices for

getting rid of the surplus hours? Notthat we 6hould never step aside from theserious pursuits of life, but in our sportshow often are we ponderously sensibleof the lagging minutes, and heartily gladwhen they arc passed! Fortunately formost of us, a certain portion of each dayis necessarily devoted to the labor ofearning TUr daily bread; but after themerchant has closed his ledger and theshop-ma- n has put up his blinds, after theartist has turned his easel to the wall,and law and order have been establishedin the housekeeper's province, and thegardener has left nature in undisturbedpossession, there yet remains a respectable remnant of the day, pliant and readyto be molded to our uses, butwhich we usually make haste toemploy in the most shiftless andprofitless manner, or not to employat all, merely Animated by the dtsire of passing time, as though w e didnot know that it is the material withwhich we build for eternity; and if wewaste the material, will not the structure be incomplete? lor the surer annihilation of time we form conspiracies "tohelp each other out of the difficulty, andthen turn round and complain of thebrevity of human life. Ihink you thatin threescore years and ten we might notfind leisure for every elegant accomplish-ment and every solid acquirement if weknew how to economize the preciousstuff, or cared to learn the method, anddid not fritter it away as if it were ofsmall account and utterly inexhaustible?Consider what profit might accrue evenfrom the average life if no momentswere " killed," not merely unoccupied,but unfruitful of thought; for each of usis aware that the idle hand is at times anecessity of nature, but the mind that isbusy entertaining lofty ideas is too wellpleased with its company to wish thehours away, and that it is only the sickor vacant brain which complains oftedium, and urgy s its owner to fill thevacuum with empty gossip and a tliou-san- d

trifles with which we could dis-pense. How many novels do wc leadwhich leave no more impressions thanfoot-print- s on the eand, only becausewe have some hours at our disposalwhich we would fain stranglesecretly, like the princes in the Tower,with the hope of escaping conviction;how many rubbers at whist do we playwithout giving attention to the science ofthe game, only because it will while awayan evening; how many after-dinne- r napsare undertaken in the same worthycause; how much over-eatin- g, drinkingand dressing, not to mention gamblingand lower methods to ears polite; howmany abominations in worsted and waxwork bear witness to the waste of "thestuff that won't endure ," how many in-

trigues have been begun and carried onin a mere spirit of ennui; how many dis-

putes and quarrels have killed the cost-ly gift for which its possessor could lindno better use; and how many flirtationsand broken hearts are the result of thissad propensity of heedless minds! Intruth, we work harder and more dili-gently at this trade of willful murderthan at any other, and while we holdupon existence with a most patheticgrip the material of which it is madehangs heavy on our hands, and w e arebegging every passer-b- y to relieve us ofit, while wc estimate it at its true valueonly when there is an immediate pros-pect of losing it, when we would gladlybarter all other possessions for a fractionof that which we lately found so bur-densome. In lact, this matter ofkilling time lacks originality; theRomans killed it in their baths, at theirgladiatorial sports, at their toilets theI'ompeiianlady devoting the entire morn-ing to that pretty craft and is themodern belle far behindhand? It hasbeen accomplished through all the ages,by kaiser and peasant, rich and poor;and with what eclat was atthe Hotel de Rambouillet, at the charm-ing retreat of Coppet, where Mine. DeStael hastened the years of her exilewith every brilliant device, or at theRocks, where Mine. De Sevigneabridged the absence of her daugh-ter by every indolent employment ; norneed we flatter ourselves that it is an ex-ploded custom or one that is losing ad-herents when we meet people who com-mit the offense every day of their lives;people w ho sit through classical concertsand Italian operas not because they en-joy them, but because they help pass thetime respectably ; people who go to thesea-shor- e or the mountains not so muchfor change of air and prospect as to be-guile ennui; who go to church not forconsolation but for dissipation ; who, inshort, embrace every opportunity of ab-breviating the time from the cradle tothe grave, not reflecting that for everyidle hour, as well as word, must we ren-der account. Harper's Bazar.

A Wonderful Motor.

If Mr. Keeley, of Philadelphia, suc-ceeds with his new motor, the transporta-tion business of the country will certain-ly be revolutionized. What it is re-mains a mystery to any but the inventor;but if it be all Mr. Keeley claims for itthe scientific world has been in ignoranceof a very powerful agent or a most po-tent combination of agents alreadyknown. He says that with two gallonsof water he can generate sufficient forceto draw a train of cars from Philadelphiato San Francisco and back, and yet heuses no fuel nor does he employ chem-icals of any kind, electricity or magneticcurrents. It is surmised that the "forcemust be obtained by the rapid decompo-sition of water into its constituent gases,but he denies that he uses any of thecustomary methods to accomplish thatresult. In the machine he is now con-structing he has developed, he asserts,a pressure of 7,000 pounds to thesquare inch; and when it is rememberedthat the pressure to which steam boilersare subjected is seldom more than '200pounds to the square inch the enormousleap Mr. Keeley claims lo make with hisnew motor may be partially appreciated.It is plain that should such a powerfulservant be added to the resources of mansteam engines and much of our presentmachinery would become antiquated af-fairs; coal would lose its inijiortance;mountains could be tunneled or leveledlike ant-hill- s, and in fact all the processesof civilization would be changed; unfor-tunately, however, for those who wouldindulge in roseate anticipations of ourcommercial future, Mr. Keeley's ma-chine, as he calls it, is still unfinished,and it may be a long time ere his dreamsarc realized. Albany (2V. '.) Journal.

Fatting Hogs on Cooked Food.

Some of the agricultural papers havelately denied the great advantages ofcooking corn for swine. Omitting ourown experiments, we refer to a few oth-ers. The two best farmers iwnong ourneighbors at Union Spring, who weighedand measured, arrived separately atnearly the same results as lo the greatsuperiority of cooked meal overcorn in the ear. One of these foundthat when corn was worth 62 cents perbushel fed in the ear it was worth 87cents in dry meal, and f 1.12 to fl.5 incooked meal that is, it was aboutdouble in value. The other farmermerely scalded his meal. He was in thepractice, in preparing his feed, of pour-ing ninety pounds of hot water on six-teen pounds of meal, then allowing thisto stand from twelve to eighteen hoursin a covered tub before feeding. Thewhole swelled so as to make thick pud-ding, although the bulk of the w ater ap-plied was three times as great as. themeal. He found this scalded meal one-hal- f

better than meal soaked in coldwater, and at least double in value, ofcorn in the ear. George (Jeddes told usthat his experience showed cooked foodto be double in value over corn in theear. A skillful farmer in Wayne County,who had tried it many years, placed itbetween twice and three times the value.Results will of course vary somewhatwith the manner of conducting the ex-periments. Country Gentleman.

A farmer living near Georgetown,Ky., has two pigs that regularly drawtheir sustenance from a cow. The cowwill low for them as for a calf, when thelittle porkers will answer the summons,and, rearing up, support themselves byIntertwining their forelegs, and in thatposition take their repast.

AGRICULTURAL AM) DOMESTIC

It makes a deal of difference w ithyour cooking how you slir up saucethickening for gravy or pudding. Youuse flour or starch of some kind, mixedw ith w ater or milk. Wet the flour witkvery little w ater or milk, and beat thor-oughly together till every lump disap-pears, then thin with more water or milkand heatr well again. Let the milk, orwhatever is to be thickened, be actuallyboiling, and stir as fast as possible whileyou slowly add the thickening beatingrapidly for two or three minutes. Thismakes the gravy or custard wonderfullylight and foamy, especially if there arebeaten eggs iu the comjiound. If youtry to mix a little flour with a good dealof water you w ill have a long, hard siegein getting out the lumps. Salt should beadded before the thickening goes in.

Scarlet Fever. In this disease theparent and school-teache- r are often con-cerned to know how long a time mustelapse before it is safe to admit the con-valescent children to mingle with otherchildren. And the answer is that for amonth, at least, the body of a scarlet-feve- r

patient is casting off scales fromthe 6kin, and from the nose, throat, bow-els and kidneys discharges which arepoisonous and convey the disease. Thechief danger, however, arises from theskin, as this is the main outlet for theblood poison to escape, hence every scaleit throws oil can curry the infection.Farm Jourtuil.

Because only a few potatoes wereleft from dinner that is no reason whythey should be thrown in the cow's pail.Peel them if not done already and bakethem over in the oven. Or siice themand warm them with bread which iseven better than potatoes warmed alone.This is the way: Put bread crumbssoaking in milk upon the stove. Whenhot add the sliced or chopped potatoeswith salt, and stir all well together tillthoroughly heated or cooked. Thenseason as you w ish w ith a little butter orcream.

Gerritt S. Miller, of Madison county,N. Y., writes to the Country (Jentlemanthat his llolstein cow, Clown Princess,in 177 days in 1871, gave 9,081 pounds ofmilk; in 305 days after calving in 18T2,she gave 11,700 pounds; ahd in o05 daysafter calving in 1873, she gave r',o73pounds. At one cent per pound her milkfor the last year would have brought$12:1.73 A half-bloo- d llolstein cow-owne- d

by J. M. Young, of New Jersey,in 177 days, from September, 1873, toFebruary 28, 1874, gave l,00T pounds ofmilk.

Our hours of rest, as a rule, shouldbe the same every night. It is not salefor even the most robust and healthy tolong violate the law of regularity in thismatter. The man or woman who retiresand rises at irregular periods, varyingfrom two to four or six hours, as manyare accustomed to do, cannot enjoy goodhealth, or live long and happily. Every-one should adopt a rule to retire at a cer-tain hour, and adhere to it as strictly aspossible never deviating except i

emergencies.Cracker Dessert. Choose whole

soda crackers and lay each upon a sepa-rate small plate. Pour upon it enoughboiling water to soak it w ell, and leavenone upon the plate; cover with a dress-ing of sweetened cream, with a spoonfulof jelly in the center if you choose, ordip upon it a portion of nice fruit,canned, stew ed or fresh, as is convenient.

Store hogs can be wintered thriftilyon finely cut clover hay, corn fodder andpotatoes, if these articles are steamed orscalded with hot water and a little branor meal sprinkled on. The fodder willbe greedily eaten if prepared in this w ay.

Matutaehuneltx J'lowfoiian.

Which Fowls Eat the Jlost .'

This question has been asked and an-swered many times; but now here, as yet,in print, have I seen it to my satisfaction.Writers invariably try to solve this (piestion so as to make it an argument for someparticular breed, and that one is gener-ally the breed in which they are mostinterested. Another reason is that theyare constantly giving the favorite coopof fowls all Ihe tit-bit- s, which they donot count as anything. But to answerthe question rightly would be to say:The hen that eats the most, as a rule, isthe one that produces the most. Onebushel of corn, or its equivalent in otherfood, will make nine pounds of livepoultry, or seven and one-tent- h poundsof dressed poultry, or twelve and one-hal- f

pounds of eggs. One has only toweigh his pullet at six months old toknow how much money he has expendedfor her; and if he has not furnished thefood he will know just how much shehas foraged oil" his neighbors for hisbenefit. Most farmers have a feelingthat the corn which is fed to fowls isthrown away, and that their pocket-book- s

have been depleted so much. Theyshould rather look upon the transactionas so much grain exchanged for eggs orpoultry, the profits of which are comingto them to better till that pocket-book- .

Fowls are machines to produce eggsand flesh, and we might as well expectcloth from a factory that has no wool orcotton as to expect eggs from hens notsupplied with food. When I see an un-usually hearty hen I am led to sajr, " Putit in, my lady; you are either makingeggs or meat," and I know as long as shedoes it I shall not be in the strait of theboy who was after the woodchuck of aSabbath morning, viz. : " He had got tohave him, for heWas out of meat."

Liberal feeding means liberal profits;fowls scantily led pay scanty profits;neglect means" loss of what you do givethem. As a rule, feed well or kill theflock. This should be the rule, for theresults are as sure to follow as day issure to follow sunrise. . K. F., inPoultry World.

Change Seed.

Harvest is over, and many are market-ing their wheat and corn. Now is agood time to look to the question of thechange of seed. Vegetation, as well asanimals, deteriorates unless preventedby the watchful and scientific attentionof man. Wheat, oats, corn and potatoesneed frequently change of location morethan change to another kind of seed.Grain grown in the cold atmosphere andclav soil of Canada, Northern New York,or Vermont, when taken to the warmersoils and atmosphere of the Middle orWestern States, produces far more luxuri-antly than seed sown in the same soil fora dozen years. It is the general remarkthat wheat is failing and yielding less tothe acre every year, even where new andvirgin soil is used. Change of locationis what is wanted. Nor is it necessarythat the change should be so great indistance. The transfer of seed a fewmiles from one variety of soil to anotheroltcn makes a very perceptible differ-ence. Now is the time to attend to this.It may not be necessary for the farmerto travel so far but that he may returnhome at night and make an exchangewith a fanner, and both be equally ac-

commodated. In some cases it may bedone by letter, and the transfer be madeby railroads Ten or forty cents addi-tional for freight w ill be more than twicemade up in the increase in yield. Butgenerally the increase in quantity is notthe main advantage. The improvementin quality more generally attend.? changeof seed. If this matter is attended to intime it can be done well and economi-cally

There is not enough attention paid tothe question of seed corn. This is thegreat staple crop of the West. The dif-ference each year in the quality of seedreaches in the result high in the millions.There is little doubt that the average forentire Iowa could be raised ten bushelsif this question was as thoroughly can-vassed by all farmers ".3 it should be. Anadvance of ten bm-he- is per acre wouldmake a ditt'ei i c , 1 the crop of twenty-fiv- e

million bushels. All around us wesee corn planted that raises only smalland dwarfed ears, and is persisted in forthe reason that it always gets ripe. Inshort seasons like ours that is an im-portant consideration. But the energy offarmers, the attention of agriculturalsocieties and of scientific experimentersshould produce a larger quality of earlycorn. Too little attention in this wayhas been paid to so important a crop ascorn. Often the large variety of warmer

latitudes is brought here, but an earlyfrost checks its career. No sufficienteffort has been made to produce earlycorn of these large varieties. More painsand twice the scientific skill are appliedto the efforts to get a potato earlierthan the rose, or superior to the peach-blo-

But in value the potato crop isonly a mite in comparison with corn.Mind is equal to this question if it be di-

rected in that channel. Iowa is on thenorthern border of the corn belt, and re-quires more attention to seed than inKentucky or Tennessee, yet the averageyield in our State is above either of theStates named. But there is no causewhy our average should not be increased25 per cent. Iowa JSttile llegister.

Knowing' and Doing.

Talkino w ith an employer of men theother day, and of the merits and compar-ative know ledge of some of his employes,he gave us the test by which men arejudged in this practical age by practicalmen. It is the shortest "and directestmode of reaching a conclusion with ref-erence to the value of ni"n that we knowof. He said: " You tell me that Mr. II.is a man of great knowledge in his lineof business. It may be; but there isJohn , whom I suppose you wouldcall comparatively ignorant, who pro-duces ten times the result that Mr. II.does. I assure you We care little for aman's knowledge unless it is productive.It is like a mountain of gold, locatedwhere it cannot be made available it isof no use."

Prof. Sweet, in an address before theMechanical Engineering Association atCornell University, once said: "Men arc-pai-d

for what they do, not for what theyknow." This is a forcible argument infavor of the most thorough practicaltraining in combination w ith the acquire-ment of technical knowledge. It meansthat a man may have a complete techni-cal knowledge of the laws of mechanicsand be unable to make a machine thathe may be possessed of the principles ofall of the sciences relating to agricultureand horticulture, and yet not be able tomanage either a farm or nursery suc-cessfully; that he may be learned in thescience of government, and yet be amost miserable legislator, etc., etc.

the reassert inn of all that hasbeen proved, over and over again, to betrue that the man practically educatedin any kind of business is surer ot sub-stantial - and enduring success in thatbusiness than the tine who possessesvastly more theoretical knowledge con-cerning it, and yet has not been taughthow to manage it in all ils practical de-

tails." This is one reason w hy the RuralNew Yorker litis repeatedly advised youngmen who asked w hat school we wouldrecommend them to attend in order thatthey might learn farming to hire out tothe best farmer they can lind and go towork on a farm. This advice is notgiven because we in the least undervaluetechnical and scientific education, forevery young farmer should employ theseaids in his daily work; but we wouldhave, so far as practicable, the acquire-ment of knowledge and its applicationsimultaneous. But if we were going todrop either from our education we wouldnot drop the practical. The theoreticaland purely technical should be made, asIt is, subordinate to the practical.

A Shawmut avenue grocery store i

ornamented by a new placard whichreads: "My Back is Up! Fresh milkonly six cents a quart!" Boston Globe.

A, in his honeymoon, calls his w ifehis saint; B, ten years married, sadlyechoes, his ain't.

The huge, drastic, griping, sickening pills,constructed of crude, coarse and ulky in-

gredients, an: fast being superseded by lr.1'icici's Pleasant I'urgative IVllets, or Sugar('0.1 ted. Concentrated Root and Herbal Juice,Anti-biliou- s ('ranules the "Little Giant"Cathartic or Mutl'im tn farw Physic. Mod-ern Chemical Science enables Or. Fierce toextract from the juices of the most valuableroots and herbs their active medicinal prin-liplc-

which, when worked into little Pelletsor Granules, si arret 11 turcr than mustard w,lender each little Pcllei as active and power-ful as a large pill. While they are much morepalatable and pleasant in effect.

Dr. Ika A. Tuayeu, of Baeonsburg, Ohio,writes,; " I regard your Pellets as the bestremedy for the conditions for which you pre-scribe them of anything I have ever used, somild and certain in effect, and leaving thebowels in an excellent condition. It seems tome they must take the plaee of all other ca-thartic pills and medicines."

Lyon v. Macomiiek, druggists, Vermillion,I. T., say: " We think they are going to selllike hot cakes as Boon as people get ac-

quainted with them, and will spoil the pilltrade, us those that have used them like themmuch better than large pills."

Newpapert, Sliver and China GivenAway for Chrlatnia.

The Excelsior Jfatjazine is giving awaynewspapers free for one year to their sub-scribers, and in 6ome instances papers withtheir chromos framed. Every subscriber whoorders through said magazine a sewing ma-chine will receive gifts of gold or best tripleplate silver tea service, etc., or china dinneret of 101 pieces. Send twenty-liv- e cents for

sample copy of magazine, or inclose stampfor circular. Agents can make enough onthis In fore Christinas to keep them for onevcar. Office 0J, No. 157 La Salle street, Chi-cago, 111.

The Latest Tihumphop Tempekanci:-- We congratulate the temperance

v tld on the success everywhere attendg the use ot Vinegar. Bitters. Cer-nl-

no preparation containing alcohol:i3 accomplished such cures of malu-iou- s

fever, biliousness, dyspepsia, rheu---'i- !

ism, lung complaints, constipation,ind general debility as we hearof from all;ii li ters as the results of this famous

. - g( table specific. No true philanthrowill regret to see spirituous liquors

pelled from medical use if they cansafely dispensed with; and that they

r.i not necessary in any case of sickness,vliatcver its character, appears at last tolive been demonstrated. If publicpinion is capable of making any

upon the minds of the Faculty'lieywill ere long introduce the mostlopulir of modern medicines into the

and prescribe il in their prae-ico- .

The million.- have given the article1 fair trial; it has more than answeredicir expectations, and no theoretical op-

position can shake their faith in it. 13

Safe, Permanent ano Complete! Wil-hoft- 's

Tonic cures Chills and Fever, DumbChills nid Bilious Fevers those Titans thatkill their thousands where this remedy is un-

known. It cures Knlargement. of the Spleen.It cures Hypertrophy of the Li-- er. It hurtsno one. It cures all types of Malarial Feversand is perfectly protective in all its effects.Try Wilhoft's Tonic, the great infallible ChillCure. YVheki.ock, Finlav fc Co., Proprie-tors, New Orleans.

Fok Sale py am. Dkcgc.ists.

This notice is addressed to ladies only. Ifyou want to make your husband, father orbrother a handsome Christmas present, givehim a carton of Klin wood Collars, "iiou cang-- l them at any gents' furnishing store, be

to get the El in wood, because it looks andfits better thau any other.

Anna S. Getsingek, of Honesdale, Pa.,writes the following: "After suffering fornearly two years from neuralgia in the breast,passing up" into the throat, face and head, Iwas entirely cured and restored to health bo-

using Dr. L. Q. C. Wishart's Pine Tree TajCordial."

Of course everybody knows that the Sheiwail House is the best hotel in Chicago. Hutwe desire them also to know that its rateshave materially reduced. This will stiilfurther increase its already deserved jopii-iarit-

A I'ROTKfDl o toe is not a sightly thing,gav nothing about health and comfort. SlL-VK- R

TIPPED Shoes never wear out at thetoe. For sale by all dealers.

A--

Dybai.i.'s lines, candies- - mailed Iree to allparts at tide per Vt. Address Dy ball, Chicago.

rax North w bstkun ! esB-Ni- i. o.'s" K'nifhcd " Nail i 'be lt:rt in the world.

VettttMt Pnlmonarr Balutnit Molt ip--rroved, reliable iM well-know- n remeUy tor C'oukIi,Colds nd Consumption. Vet the (Anoint Price l;small jUC Ccti-k- Bko. Co, Uttnton.

U'll WRITIM: Til AIIVKKTlK1 lennn ay you aw the BdverlUesnent

Id i hi paper.k wrrir. AirenH wanted everywhere. For

JM outfit viic. Fkitcii It WiWK, Dayton, Ohio.l ots for sale (K down, 5 per ra .uitj tillCihicaoo exchange. M. C. Spauiding, Chicago. IU

-- , i I TTT i J AddreM Goodspeed'i Em--

O I $210 AMonth. tfZXXZ:V J J Oculars free. K. Waller & Co., tU Louis, Mo.

4)f" IKR I Y 'niil-!or- i "r :iO a il--

y BivTuml cvm-tfeK-. We otter il and will pay

It. Apply uotr. C.. Weblr V Co., Marion, o.

gm rm f A MONTH Agents wint.el every

V'lJt3l where, liuxiness honorable ami firstJX iiJ 1 rlii". I'iirtic'i'ars se!it fr-- e. AndreaMUUu JolIN WOKTilJe CO., St. Coins. Mo

Men or Women ?! aAiikvrS f ! forf oteU. The Sn-r- t'rre. Writeat once to CO WEN & M.. Eighth street. New v""v

Try UsP

1 Bplendid Chromo 9 LandscapeCar.ls sent for iV, A'jeiitx wantrAAdd'8 Cherry Co.. W adaworUi, O.

HTCUTC OCTivrn bv ?ITSIVYA I Ell I O K.VAKTS, Vli La Salle st reel,Chieniro. I'uiiiphlet lor inventors Bent free.

tF Fatjcnt SUITS A SeKl lALTV.

COM CDVorFITS ennvi hv t he use of now'ileplic Keme-licH- . Trial l'iu-ka- :

Ihl' 'ggTSteiglASM i:kk. Korcirenliira, evidence of hiic-cc.--

lit., u.Iuk -s KO.sS llKOTHEIis., Kichmond. Iud.

TITCTI rIOXKY IV IT SCR EI JustI I I I lout. I'sel'ul. HandMinie. heap. ellTHE I ecrywhere.

or IVJ Westreiii i"r t m 10.1 A N . 5 '.arclav .St.. N . V..

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(10 "f ST A XT KflPI.OTJIET. At home, Male orJ ieinuie. t.jOa week warranted. Nocapital reiiuired.

Particulais and valuable sample sent tree. Address,with 6c return stamp, C Koss, WilUauiuurh, N. V.

The Millerand MillwrightA monthly Journal of 18 paeeo. Every Miller amiMillwright xhould take it. Address S 1 pkon A ( : At: lt,Cincinnati, O. l.rt) per annum. Send for sample copy.

OUR

NEVY

Laiies Kriksd" containn 7 articlesneeded bv every T.adv l'atent Spool-Holde- r,

SeWsors, Tliinifile etc. miauin-lec- d

worth ft. fd. Sample t'ox. hv moil,SO cents. Airetits wanted. I'l.UMljKHS. Eighth street, I'hiiadclphta, l'a

GUNTHER'S CANDIES!cb briited tlirMv-!uKi- t the T'nion. V pressed to all

parts at fill et a : u 1 -- tiud n:id upward.--. Ad-dress i l '!" 1 1 '.11 f!ilVt-iioMf-r- , t'liicugo.

The A mrrirnn Nrn-itr-r I nioii nunibrrsovi-- r 1.UH) papers, aeparati-- into ftevni subdivis-10T1-

For separate lists and cost of advertising,address S. F. SANBOF.N, 111 Mouroo St., Chicago.

BUST HOLIDAY GIFT,FOR PARENT, CHILD, TEACHER, PASTOR, FRIEND.

Welsier'sDjalirMpfl Dictionary.3000 ENGRAVINGS; IS 10 PACES Ho.

CDFI? f Ppeclnipn Copies of the best Aprl- -m b d cultural l'aer lu the world.

AMERICAN FARM JOURNAL.Slitt-r- Large Piti- - for only 7.1 renCx peryean Save-you- inoin-y- . Specimen Copies frea toany address, send Postal Card to

JMK.-- K V JO ES, Toledo, OUo.1 ou will like the paier.

WnTW lyWS.independent, hoiiet and tearli,s newspaprr, ofbroa I columns, especially de-iu- for ihe farmer,the mechanic, Ihe merchant lid the professionalmail, and He ir w ies ami children. We aim to makethe XVcc-Ul- 11 11 tiie hest family newstaM-- r in theworld. It is t ii 1 ol a nd insl rueli ve rend-ing of every sort, hut pi in nothing 'o themost scrupulous and delieal e last-- . Price, l."JOper year. pohtaKK prepaid. The cheapest paper pub-lished, 'lry it. Address Til r. New York it v.

Jjli,r,,iJfc.T'm.

Address

21 Of. Jl IIVC, Kit.

- II mlw-.-rr- IVnlfr f!1 H.---

' - iT V : Hh.ir---- r ; n..-.,fl.X TH' - &2 &-- " T " -'.- !.--.

. VJ.",.. Sii'-- - !7 .itiilai.troo. Ad.h ..

ii.w. iiiM.&co. i1;.-.- - 1

Is (he only machine that rsnk nil all Pues of work ami nar-row Mel w id'-- it: tliar cantliapi and .'SjP!.KrK( without

Seamless Ilo-sier-v,

(i loves and M i ileus. ir k nitllieio ill nil W0111.11

niskeS.Of a day with it. ,u-?i- f IVMftnip Ptr pjunple of tvurk iuM j: lai rl pric-- U

J. K. Wootllicul, .Auiil, o-- W. .M;ulisjii Chicago.

ASTHMA I CATARRH.H wii: hi uK i. .( t vnttit y uc-- liic mi, J

h with AM1IMA, I riinwt-- iy coim- -

l4iititliti itMits himI herlx mi inlmltu:? th m- -

I for! dlmlfly r WonlM t ulrtinMiv n.l snif cur for A xihma an! C'atarrli.WtrTntfti f rh-- ntvti'rit pnroxyftiu

tite ptth-n- l ran li rlnwii to r(tt nii'loiNlrrtiiliiy. Irutrt;ijt!) ar? Kiiitplietl witti

niilf for v rk k bold ly1ru;.sf infp. I':triit,.' liv mail

ft. Ll.t Aj.l9 C rrrb, OhJo.

sOesolseERS."We have Rrrnnprod witli IKSMONJ) & CO., 915 Knre

at reel, Philadelphia, by which each subscriber to thispaper 1 s ent it led t o receive a book of choice selectionsfrom the poetical works ofBYRON, MOCRE AND BURHS,liy sending 10 cents to the above address.

FREE toiBOQK"AGENTSAN KI.K;MI,V-i:orM- ) iV.v.; HOOKor th; bet and cheapest Family Klble ever pub-

lished, will be sent free of chame to any book ci-n-

It contains Over TOO One Scripture Illustrations,and nsmds are meeting with unprecedented success.Address, sta'injr experience, etc., and we will sho w

what our atrcnts are doiiiK, NATIONAL PLCO., Chicago, 111., or St. Louis, Mo.

The Cincinnati Weekly Star !

Including; postaire and the flne'v-illiistrate- d StarH per year. A ill -- Monopoly 1'iie(iranirrr's 1'apr r com. unities larre paaesof ex-

cellent reading matter. The farmer, merchsint and me-chanic in any part of the country will find this the bestof the weeklies, to say nothini of the low-- price.Afrentsare orb-re- Inducements superior to anything:heretofore attempted, specimen copies free. Ad-dre- ts

"THE STAIi," Cincinnati, Ohio.

sec

C. willi

I

,

pay for your Nnnir- Slamn.made of the bent Vulcanised Uubber.Also, Itoxen, laIs anil IndelibleInk. Anv style of tyH-yo- tlesire w iillie used. The stamp works to perfection

on CARDS, as well as in marking clothes. Address

Rubber Stamn MTr.lfH E. Madison-eL- . Chlcneo.N. B. Xo attention paid to orders not accompanied

bj cash or stamp for reply, fcpecial terms to Agents

Hi!My ILLUSTRATED SEED CATALOGUE for 1ST5

is sow ekadt and will be mailed, FREE OFCHARGE, to all applicants. English and GermanEdition. Address

JOHN KERN,21 I Market St., St. Louis.Jf"State where you saw this advertisement.

sioPER DAY.TosellthellOMK SIHTTLK SKAA IXG JII.VCI I INK. PKH'K Reader:! vut can makomoney selUmr the NOME Sll irTT'L.K" whetherjou are KXPIOItlKM'KO in the business or not.If you wish to buy aisKYVLNU .M A II IN K for familyuse. our circulars will sluivy you now- - to suvu money.

JOUNSOX, CLAKK & CO., Chicago. III.

ecKiyown merits, send for my quarterly matrazine, (ttcosts you nothing,) containing certificates of hundredsthat have been permanently cured. I claim to havediscovered and produced the first, original andOXLY CCRK FOR OPir w EAT1XO.

Ult. S. It. (OLLI.VS, L.sl Iorte, I nil.

mum

1

HAPIT CURKD at Home. VoTerms iiioih'ratc.

Time short. Four years ofsuccess. Describe case.

iHitestliiionuils. Address Dr.FJi..Marsli,Quincy.Mich.

and exnenBes a month to afrenta. AddressSnnn A.U b Mlcb.

OPIULVI

BOYS

LOOK

HERE!

1

Iil2

teb AGENTS

IITMHabit Cured

1'ublicity.

lODDAIlIX Jonesvilie.E A T E KS TTTORO TTG TT 1ST CUKEI.Chuap.ouick : nostitrerine. 6 yrtwonderful success. Inscribe case.Dr. Aruistrong, Berrien. Alicb.

Prisli:? Press

FOR A CLU B OF FIFTFKVSl l'.si lin i lis TO "Ol ll OWXFUIKSIIJK."

Send three-cen- t stamp for SamplePaper and Terms. Address

Our Own Fireside Publishing Company,

176 William St., New VorK.

N1ALTTx hkdStatesGtAZETTEIIRMiows the crand resultsol out tirst 1MI years.tXHk for every American. Sells everywhere at sipht.Farmers, Teachers, Students, Lawyers, Merchants.School Directors. Mechanics, Shippers,Salesmen, men of lcarnincand meu who can only react,old and yuunir. all want Ii forevervday reference & osol

A whole library." lioun (rlvhe.Not a luxury, but a necessity. nOr- - Ocean.The most recent, complete, t nisi wort hy."A'ation,

The lloOK Pi ulishko. Send lorCirculars to ZLLU LKii, MeCCIUJ V Cluuaa.au.

MM

J i I Dunham & Sons. Manufacturers,I J J Warerooms, 18 East !4th Street,

Established 183. KW YORK.Sendfor Illustrated Circular and Price List.

$14.60 Shot Guii.C--

A CURE ASSUREDtss.k, LrrVuiif uiuuner of treatme

Addresa

Box &7.

way express agent. Send stamp for lo iii uoio--

without Ihe seoflhekuire. Send stamp Tor

Ml. cure.IHt. I. II. (ill ATII.l

lKSl'-LU- bTBKKf, NKlt KoCllTl',CINCINNAII.

tub o.Ni.Y Self-Threadi- Machine,CZZL2;

IN TIIH WOKI.IJ. pi

AMKIIICW KKWIXli M.( IliNK CO..

il'i W almdi Avenue. Cli i j;o. J

Optic's Magazine, 1 875."Vow is the time In Snlwi lle The New Vol-

ume willconlaiu New store-sh- il: .c r optic, KbiHelloes an, i others, besides many nev features, all of

hleh are duly set forth in our Prospei t ns. Term".year. In advance. numbers mailed

free onLKK SI1K1M.UI), I'uttlUlieiM, ISooIou.

1 875. Postpaid. S 1 .60.

THE NURSERY.A Jfnnthta Murfozine for ' Younqert Kenter.

lLLCsi iivi-KO- . HTScm-- I leu cents loraSaiifpleNuinWr. SnbTlIt and thelaat two numbers of this year FltKK I

L. SHOREY,30 Broiufitll Street, Hoaton.

JO.mL ii i

EASY.

particulars

11

1 .

a

v

application.

SOWib'd)

JOHN

CALLING CARDS

NOBBY DESIGNS.A(iKTS --WINTBD. Send

stamp for Circular.Wedding and ordora spe-

cialty allow prices. undercookOt t o.. Designers and Kntri.-- tato and Madison tits., Chicago.

Adjustable Dash Lamp,FOU MfillT IHtlVnO or HI TI.i;Can used on any shaped lish or on

nnv kind of Vehicle. t;ives a powerfulli:1it loriJ.t'eet aheiiiL Mums kerosene i

w 11 bout chimney. Splendid llarnLantern. Try one. Price C.O.I . Prlv.ileco of examination. A'so, ImprovedSta(.T-('oac- h Ijimps.IVUII b atA.M-l- - 'Tl-K'C- COMMOT,

Atr!4Mrt C onn.

STEINWAYGrand, Spare and Upriatt Pianos.

Sup-rU- ir to nil olh-rra- TCvpry Pluno "ViirriTtt'i f.rFive Vnirn. I Mum r:.t. uUiloUfs, willil'ricu .Lint,inailt'd irt'u n Bitplic'itioii.

Nus. 10T, 1 & Ul Ka- -t 1 tilt btm U Krw r .

uH to thr pBMirr-H'f-r.. for !'- - pi t

"ruriuuc n rut mjlt(. M artfi.ll.mpi' l rtHfmi t!

nU ihr (Mll.llf! Iinli'l lift I . N H ti I VI

in oui- - kv ai1)) tin in irt- - ? .V'tlifttmt hit kmlrLo jt a. ini - itiTvl""rr, Kt ;.: Vi'-t- i 11'

"ftwti. itl that I hvp rn parlivr or ut, t . (.r .i v ti v

I.uMic tiatr Ih fct Pkt.-iix- .f a !! t ;.v- ri ;r n :. "f i

ihii ! ortl n . front me urice U."' o ut ) m it H' "4tIII. Mt i.'rinl;j i tK rli- -: I - -

tlu- - fVmaUf im-- yrt ri-- : n. fnf.

&

ih

I).,

tint

I 'IuoHio. an. tMBs to fim s .1 fitiH..vkUte. M cur-- "f U ptu m Till r. n -

at) iiwitinm "'M . k. 'l itinj nan' iti tj'TitHH'tion Willi t"n-- - r 'i r "

rwn lifting PIT nniiia- r ., I ( tt.- - ftaw- tin- uMif !' .ut "l-- ivrM. n i" i "tbT wi 'rv: iftii, m 'Ii- tts.isufc'f tnl IN' u j'nil- i

-.r !,- a. t f. H' l I

I IS.-

lit. l.

.1

ll

,i--

...t ni... ii

I.T 1. .1.

Cheap GOOD Reading.TUf COMrr.KTE AVORKS f Cikhkt,

W:thitit;toii Irving, Itickens. Tlmclerii.v,4'lia-- . Ke.xle, IHimas, V f I k ic ol n, .1 in sl'n v ne, II ; I home. Waller Mull, iiillionyTrolliipe, Man yall, Ac., Ac. iic com pleleto'uiiie iii ll iliel every Iwiinri-lis- . i'iieONLY III t'KVIS f r volume: TO M II-- S

lCIIII.i;s. $;.!- - I'KKANNlvH lor 2i vol-umes, m.i itiil. wnrl h from IO t $.!.li'r-- I lian ci iii lilim ry. ol. I,"11m- - Itcst of II unliaiitlM," ly .1 allies li ne.m ral v. Se-- i men coiiie lOcca. Ii. si

NOW for the New Vfiir. .,iilrcs,IloiuiclN-v- , Lord & Co., IMilicrs - I iksilo Library," lark A Adams fl.,t'hie:!o,FOIl JVE.VRLV TIIIKTV YK.YUK TIIH

RICHMOND PRINTSllavi! been held in ':'. .11 by tho-- o who ts ai . They are T .n il in all Me Movcltlcsofeliam"lt'K and in "iw-r-

, at i e ntx lei- - Milled ! thewantb of many perin.. AnUiiu the latter arc the" STANDARD GRAY STYLES, "Projierfor the houc or street beautiful In designs

and ika-int- ; iu coloring." Chocolate Standard Styles, "In preat variety, and widely known as nuM servicea-ble iiiitus. Nothing belter lor daily wear.6. ur U iififl ti'-ir- e. Your retailer should haveUieiii,aniii-urc.ai- i iinii ion ami approval will coincide.

T1XK "FAMILY FAVORITE.'

SIMPLE.DURABLE.RELIABLE.

"Made of the lnatoHala. rrts InterchnnpeaMoand few in number, easily learned, doing a great va-riety of work w ithout extrasttachinents.

Ve emphatically deny the statements madebynti tilsor other maehiuos coucerninif our goods Jud our busi-ness standiux.

SEED Mil MacMiiK Co.,

J 3 State St., rhirngo. 111.

THE PIAf0-HA- E?

Cabinet Orsan,PtMltl Drrrmhrr. IS) I.

Anpwand beautiful musical Instrument or Im-provement upon the ( abinet uran beint a combiti:i-io- u

of the pianoforte and oi an. To a complete Five-X'tav- e

Double. Rt-e- oivan is added a l'tauo-Harp- . theones of which are between those oftbo pianofortend liarp. it has a pianoforte action ; is pla d by I hoiine l.evs the or.Mii. slid may be used separately

jr w ith one or ail the stops of organ. It is not lia-M- e

to (ict outof order and does not reqmr tuninu.Haviiiif thoroughly tested this beautiful improvement,we oiler it with jrrcat connd-ne- to Ihe public.I'rieo of l'i ANo H AKi' CABINET ORGAN, beimt a

Dor hi it RitkkOiki an. Si x Stops: w ithV'V HrMAVA, Af SW EI.I., K.VKB SWKLL.

v Pi three and a ball octaves; lu ElegantUpright Resonant Case, tJUU Circulars free.

MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO.,

23 Vn on Square, Xevr York j131 Trrmont St., Iloston;

0 & fe4 Adams St., Chicago.

fc1

J",

the

mmel EDOER

TITF5 CHEAPEST AND BESTPAPER IN" THE COUNTRY.

PERMUSVI

A certain and snrt cure, without Inconvenience err T iand at home. An antidote that stands purely on na Unexcellea by any W iiiterary

GIVEN

A

Manufacturers,

BEST-SKLLIM- l& CO.,

Party

Tit

Publication, East or West.

CAXVASSKUS VAMI.I IN 1IVKKT

TOWN IX Tl'.r. UMTi:i vriTKS.

The most Liberal Premiums and f'lotTeie I by newspaper. Write f.

iii'iif full i' f.irei.itio.-- . U . Hp.

to

AT

"nriilPhed on li. aiioe. A.t.lres"IIK i.KOUKH fi.r.NY. llI-

K.i

-

t e rt e r.r a I'll" nl. i

inn it I ' ie:

TRYING ON TIIE BOOTS!This feilow

is in trould".And no won-ler- !

For I lienew bi..is hehas bought,wi.ihfut '.iri-- t

tr:n themon. uill mil wt.lie in I If h tlearn alr..iii the littlefellow w h oS'-- the

hli-- r

to the i'ub i ier

of HieYoung FoltsNews:

' f"-r- r irllreviiiif lo ur--

of the Yor.NOfoi ks'N w...I send for aHMH iinen onyI ,,1 w t i i I it

0 in,. it wayIn try i"i tn 'lhtml l foreflHf til' tn.F'ieiM.1 k R."

.u. ,nui u ......lln-- r I. 'Iter. AS tollows:" Jj.'tr - v lilt lo Kiv In- eaniined the

nunihers w liich you him. ha tout the It x'ttou. and likes the lit. .o p..vim! send him the i oi NO

Folks' Nkws for one vcar. Fi;ki.hiks r tiiki:.Seud a thri-e-ce- ni.iinp for a iuien opy. Trf

nn th In tirxt. They are sure lo lit. i'rice. onlyM.--4- . and 'warranted to hi t f.-- r one year, wlih afiandsoine Chromo tnven " lo Im ' .i." The sH-- r for oneyear, nostane paid, and thr; ch"i,-- e .f four I limiine.,

or the paper, with either t hromo inn"' te-t- ,

il.Vljnr with Chromo . mounted. t.7:orwith ;'ir Chromos. mounted, '4.33. Mounted I nro-m-

;ire ready for franntm..Sf: tn tt r, fr 1 vi7v.vi-r- t tt'tmhrr.

ALFKKI) 9I4HT1K., Piibli.hrr.XI Siouth Seventh Street, i'liilaUclpbia..

noi'BLE BAKREli GC'Sf; warranted resl Englishbarrei, paieiil lre--h- , a igKH sn..ler. wnh r litsk.and V bent t;. o. !., wiii pMvllejn? to ex- -

suiine Pelore payinn hid. upon iay iiuf express ciiHrjre potti(JoOuu dealers, lUlt SluaU, tst, ixiuis, M-- .

Dr. .7. Walker's California Yin- -

C'ar lliltoi'S aro a purely Veetublpreparation, miulo chlelly f"n tlio na-

tive herb found on the lowei ..i:iijc:i oftlio Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor-nia, tbo inedicinal propcrtios of whichare extracted therefrom without tlio tisoof Alcoliol. Tho question H almostdaily asked, "What is tho causo of thaunparalleled success of Vinkgau 15it-tf.i3- ?"

Our answer is, that they removotho causo of disease, ami tho patient re-

covers his health. They aro tho preathlood purifier and a lifo-givi- n principle,a perfect lienovator and Invif:or.iorof the system. Never before in thohistory of tho world li.is .1 lccncouipoiiiided jiossessinp tlio rciii.ul.aliloqualities of Vi.nkoar I'.ittkks in l.caliii'r tliaeick of every dist-as- ntan is licir t. Thoyaro a pentlo I'urpativo as w.-l- l .n a Tunic,relieving Conpesti"n or 1 nii.nMi;i m ofthe Liver and Yiccrul O.g.it.-- in UiliouaDiseases.

The iro(Miios of Dn. Wai.kkk'sYiseoar IJittkks :to AinTienl. Diaphercl if,Carminative, Nutritions, Laxative. Hiiin-tic- ,

Sedative, t'ouiiler-Irriian- t feudontic, Atlefa-tivo- .

and Anti-Biliou-

UrafKal TIi o-- i sards Vi.3JGAK jIJTTEIlS tho l'.inst V ojpierh.l

that ever em ti.lnod tho tinking

accordm.i; to directi'mf-'- , andieinaiiijoiijunwell, provided their bonn aro not ed

by mineral poison or othertueiun, and vital organ.; wasted beyondrep'v.r.

Jtilious, l.cuiiKont anl Inter- -111 it 1 w hich aro fo proTn.lent iu the valleys of our grout I'.'.oiithroughout tho United Statoa, frpfcially(hose of tho &iissi;--Mpp- i, OJiio, Missouri,Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland,. rkan-Ba- s,

lied, Color ado, lini::os, Iiio (iinndo,1'earl, Alabama-- Mobiio, Savannah, Ko-ano-

Jamea, ;:nd many others, witljtheir va.- -t tributaries.' throughout ouientire eouutty duriiv' Mic Summer andAutinim, and l fvnnrkably so hn imj- - sr;pfins or jimifjual h'Mt ami divM--- , lirainvariatdy aienm-nuiii-.- l !y t xtensi v. 1 do-ram- ,''';

uui-- s of t!i" stomach and liver,and other abdominal viscera. In theirtreatment;, a purgative, exertic.c a ov-erf- ul

inthn nco npeii the.-i- u variua or- -

u esst nli;:liv r.cct-s-.

is no cathartic 1 .?r tho pun. Thero

e f oual to1)K. J. WALKfli'S VfNLuAll lIUTHKtf,as they will sjeedily remove t lm d.trk-eolore- d

vi.-ci-d matter with which thobowcld are loaded, at tho sarie !imostrfiiulatin (heand Koneridlv

Kct'ieti'ins d i.'i0 liver,if -- loriiij' th healthy

l'uuctins tif tho digestive ;;:.,in'-.

Fortify ih li7y n:? iKivf dif.isobv imrif'. i'mr id! it. f!iii-- i wi;h Vint.o nI'.xttki;.'-.- . ro 'pidemi-.- ' em Ld ) hiddci a, I !ni:i

Ihsju ji' ia or i;,ii-redio:- , Head-ael- n'

Pain m the Shoulders C''!,f.;'".',Tihtnoss of tho Chest, Hizzines:-.- . .Sm:rErnetations of the, Stomach, J5;m1 Ta. loin tho Movdh, I'.ilioiw Attacks, Palpit

of tho Heart, Inllarnr.iat of tinLungs, 1'ajn in flu; region of the ti ne

s, and a hundred other painful mp-tom.- -',

aro tlio i of !);:' V:uOne bottle will prove a better guarantcoof its merits than a lengthy advei tiso-me- nt.

Scrofala, or 'iiMi's Evil, V.'hioSweliinp.-t- , Ulcere, 'Lryiju-la-'- , S.vcliod N'cvlf,Goitre, Scrofulous Iidl iiniiiriti'ti Iudol titInflanunation.i, Morcari-- A IIUlis OldSores, EriitioiiS of lL SLin, S"fi ilIn these, uh iu all otiu-- coiis'itui.cj,

"Walkku's Vimo.mi LTrn.i:.i havoshown their prer.t f iiratiio piv(-r- ii themoKt ohslinato and intractahlu ii.;c .

For lnl!aisnnatory and (.'IitonlcRhCV.iatisin, Gout, IJil'mus, Roniit-tentan- d

Intermittent, Fcver i, Diseases oltho I".!ood, l iver, Kidneys a:.d BItvidnr,

Bitters li.-.- ve no e'j'i'd. Such Diccuj'jar caused by Viiir.ted Blood.

Met'IianiVal lMse-ase?-. rersons m-ig- od

in I'Jints ami Mineral?, rick asI'lumber-t- , Type-setter?- , Gold-liealem- ndMiners, as they advam.-- iu life, a to sii!ij-n- t

to paralysis f tho Bowels. To jiniardapainxt t hi;, take a dose ( f AVALKEuV VtN-KOA- R

B ITT khs :eea iii'iu'ly.For Skin J'i.v'asj'S, Erupt Tet-

ter, Salt IM.euiii, Id-it- i Spot-.-

rurtnh's. I5i;!-- (,.:r,t!nee., liir.-- wtm.,Scald-head- Smci Byep. j:ry..i;)i'ii--- . Itch,Sc'.ffV, Bisii-ViiMtioii- f the Skin, Humorsand Diseases of ll; Skin of whatever nam ft

or nature, aro liicraHv dup n and carriedout of the pysteifi in a short Umo by tlio 'Jsoof these Lifters.

Tin, Tapo, nii nll-c- r Vv'orms,lurkinp in tho system I sn th'i'iseuidi,ora clloetually d. ;:l.voytd and d. NosvKtem of liied'u iue, r, crmd'ie'-i- ;:o

will five tLohyslcb- - fiom worniulike these Bitterf.

For Foinalc rompT;: It:f s, in youngor old, married or sitie, :U the e i va if womanhood, or tho turn of MV, those TonicBitters tli.-fd.i- so decided an thatimprovemjut soon j ihh.

Cl'iins(lli( VitiaitMl r!o:l when-ever vou lind its impiuiJie burst im. throughthe skin in I'nnpic-i- , JOi uptioiip, or Son;;cleanse it when yi;u find it oIstru-t.e- tnlplnfrgish in tlio veins; clenno it when it ilf ml ; your feeling v. il! t!l vou when. Keeptho LKm-i- I ptiro, and ttie l.utifth of ihe ujvtsiilwill follow.

it. ii. MriHivu.n A; hi,rrnrt-- i i ninlOn. Airtj.. Si i Kriim-- i l.!ifrrol,Olid e.ir. of V'ii..liiiu:t'ii up i 'iim iioi' S N. Y

tll ly all Uro-j.'l- t - ml U iiltri.

Wisliarfc's

Pine Tree Tar

Cordial !

Nature's Great

lleiuedyFOR ALL

Throat and Lung

Diseases.

For Sale by All Drug-

gists and Storekeepers.t.' nft lnx- At bor

A. V. t 4N7-- K. P. K.

'I'lii-- ' FA I'KK 1h prlr.te.j with 1 N K m sua fact mej byI o Li. KANK A CO.. I i I Oe;trl)(.ra tt., !ii- -

Vo by A.N.K.Bt.'lobu,') Jokua btCi.e ii