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Horses Wei I wdl h II. from im.iiihN !. an f t'" ; I Dean's Para. li..lllll Opera Huuae. u"'1'l'1t.?u' ,ounrt horses waa eS. T. M. ?r M. . Own. Ill , Dis 'i. Ifl -tf HETTIPS BLOOD PURIFIER A MARVEMH-'HMKDICUiE. Compose J entirely of choice Roots.IIerba and Barks prepared o as la retain all their Medicinal Qualities. Dr. Pettit does not claim it a Cure for all diseases, but claims jit will Cure all diseases arising from Im pure E'.otvl.Torpid Livcr.DUordered Kid neys, and where there is a broken down Constitution requiring a prompt and per manent remedv, .it never fails to restore the sutiering. PKTTITS.KLnO ) PUKlf lfcK IS equal in merit to 1'ETnr s Eve SalV Which is conceded best in the World. FOR SALE BY E. Y. GRIGGS. Akh ' Ottawa. Illiiuti-. Tli . Pellc.a rur I tin- heat J ceiit ever olt.-r.-d ain..Kei ,,f Ottawa. Mild iiiv K. Or'try. Pure Lead uu.l oil. The best Mixed I'mi.i flu. which wela-lm more to the rmIIoii than ' other. Hurt" Prupi tad Chemicals, ail at bottom prices. B!clc Headache and relieve all tbo trouble !nc! dent to a bilious state of tho sv stem, such as D.z I'ness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Fain in the Skip, c wane tneir man rouarav blu success boa been ahown la curing Hesd&e he.vet Carter'sLittle Liver PiHssre equally Tilujibl.in Constipation, curing and preveutm this aunoyingcoraplaint, while they also cornet s.Hdisorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver ud rvgulate the bowels. .Even it thty only cured Ache f hpy would bealroost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint ; but fortu natal? their goodness doe not end here, and t boss who onco try them wilt find these little pills alu able in no many ways that they will not be williu to tit wiUwuttaem. But after all sickbed! la the bane of so many l;v "i that here is where w make our great boast. - pills cats it wnild Others do not. Carter's Littla Liver r'.l's are Tory small and rery easy to take, Oneo: two pills make a dose. They are strictly reip'ta&le and do not gripe or pnreo, but by their gentle action please all who tuethem. la vialsatslScPuts; Ave forl. Sold fey druggists everywhere, or mtul by mail, CARTER MEDICINE CO., New Yor!- IIIHIIIIHlUHIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllHlllin Ly PAIN KHEU.MATI.-CH aud NEIKAI.I.I A bate long enough run riot in the hum mi yatem. They have tormented the tumuli family ami dened the medical faculty ; from time out of memory they havecomipted the blood, demoralized tbejuinta. vexed the nervtst, saroulzed the nut lea aud racked the brain with wearying pain. Athlophorim" U tlw etnmy of nb.puin.i- tiam and Neuralgia, repair their daniaava, renews the blood, ease the Joint, culms the nerves, sooth "i the muscles, irives iwt aud hucw to the troubled brain, and eusurea deliifhtfid sleep. " Athlophohos" U a new reuie.iv, but H has been abunibiutly tried. From far and near eouie te. timoiiialii from well-known irou who had l.m been aufferer It lias turned their disease out. It haa cured tbara. That ia all.-and that is enouvh. "Athi.oph'iRij"" o.tn lo fur yu w hut it has done for those stulerers. It cuii drive otityxiir ltlicuiii.iti.sni an.l Nen r:i lyia. and will do so if you give it a fair trial. ' Athlopuokos ' ruw by lliw tln. lud such a aod trial all over the country that its true v.jik is known, and its true character pr..v.l. "ATH.POKO', lucirn ' I'lt.c-Ictitivr:" 'Victor." " t'ou'4'.'.eror ' 1 1 earn.'? ul' tic ir:e a- Victor over the -attacks ...f tliee ternble n.aladie-. and OoNQCFnoR of the tnifhtful ainics lin-rv timahavsendup.il. Not i nifi t.'iii!"vy r.'l ef. but a iwriiiauvut. eu i .r.n-, and t f-1 . Hi ; limit cu:e If you cannot A:iu.opnoi.os-r.vir ii-i.--t,ist, ive will r'ivt It eireip;,i,l. on .: i regular price o.i .lo.i.rp.-r b' '.!". that yon buy r ir iu rcir dM,vii. ;.n ,' ' hasn't If. do not 1' p r; "l"d to t n else, bu: rier at oi.ee tro:,i a u.-di: ATH OPHOMS CO., 112 WALL ST., NE'A! K3?.;. iiiiiiiiiiiminiiiW.R.miiimiiiUfims GRAWOTHER Used harbs in doctoring tbe family, and her simple remedies CURE in most cases. Without the use of herbs, medical science would be powerless ; and yet the tendency of the times is to neglect the best of all remedies for those poweriui medicines that seriously in- I jure iae system. HISHLER'S LlSITTEKS- is a combination of raluable herbs, care lully compounded from the formula of a regular Physician, who used this pre scription largely in nis private practice with great success. It is nor s drink, but medicine used by many physicians. It ii invaluable for IHsrEPSi.i, KinwKT and comviaists, yKltrOCS EXHAUSTION, WEAK NESS, iSDlGEHTlOS, Ar.: and while curing will not hurt the system. Mr. C. J. Rhodes, a well-known Iron man of Safe Harbor, Pa., writes : "My aoo wu completely prostrated by fever and atie. Omnin and harks did htm no k""1 I then sent for Mihlr Hert bittera and in a bort tM the boy waa quite wr.ll." "E. A. Schellentrager. Drngglst, 717 8t. Qalr Street, Cleveland, 0., writes : "' Tour Bittera. I ran ear. and do say. are rr scrtbed by some of tne oUwt and mot iron:iaent poyaiciana in our city " MI8HLER HERB BITTERS CO., 825 Commerce St.. Philadelphia. Parker's Pleasant Worm Syrup Never Fails CAKTER'S( S PILLS. mm MSA WOMAN UOSSIl. Cuatle Garden an a Matrimonial Aiccimy Wniiii'n Ht Nurses Hiul Help. Rev. Ir. Kalonof l.miisville.Ky., DUrouraea on .Voinuti'a iHi'TulneK. WIVES EOK tiik wir. We are not surprised savs the Now York Sun, that tht otlioiuls at Casthi (itirdfH rot'pivp so many applications for wives to bo selected from among the immigrants, because for years past our own correspondents have acked us to as-ist them to t'ml conjugal partners. In all the cuiiuuunities of tho West there i u great excess of men. Very man v of these unhappy bachelors are farmers with no near neighbors, and thev lin.l that they can make little headway without wives to superintend their household and supplement their efforts. Hut the circumstances which bring them so many hardships arc also veiy"unattractivp to women, who know that such farm life involves loneliness and endless toil; that it is monotonous and altogether unlovely, and especial ly wearisome for women.' When, there fore, people find fault with girls for flying from farms to the shops and fac tories of the city, they show how ig norant they are of the" hardships of the average farm life, ami do not under stand how heavily they bear on women particularly. Daughters who see the haggard and prematurely aged faces of their mothers cannot be blamed if they hate tho existence which has done the terrible work. No wonder that op piessedTiy tho loueliness of the farm, they demand a better field for the satis faction of their social instincts, and look with aversion on the farmer lads of the neighborhood. They are likely to prefer tor a husband anybody ratner than a farmer. Aecordinirlv, manv fanners, at the West especially, are at their wits' ends to get wives and helpmeets, and some of them have written to us bitterly com plaining that the rirls of their iiei;rh- borhoods turn up their noses at them, and have approving glances for cily brcd youths only. If, therefore, the Castle'Uarden otlicials show a disposi- sition to help them out of their diliicul- tv. we have no uotiot mat western farmers w ill hasten to avail themselves of such a matrimonial airenev. nnd that fair immigrant maidens will lind hus bands immediately upon their arrival at this port. Hut exnerieneo seems to how that such attempts to artificially stimulate matrimony are pretty sure to be unsuc cessful or "to produce unhappy results, When women are sent from Massachu setts to Oregon to become wives tort.ho pioneers of that thriving .state, it was hoped that a new and happier sphere had been found for maidens of the pur itan commonwealth who had no chance of getting a husband at home. Hut the experiment did not work well, and after a brief trial the project was aban doned. The women shiuped to the Pa citic coast did not take kindly to their novel surroundings, and the business like character of the enterprise offend ed the sensibilities of such as were best lilted for matrimony. They could not overcome their prejudice in favor of old-fashioned courtship, andccordiiig- lv the attempt to relieve Massachusetts of its surplus of maidens was brought to a rather ridiculous conclusion. If women are few in a region the reasona ble interference is that it is not ready for them, and that they are not adapt ed to the circumstances of the life there. In due time Oregon became at tractive to them, and now we hear no more complaint about, the scarcity of women in the State. In this city there are more women than men, because the demand for female labor is so great that a working-girl gets employment more easily than a boy, and the social advantages and excitement of a city are even more prized by the poor than by the rich. The Western fanners, thereto e, are likely to cont ntie to sutler un der great disadvantages in the matri monial race, and we doubt very much whether they can get much help from Castle Garden. In Kurope no less than in this country the preference for the crowded and bustling towns grows more and more general and more and more marked. And yet, poor fellows, the farmers must have wives. If they cannot get them the occupation of the farmer is likely to fall into disrepute. Already wo see that the character of the men engaged in it is gradually changing, especially in the Eastern States. WOMKN AS M CsKS AM HEM. What is there in the hour of anguish like the gentle presence, theouiet voice, the thoroughly trained and skillful hand of the woman who was meant by nature anil has been taught by careful discipline to render those services which money tries to reward, but only gratitude can repay? I have always felt that this was rather the vocation of woman than general medical, aad es peeially surgical, practice, says Pr. O. W. llo'lmcs.' Yet I myself followed a course of lectures given by the younger Mme. Lachapelle, in Paris, and" if here and there an intrepid woman inMts on taking by storm the fortress of medical education, I would have the gate llung open to her as if it were that of the cit adel of Orleans, and she were .loan of Arc returning from the field of victory. I have often wished that disease could be hunted by ils professional antagon ists in couples, a doctor and a doctor's quick-witted wife making a joint visit and attacking the patient - I mean the patient's malady, of course with their united capacities. l'r I am quite sure that there is a natural clairvoyance in a woman which would make her as much the superior of man in some par ticulars of diagnosis as she certainly is in distinguishing shades of color. Many a suicide would have been pre vented if th doctor's wife had visited the victim the day before it happened. She would have seen in the merchant's face his impending bankruptcy, while her stupid husband w-as describing for dyspepsia aud indorsing his note: she would recognize the lovelorn maiden by an ill-adjusted ribbon, a line in the fe tures. a droop in the attitude, atone in the voice which means nothing to him, and so the brook miM be dragged to-morrow. 'Hie dull aiTangement of which I have spoken is. I suppose, im practicable, but a woman's a Ivice, I suspect, often determines her husband's prescriptions, instead oi a curtain lecture oti his own feelings, he gets a clinical lecture on the puzzling case, it may be, of a neighbor suffering from the complaint of the village nosology as a "complication of diseases," which her keen eye can see into as much bet ter than his as they would through the eyo of a small-sized needle. She will tind the right end of a case to get hold of, and take the snarl out as she would out of a skein of thread or a ball of worsted, w hich he would speedily have reduced to a hopples tangle. THE ISCU L WOMEN. Rev. Ir. Eaton, of Louisville, ICy., takes a high position concerning wo man's usefulness. Iu a recent sermon lie said: "Many ft great man's suc cess in life has been due to his wife, though the world gave all the credit to him. It would be a long list, and would contain the names of many of earth's greatest and best, that would tell of the success of men which were in a great measure due to their wives. Erasmus tells us of the home of Sir Thomas More, and we see there the se cret of his power. Luther acknowledg ed his obligation to his wife, and o did Hunyan, and Haxter and Edward ward Hurke and Hm kland and Niebwhr and Sir William Hamilton and Fichte and (iuizot and Carlyle and many oth ers. Listen to I r. Livingstone "ay on the death of his noble wife: 'I shall do my duty still, but it is w ith a dark ened horizon.1 Tom Hood said to his wife: 'I never was anything till I knew you, and I have been a better, happier and more prosperous man ever since.' In a church on Fleet street, London, there is a tablet with the in scription to the memory of Sir Samuel Homilly, w hose devotion to his wife was such that seven days after her death he died of a broken heart, lie described her as a w oman of strong understand ing, noblest sentiments, wannest atlee tion aud utmost delicacy. These are but few of many cases, aud we get bright glimpses of those great women purely incidentally. None of them sought notoriety as good wives. It has been well said, 'The best women are necessarily the most difficult to know; they are recognized chietly in the hap piness of their husbands and the noble ness of their children; they are only to bo divined, not discerned, by the stranger.' " . The Decay of Will Tower. Strong wills are becoming as rare as healthy physical organizations. Tho world "is fussy," but only because hu manity is working itself too much. Hrain tissue has increased, but healthy, vigorous thought has diminished. Af fectations have become realistic, and realities affectations. A toothache con verts us into invalids, where our ances tors laughed at tho gout. We have beaten tho gold leaf so thin that it lias lost its own color, and shines with a ghastly green light. Sentiment has carried us past common sense; we have had such a terror of the tlesh that we have cultivated brain at tho expense of motive tissue, and have produced a gi ant's skull that is too heavy for the dwarf legs to bear. Emotions have been refined, but sjiey have not been improved; bran has increased, but strong, vigorous thought has diminish ed. Education has become diffused, but what many have gained the select few have lost; and though there are abundance of readers, tho race of p ophets has died out. Suicide has in creased becau-e will and healthy thoughts have diminished. It is a dis ease born of modern fleet at'on", of tho disappearance of that self-control and self-respect that are better than tw loads of mock sentiment and morbid melancholy. Aside from the irrespon sibility of insanity, an unsuccessful self-murderer needs a large do-eof iron and a laro-e do-e of tho whip; and to crush out all future attempts needs a strong dose of public contempt and a strong dose of the treadmill. In a cer tain sense nature uses su cide to rid the world of fools; but it is, nevertheless, a blot on civilization, and a warning that there is a limit to all things, even to human progress. Humanity has made a rapid journey toward perfection; but the point has been now reached when rest and relaxation becomes a necessity. We have coinpi red worlds; let us now return for a while to the old (Jreek proverb, and try to conquer ourselves. llosion f.iitzrllt: AlMPiit-Mimlcit. Dr. Lyman H echer was sometimes .ibsent-minded and forgetful. Mrs. Hcechcr once received a sum of monev, and it was the occasion of great rejoic ing that it would enable them to pay a bill for a carpet, so she committed 1 1 vt money to her husband, charging him to attend so the matter immediately. In the evening the doctor returned from the city in high spirits. He described to us a missionary meeting he had at tended. "Doctor." said Mrs. He cher. "did you pay for that carpel to-day?" "Carpet! What can et?" responded the doctor. 'Why, the one I gave you' the money to pay for this morning." "There!"' said the doctor, "that ac counts for it. At the missionary meet ing they took up a cimtribution. When they Cairo t u e I said I had no nionev to give them wished, I had at the name time. f-. cling :n my pocket, where, fo my surprise, 1 found a roll of bills: so 1 pulled it out and put it in the box, w ondering where it had come from, but thinking that the Iord had sonVhow provided." I'hrMiiH I'nimt, aw It is said that one tree marks the corner of three munties in Ohio, Wood. Hancock and Seneca, and a cow rub bing her sides against the trunk in Han cock County, chews her cud in Seneca and brushes llies in Wood. Persons whose lutis are impaired or hsve throat diseases should not o to tbe seashore, as the sir is always poiuntnn to such trou bles. Use Dr. Pigelow'a Positive Cure; it cures coughs, colds, croup, bronchitis, asth in a, iutluenza, and all throat and lun dis esies. Montgomery & Co., dniiijist. De corah, Iowa, say: "We arc having a run oi Positive Cure. It giTCS universal salisfac lion." Price 50 ceuts and one dollar. . T Crises. Those- w ho understand the value of time treat it n prudent people do their money i liPy msine a nine go a great whv. - If ilr-Cultliitf ly tt Mother. You Pin always t"U a boy whos mother nits his hair by the way he ..top, in the street and wriggles his should ers. When a fond mother has to cut her boy s hair she draws tin. front hair over his eves, and leaves ii there wh Io she cut.-that which is at the back. 1 he hair which lies over his yes appears to be surmargeil w th electric needle-, and that which s silently dropping down under his collarband appears t j bo ou fire. She has unconsciously pished his heal forward until his nose presses hisbrei sl. In the meantime he is seized with an irresistible desire to blow his nose, but he recollects that, his hand kerchitf is in the oilier room. Then fly lights on his nose, and does it o unexpectedly that he involuntarily dod ges, and catches the point of the shears ia his left ear. At this he commences to cry and wish he was a man. Hut his mother doesn't notice him. When she is thro.igh she holds his jacket-collar back lrotn his neck, and. with her mouth, blows the short hits of hair from the toj of his head down his back. Ho called her attention to the fact, but she looks for a new place in his head and hits him there, and asks him why ho didn't use his handkerchief. Then ho goes (Hit and wriggles to get the hairs out of his neck, and wonders what, the other boys will say to' him. -Vn '.r. - -.a -s-- -A Hoi; That Collects Had I'etits. A stout German in the Seventh War 1 keeps a lager-beer saloon and a big Si berian bloodhound. There was a tinm when he kept only the saloon. His. i of a peaceable disposition, and would rather loe a round of drinks than light for tlw money. He lost so much that he took to keeping the dog. which ho has trained to do his fighting for him. Saturday night two half-drunken men entered the saloon and drank two glass es of beer. "See if you can remember that 1 owo you Id cents until to-morrow," said one of the men. "If yiu don't forget it, maybe I'll come around and pay you and maybe 1 won't." "O, l tink id hat better been oof you bay now, shentlctnens," said the Gar man, mildly. Tho men laughed aud turned to go out. "Nero!" said the German, sharply. The bloodhound sprang out of tho back room and stood in front of tho door, growling ominously. The man hesitated a moment, and (hen ona of thetu dragged 10 cents from his pocket and laid it on the bar. "Coom avay otV, Nero, und led dosi nice shentlctnens go otid." The dog retired, and paid no attention to the men, who swore at him. .Vrw York' Sun. The IJetls of the (ii-nuiii IVasantry. The dwelling houses - or, rather, tho apartmentsare at one end of the barn, and are separated from the store-room for hay and grain by a brick partition. The sleeping apartments are made in the walls of the room, those in tho kitch en aud dining-room being used by the family, while the one in the parlor is reserved for tho stranger within their gates. The walls selected for the beds are the outside ones, as they are thick enough to ma.ti a bed oi the average width. The walls are plastered nicely, and the beds are simply a niche large enough for a bed, the wall presenting an unbroken surface, save the opening where you get into led. These open ings are sometimes of an ordinary height, while others require a step-ladder to reach them, to the complete dis comfiture of the festive bed bug. The beds are made first of a lot oi loose straw, surmounted by a thick feather mattress. This is covered with a sheet, while above it is another mattress of lino feathers made lightenotigh to serve as covers. Just imagine the feelings of an American who has to make and tiumake his toilet after getting into bed! The opening iu tho'wall is closed by a calico curtain, except the spare bed in the parlor, which has doors of wood that are opened and shut at pleasure. - lugli'xiilt:. Ktuiiip-Toeil Owl-). Ke resentative Cabbage will be re membered in Indiana annals for all time to come for his owl bill a brave, but ineffectual elici t to protect the barnyard bird from the s.ivage bird of night. Years ago. Uncle Jimmy l-'ra-zier. of Pike Township, this count v. was. like KeproscntaMye t'abbage. the unrelenting foe of the owl. He bother ed not with statutory amendments. He pondered, and as he pondered, his chickens diminished and the owls in creased. One day a harpy thought came to him. He took down his scythe and all one long slimmer afternoon he plaed a syrnvhony upon it with an old fashioned blim whetstone. When he fini-hed, it was of razor-edge keenne s. Placing a ladder against theeh cken hotise, he nailed the set. 'he h gh aloft, its keen edg- skyward, a mo-t inviting resting p'ace. The old gentleman had calculated rightly, and half a hatful of owls' toes were found net morning under the scyth". This continued fur several day .s." a fresh crop rewarding the early riser each morning. After a while some owl, wiser than the rest, must have discovered t he practical joke. At sny rate, their visits cea ed, though to this day all the elderly Pike Town ship owls are distingui-hed by the'r stump-toes. i'''iocio.'i .yum', m s Gripp ed boys are Uught by the New York Children's Aid Society to make a living by making brushe-i. They sre paid the regular price for brush hands, and in 3 short time have learned the trade, bf cotning useful nx-mb." of so ciety instead of begging or s'e i!ing, a they migiit do if left to themselves. a i. An End to Bone Scrapim? F.I ward Shej tierJ, of HarTi'Mir":. I.... .): "H.iv.n.' received su rnu. h be tic tit from Kl tri. K:M.-r, 1 fed it my duty t.. let si.:T. r.v.n humanity know it Kate l.jd a rtiii'iiiijr re on my U-'j for eiht year, my d...-t"rs id me I woidd h-ive to have Ui- l tn' si raped ..r !( i smpiJaP-il. I Used, instead, three l"'!'i'S "t Flci trie Hitter and s. ven ..ie Kn. ka-n's Arr.ii a J'.iive, ami my iv is ii w ii. .1 and well.' E!c. trie Bitters are at lifty c. rit.- tie, and Buckk-n' Arnica 'a'.ve at i"e box hy Luts & Brly. i...t. per Are von laili'ij. try W Ktj.s' IlKtl.TR Kk- Nt'WK.i, a pure, clean, wholesome SJ v i.r Prsln. Nervm, srnmaeh. I lrer, Ktdne) , I.uiis. A:i l:iieiimU'd luvi,irant. Cures DYSPEPSIA, Headache, Kever, Ajrue, l 'hills, DEBILI TY & WEAKNESS. N'i.s to pike, irne im-cit, uneounled for TORPID LIVER, and Night Sweats, Nervous Weakness, Malaria heaiiue. Sound Pecliue. Si.oHiht hot.. 6 forfVtXi.at lnftists.' K. S. Weuj. Jersey City, N. J., Ii. S. A. Buchu-Paiba Remarkable Cures of Catarrh of tbe Uladder, Inildtiiniation, Irritation cf Kid neys and Madder, Stone or tlravi l Ins eases of the Prostate Ulnnd, lropsical Swelltiurs, Female l'isenses, Incontin ence of I'rlne, nil Diseases of the (ienito I'ri'iary Organs in either Hex. For I'n heiiltli.' or Cntiiitural IMseharRe Use also "i hapin's Injection Kleur." each ft. For M i'UII IS, cither cotil racted or hereilitarr taint, use i hapiu's Constitu tion Hitter Svnip, I. en per bottle, and Chupiu's Svphihde Pills, Jfv'.OO; nndCha pin's Syphilitic Salve, 51. 00. u bottles Svnip. i of PUN, 1 Salve, by Fxpress 011 receipt of f ltl.iH), or at Prnisists. K S. Wi.Ij, Jersey City, N .1.. V. S A t .leal re to sell niititeiliately the fulluwii'g property, alttiate iu the eut ut (HU.v.i: So. I. Two-lort linek ltutld.UK, r.xftl ft., with a 1-st.irjr troa clad, in'). III the rear. The tiitllilinne ara new Tins proiH'rtv is on t'liutoii street, one blis k ill-re-ty wrat of cunt Imuse: iitul a liiirifniiL No. :. Mv liesldeme, aitusttsl on tllinola Ateuue. the ti.wl tv.'.li-i.ee Mreet i it Ottawa. The Kroumi iuu talus a'niut of hii acre. House hits 10 ruoius, vltm'ta, bl h r.Ntiu ami eelUr. srleslun, well ami (' Intern wsterj trsl li irn. l oftl and wood houses- Httuiiilaiii e u! slnult! anJ fruit trees; all 111 ll rat elitsa order. Pintle iniite'ii. platiiit; Iiiiv.iik- r U 1 1 1 1 I i I tec will II ml It to tlieirailviiulatt to loiiW st this i.rniwrtT. Tune will Im' alien on part if aersl liiiiiure at tnr resilience or uf Or .1. o. Uarru. in trl lilCOUOb: .ItKVI.L. FOR SALE. Itj proper' in South oitswa. uesr the tllinola HlTBi tm.lne, I.- otTe'red for sale on ivasnaable Urrma, as 1 la le:i.l to remove to Nelti saks. The piiretiiteer ol this property i sn rent Hoes' Greta, .1 desirable pi. toe rsaitenoBs Call on tir write li .lACOU UAISCH, novt:i-:lnijs Ottawa, lit. Farm for Sale. t acre r.inn In lleiilini Ci.uiut, Indiana, aules from tiisidlaml. ou I'., P. A W. Ii. Ii., ami J inllei. from Wadena, on I' , l s. I!. It. OihhI house, ham. wind imiiili, cnli. liesrinK oreliiinl . fenced mid ditched ; school hmiae on corner of laud. Mils l a well niipiotid farm ; price, V i,tV. en" lerma Apply to Inuue H. l'lioci , r'u It r, 1 ml. ih t :j iiu For Sale or to Rent. Aixiut the last oppoitiiuitt tu iililitin the most tlesint hie liesiilenee Proper'a' 111 lat Otlawn. Mual lie sera lo lie fully appreciated, specially uooil lor till luteal ineiit. mi which to luuld Imasis. .' aell or rent. If not sold by the Jt of March lstt't. the naideuce will tie fur rent; alo four lots for Ksrdeiilntt parpoaes 'terms reaaoiialtle. Please esll on Mrs .Ism- .. Clare, at the re.lil.'ltte ul Pr Slout. cor Paul and l.aluyelte st in is- iinos Farm to M I'he MhiltrsDined t.lfi is fur rent his farm uf 1 .1) si ii -, in the town of Wallace. Iwo miles norlh uf Ottawa. Kur particular iippl? at lite premiai or addieaa I'll 1 1.1 P M.(.SIS. ilei-;; 1'iiat llfllie Itol B.'l, (Mliiwil, III FOR SALE. The late rn-tdiMic of .1. Wall Iliiu la lr(te and fltttsl up in modern st le. ami lit ttist class cuiidlttou helai? nearly new. Heated hy fiu n ice Artesian walor In house and yard. Oianl sued lot and Ku.sl barn. Kur further particulars Inquire of .1 A M Ks (i AI.VIN, Prlano Mines. Ottawa. 111. feb " Fiie Farms for "Sale. I lute lur iile a uiimlier of Oue farais la tin. luaaty : It's) Acres in Peer Park. Nl Acres in Kali Kiver. Acres in Full Kiver. si) Acres in Unit hum. lt'si Acres in iphir. so Acres in South I Mtana so Acres in Farm Itide. :;oil A. res in Haytiiti. i' Acres in Freedom. i.i ai'MMIl! other IT I flirlll", ill Well lltlpttited Ant or ail tltesi- liiiula I will sell at f in price" oe.sw l. Ill , uir It tf It. f 1INCOI.N FOR SALE. 28 FARMS Of from 80 to 320 Acres. Locates' in Sullivan and Adjoining Town ship, in Livingston County. ALL IMPROVED. Price $30 to $50 per Acre. ' FNOKiM CASH To ASSCRF sU.F. Time on Il.tl.itif.- ' Sun t'oc lia-. t". ' Kur de niit:i.:i id Uu-l- w r.fe tu or i s ': ull i J. T. DORSEY, Cullom, Livingston Co., ; 0,,.-, ILLINOIS. 1 rUBLISHID KTIST FKIOAT At 44 La Salle Street, T1A.WA. 1 1.LJ-., Is the Only (Jennnn Taper In Laisille Couuty, Also between Chicago an J js Yen port, anC tlerefore well aJapted as an ADVERTISING MEDIUiV -1 Yaltiai Prouerty for Sale FARC3S CsalrallllisiisWitaislt HYIM HERALD NVHKKLY KDIT10X, One Dollar a Year. Hriglitst, Most Newsy and Accu rate Weekly Journal in the I nited States ski ll II I.S, CAKTOONS, ku kaii.t ror oth. r feature hate been added. A'-o a imiiiiI.., ctiiiu.mc niniiur of I lie ihss, tu aii da- iiirlineiilH, It i- retul by upwards of ttiilt u uiMliuii pee ile mid iuk'iI ailt. rt.mi.,! iiieiliuin, reurhtntf fiet rie, uriiin and hemes . t iill drer.lti . ill eery pai c ..I the rumor) . A I'l llltIT N KWsPA I'K.It. p i..ii.iin till the treiieral lie, of th lai edlt:oa uf the IUko.i.. whii h Iww. the iafiii 1 i .r. ulatl.iu In Uis I tilled States. lll.leH llilelil in inlit" . It i til- llli'-l T.i'ul!e rt Du ll If nl iHil ii. il ii. iii the world, iiicmrt sry altitu l In. ix . hit. in jli.l ci'ilil'ilis ut all iM.re.si. to tlitl f! .llie- tna lit kll.iH U. Ill the ilritl'tlilt-lit et lOKKU.X MWS ril a. lit: KM I' Iiiis ' hecD illtiiik.'M'-leU hylUef'jl! ll.'Hs ut iih.e il input . itfs. ih. i: t ruimatialltiC tele rill.h i-uhii u ill lliereuse fiielhfi. . ilu-Kirlll li pin llll.lit ll the WtKKIV llFRU.DUi i. net lent. It irnes to the ,iuuit ainl d . not h-itu enot Outlines. The fal li:er u l!l sale lit. lit)' Ill-ire th:IU iOI.I.AK A I .K Krum the .uiaesion uf the I'lirm pen.irtiii'rit '., iviiceriiiim null, . iiltle, i'ni.. trees, lutililins, ,t'Ut)"a iiV. is.ultri, mitl atrrii ultnrHl ec..ii.iu " I he llnine'' iieli ui'i. the liotisewif.' uu.l On' i:liuilen Hi ri'itsnl ta ts'iniomieai und taxU tnl in ilthe. t lie I '.sliious ut ihe in. ikiiit: ut Home cnnt'i ris. In 4iMitt.ni lire icir.-a t.iftt rejii.tis ul irmte unit I'KOIU y M A KK t I S. The ciiilitmu of until. v. miliums of tniseeliaueoaa I ILH . . ii.i i ana i... a i - i ii. ...... lilt a in in, ll i, I iM j. j.i.ii ,i, i I'm in. .iiiii, . snlwcriltc one dollar, at any time, for a full teir. ' fl tla'c I"'' I" an) Mart et Hie I' S m CJimdas. Tlie New Vtirk lleiitlil, III it Wcckl.t Out' Hollar it ear. una, Adtlt'faa NllW Vlllth lll-.W.M.I. tln.s.lWiit und Ann Stn-et. J. W. EBERSOL, Real Estate and Loans. I have three eot I aires and 1..N en the P.il'e for ., on easy pat menu. Will sell all together ..r aei.arwl. One lot ..ii liidce. Hun.' T rooiiis. .' !o'a. hsra. 4c. on Weal Side, near C. II A s). deput. Mont ) to Loan mi Lour or Mmrt Time. Office iu l.J iu h's Itlm a. Ottawa. Ilia. Mil THREE GREAT CITIES At WEST LIiKFD TOQETHFIt BT HIE f.REAT CHICAGO & ALTON R. R. The Short I.lno aud the Pet t'.oute to KANSAS CITY ST. LOUIS And all points via And all points via KANSAS CITY. ST. LOUIS. CHICAGO ?hn.d EAST and NORTH. The l'opulur I.lue to California.. PALACE RECLINING CHAIR CARS Free of Extra Charge. PALACE DINING CARS. Mal$, 73 eiutt. rullinaii Palace Sleen.m? Caiv-4 An euulpnit'Ut uut equaled l.y any oilier l!tv. Fnttre tralus nm thrpuiih without change, an 1 cm uec.tlons are mnde with o'lier line a' "aonMe hmiraln I nloii leikta. The t.ltKAT K!TI.ION nOI TK In aunv tner. to all Watertna Places In the I'a.i.West and No? It: VIWV01NSlX. J'5iT-' .2JiVUI" tiS. t'ANAIA, KAsTHU N fkTATKf, Kti'kY inoi NTtlN-. coi.oit4.iMi. ntiW H K ICO. t'A I.I I'OK Nl .ln '':. loa.l th Winter Itesorts in the S' null. E.V Mr.XHO an.1 '?x.'uWii!.,M?i.,.l Trip ami Slwyte Trip Tleieta to a i.i. i.aAo ijkast POINT I" 'h' t or South, and Tl.iouith Tl. kets lo all pulais tmn. West, Nurtli and Houih. aieim sa'e ai a'l tunes, at aa lowi-ateaasliylnferli.rlli.es l or furt her Inluiuial lou and lowest ta.ea. app.y t 1st Tltkst ireal HK it.O A ALTOS K. B. o, to JAMES CHARLTON, lleneral Pa.s. iiKer and Ticket ArfeW. .'10 Peai hoiuStreel, t 1IICAOO. ILL. J. M. OATES, Oenerai TravellnK A- ut hleuito Alton nadroad, l. li t AI.O. ILL. J. C. McMULLIN, Vice-frealdent. C! 4 CM APPP. . t,. Cie.p 'ul Manatee The Line selected by th U.S. Cov'l to carry the Fast Mail. Tt On.) TNough Lina, vits 11 o t c, tatrwaaa CHICAGO, PEORIA or ST. LOUIS AND DENVER tt-.ar br v.iy ot Oti'i, Fic ' c J..' on. tch :3n at I Kiml C'V "'- s . o t'-s . . j ut S'i'sa, ILLINOIS, IOWA, MISSOURI, i NEBRASKA, KANSAS, COLORADO l.?e bianv-e I r.t to t'.s r poW"t c tea s'd !3e. ' ;t t-rs it.y n ,-s in."- tit. "o " t tfity aq-puad tnrog . c..i 't i r.'y.st Chicago and Denver, Chicago and Omaha, Chicago and Council Bluffs, Chicago and St. Joseph, Chicago and Atchison, Chisago and Kansas City, Chicago and Topeka, Chicago and St. Louis, Chicago and Dubuque, Chicagoand Sious Citjr, Peoria and Council BiufYs, Peoria and Kansas City, Peoria and St. Louis, St. Louis and Omaha, St. Louis and St. Paul, St. Louis and Rock Island, St. Louis and Chicago, Kansas City and Denver, Kansas City and St. Paul, Kansas City and Omaha, Kansas City and Burlington. C ie Connavhc r-J st s.s o- j'.st-s B0..VS aa.th Tetoug T ft to a-o '0" cs;."ts ocs'ai ae. its t'aecksi. At aacft o' . Esfs d Asa'a-a Unwra . ccna.cn m 6-ssa 0- c C.oci -s 'fwuf fin t aej ham ad po.et .r. p, U. t,o tta at asa Ca-aJa. it 'i It's Pi it pat L.ns to Sn Francises, Port I a ad tad City of Mizici F T.akct, Ra. G" al ifa-ttva. ate . ta-atft ta Butiieg'tsi Rcu's. c.U ee ry Tsjkat Ast i tmai Uwitad S's:t oi Csesda 0' stM'ts HENRY 8. STONE. PERCEVal lOWaL An t GanT Maeagat. UattT Pata. Afaat, CHICAGO. reailint:. poetrv. speeml n.ivriiit ... tt it mill ntimor, uom social aw! political, miortilis lien", popular t'leniv, lti ilolitsni e!! km. ii ptrmm ut lite vrnrl 1, a t-iar-tlli-nt ilet.tt.'il to itie .ir lUl ltlf lU'l !l'ic t:lk.c. Whlla ........... Ii . u . . .. .. !..,.-. ....I !... n.... t.t . saT . s,. m a I mm mm SSBSBmaHSaSJMMSSBIHSSBSSSBMSSBS