Bloomington Progress, Volume 20, Number 1, Bloomington, Monroe County, 3 March 1886 — Page 4
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HIO ft MISSISSIPPI
BailwaYv JL
INDIANA NEWS.
rtstissrtlins of the State Eumpmit of h G. A. K. Itms of Interest from all artr Ota State.
CiNVitfttAri ASD ST. LOUIS, SoWd Dailv Train (each way) between emaur$Ari and loujsvillb. Solid Daily Trains (mob way) between ST. LOVIS ASD LOVISVILLS.
WO
cam far AST
rhas;e af
Clan r
Krst Cfsus, fitaoml Clam and iBmSfrant PfMScnyti v, eJZ earttti an, ifast Express
a vwttss, consuftrt' f Fautee Sleeping vara, Heoont Pmrier fhackea and eomfortoblt
Day Ckxrtha, all nutxing THROUQU
WITHOUT GHASOK Only lO Honrs Time
Between CCfKtnxaft ernef St. LouU. or St
Lotas and Lomswill. But Four Hours mnVBeitoeen Cincinnati and Xowuattb.
The Ofcto Jt Mlsataalaal atwajr it Ue only Ltm erWeji
IS. Iiiraia aad Cincinnati
.Under one management, runninar all ita
traiBa through "SOLID," and in consequence is toe only recognised flnt class roate between those cities, its
Easy Grades, Jfe Splendid Motim
rower, Steel Hails, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed kaable the O. & M. to make faster average time than any other Western Bond. WW Ask for Tickets via O. & M. K'y.-fm
For sale by Agents of connecting lines
fast, west, aorta, ana soutn. W. W. PEABODT, President an Oon. nTtX W. B. SHATTCC, Got. Pass. Ask. CI 3 CI N N ATI, OHIO:
Ska State KnoalMpuieMt. Tb Indiana (fcattd Amiv nfibe Kenueite aocrds
I Bate take c anew Uir its seventh an
nual encBxnpiseftt will Be remenritared aa one wheTeis the indifferent were aroused to interest, and the interest to enthusiasm .hat particular Spirit moved eveiry, part of the State to increase
not known-, bus the met wee arrnarent that no
(previous s&eampment has brought out such mmbars of the boys who wore the blue in the
was ago. 'rue encampment met last ween a TiHffanapons. and was in session twq days. The aanual address of Cotnrtde David N. foster. Department CWfunander, was an elabo-
made one year ago, that be would give to the
truss commuted to him all the entnustasm, ability and work that was in him. That pledge he bad evidently endeavored to keep in letter and inspirit. At the outset, as be states, he recognised the impossibility of equaling the magnifl cent emwth in tinmhnni u-hirh tba Tlenarttnent
bad made under hie Immediate pvtMebfcssors,
Carnnhan and Nicsr, as under their leadership ft had reached the remotest corner of the State,
and the number of posts had risen to so high a ngure that any farther increase seemed hardly
within the probabilities. A close inspection impressed him with the belief that his duty lay in the unberoic, but necessary, work of pronto ripening and solidifying the growth already made, and to this he rutttt bis iht. He reports
the order to be in a flourishing condition.
-roe report or Assistant Adjutant uenerai aw 11 van shows that the stranetb of the Department
December 31, 1884, was 387 posts and 16,919 mem-
oers, ana me same date, iweo, snowea sue pun
ana lf.sw members. Bince that time iu post, and 170 members have been added, making ag
gregate gain for year 1,097. Number remaining
suspenaea, ,sw, ana m connection norewiau i a recommendation that the by-laws be amended so that the reinstatement fee will not exceed the amount enarmd for initiating a meruit. There
were issued during the year sixteen Department
general oraexs ana six Leparcmeue circm", 9,000 rosters, and other papers, altogether numbering 33,300 pieces, making the official correspondence at the office very large. Resolutions condemning the action of putting the flags over the Government buildings at Washington at half-mast in honor of Jacob Thompson were passed by a unanimous vote. The encampment indorsed the Johnston Universal Pension Bill with practical unanimity, after making slight amendments. A resolution was adopted demanding the establishment of a separate home for soldiers'
xne ioiiowing was aooptea ay anew
" W W w I TTi.iiIii.iT Kvfthlfl Ttmif tttwmt That we de-
I plore the recent deaths of our gallant comrades
S. M. Orchard ft Son PROPRIETORS.
QsassitetlwlsBsejt,
JJwissTtss
Tk jMry Fast Kgpnss
Chicago and Louisville,
Conaectinc closrty with the night and day trains out of Chicago oo the Great Through Trnnk T.me
west ana nortnweet, ana wim me awigina svening through trains oat of Lonisvule on the Great Southern and Southwestern lines. This Popular Boute now runs the most comfortable coaches and Parlor Cars on day teams, and Pullman Seepers on night trains, and hat only one change of ears to all the prineipal towns and c-ties in the North, South, Bast, or West. fall Through Tickets OTer all the various cross
ing aod eonnecting railroad lines, andcheekbag-
xtopsssengers mbwwhwi, hwhs
sssmoyances or wrnwmag. wv
and leaders. Generals Grant. Han cock, and Mc-
nn uis that wa binder onr tendereat Sym
pathies to their respective families, and that the Assistant Adjutant General is hereby directed to convey to them an appropriate expression of
the sympathy ana conaotenco or toe nanoM in this department. The following officers were elected: Tom W. Bennett, Richmond, Commander: Andrew J. Tite, New Albany, Senior Vice; W. M. Daily, An. TnntarViae: A. H. Tucker. Cicero. Medi
cal Director: Ira Chase, Danville, Chaplain;
lentatives at large c. r. mono, J. a.
I Wntw Wm W nwfaran. W FT. Holabart. L B.
McDonald and 3. J. story, new memssrs ox
Council of Administrations. P. Fee, J. N.
Ben D. House, Indianapolis, was appointed Ad.
I Jutant ueneraL
s Relief Corns.
Tho wasts'i Relief Corns. B. IK Depart.
mMfcMf TnAiM- nld a sMTet business session
I st Indianapolis. The reports made showed that there an twenty-nine corps in Indiana with a
memosrsnip, m goou stanoing, oi i,uzo, auu vmu
on nana amounting to siz,ow. iiwuiB ww j $47,985 has been expended in charity, and the relief fund now amounts to 91.401. The ladies adjourned, after electing the following officers: Freeide&t, Mrs. Alice E. Griffin, Elkhart; Sanlnr Vtra Traaident. Mrs. Ancelina L. Rankin.
Terre Haute; Junior Vice President. Mrs. Ella Carson, Evansvflle ; Treasurer, Mrs. Mary Titus,
Elkhart ; Chaplain, Mrs. Kmma u. strope, xon Wayne. Four delegates were elected to the Na
tional Convention, and six members to the
miaainir direct connections, and'
pense and worry of tiresome lay-over ontho joux-""Zow-rate, Land Explorers', and round-trtp Wmter and Sunrmex Tourists' Exenrsion Tickets on sale in their respective seasons. Will cheerfully give travekire full information in regard to the best connections, the fewest and easiest changes, and the most comfortaNo and psssmt route; and will furnish Railroad Maps. Time-Tables and folders, containing much useful informatton to taavehiis, on appli-
CABTEBPEERDJ6,
BaetjPll tO
wm. aBAumnr, Gee Pass. Agent,
m.
Resident Dentist.
Dr. J. W.
CRA1N.
OtBce in the New Block, up-stairs, ower
fnft Book Htore. All
Minor State Items.
A new swindle on fanners is now being
worked in the northern port of the State,
by which John Crawford, a fanner in Mar
I shall Coonty, was taken in for 9175. A
stranger called who claimed to be selling
sickle-grinders. He offered to furnish Mr.
Crawford one free as an advertisement.
The latter signed s postal card, in order to (rise shipping directions. In a few days he
was informed that thirty-six grinders had
been shipped, as per written order, amount
big to $316. Mr. Crawford compromised
by ginng his note for f 175.
-Prof. Enoch Alexander, a well-known
i music teacher of Howard County, has just
been arrested in Kokomo on the charge of
ezzlement, preferred by Sr. D. Hul-
bort, of the Kokomo Medical Dispensary, far whom Alexander has been acting as
rant for the past two years. The doctor
claims that Alexander has collected and ap.
i urupriated $250 of his money to his own
Lsgesi et m Cm!.
In his report of the Point Barrow
Expedition, lieutenant Bay devotes some attention to the 'Alaskans and
their legends. Daring file long winter nights, when food is plenty, he says the natives delight to meet at the council
house, or at different nuns (ants), and,
over their work, repeat the legends of
their race, which have been handed
down from father to son. These legends go hack to the origin of man, and
they tell with careml detail of a d
when there were no men mail the land,
but a spirit called " A-se-ht" dwelt here alone. He made the image of a man in clay, set it up on the shore of the sea to dry, and, after it was dry, he breathed
upon it and gave it life, and sent it oat
into the world. And he called the dog
from a long way off to go with the man,
that he might help in traveling. After
a time the spirit made the snkta (rein
deer I, and sent him oat mto the land,
and the teeth of the deer were like the
teeth of the dog; and after many days
the man came to the spirit, and said "The deer is bad: he devours man.'
Wherenpon the spirit called in all the
deer, and removed all the front teeth
from their upper jaws, since which time
men have lived on deer, and the deer have lived on moss and grass. Then the
man asked the spirit that there might be
fish in the rivers and sea. And the spirit took a piece of pine and a piece of balsam, and sat by the river where
it emptied into the sea, and he whittled long shavings from the pieces of wood, and the Hliavinira fell into the water,
and the shavings from the yellow wood
became salmon, and those from the
white wood became whitefish, and
swam awav.
Their faith in these legends is very strong, and they are extremely opposed
to any expressions of doubt or ridicule.
It is only by gaining their confidence and almtaining from any expression of
doubt in their presence that they can be
induced to talk about their people or repeat their legends. We heard but one legend that referred in any way to
. the regions of the northward, it
said that many years sgo a man from
Nnwnk was caught in the moving pack
that was setting to the northward so
rapidly that he was unable to return to the land. After atrreat many days, more than he could count, he came to a land
where dwelt a strange people: they
spoke a strange language and dressed in deerskins like the Inyu. He re
mained with them a long time, bat
wishing to return to his people, he left
mem one wmier ana mnea bomb over the ice, living upon the seals he caught
by the way, and renewing his boots with their skins. The journey was so
long that he wore out fifteen pairs of
boots a ve taming to -Nuwuk-
"Patoisi! Bosapakto, the beautiful sister of the first Napoleon, was a mod
est woman," says the San Francisco Inrjleside, in defending an artist ot that city, "and she did not hesitate to pose
for a nude model for Canova, who per
petuated her t-xquisite form in the statue of 'Sleeping Venn.' The story they tell concerning this fact serves to
iUustrate her real delicacy and sound sense. Some prude asked how she could have been willing to pose for the sculptor. 'Why, there was fir in th
room,' was her ingenuous wfy."
WOMEN OF PLUCK.
A St. LoniM Dude Horsewhipped by One
sad a Detroit Banker Thrashed fey Another. At St. Louis. St Louis telegram'. Harry M: Snyder was Horsewhipped iu
front of the residence of ex-Aid. James
Garvin, No. 2315 Chestnut Street, by Mr. Garvin's daughter Ella, last evening. The amis of the young mim were held by the
young woman s 12-year-old uroiner wnue
the punishment was being ndmimsteiect. After a short struggle Snyder broke away and started to run, but was met just as he was stepping onto the sidewalk by a friend of the young woman and was a.yaiu naught and held, and suffered a still more severe
punishment from the whip iu the hands of
the yonug woman, miss iiarvin gives vue following concise statement of the affair:
"Ho insulted met so 1 walked into tno house, ond just happoiied to see that hew
buggy-whip, and I picked it up and went to the front door and told him to apoldgiza.
He said ho woman t, attd 1 whipped mm. 1 think 1 gJtve him a pretty good horse
whipping, and I'm glad of it except that 1 broke the whip."
At Oetroit. iDotroit special. A AAnsntion was created in the City Hall
to-dav hv the attack of an old woman named
Eosa Schultz on Joseph Knlin, the exbanker, whose failure involved so many
poor people. Since her loss Mrs. ucuunz
has been almost distracted. This noon she
attacked Kuhn as he left the Becorcters Court room after the postponement of his criminal trial. She polled him vigorously and all the time denounced him. Kuhn was badly frightened and a policeman escorted him to a place of safety.
FROM M0RM0NDOM.
United States Attorney Dickson's Assail
ants Under Arrest Bigamist's Sentenced. (Salt Lake dispatch. Five persons were under arrest to-day for
assault on United States Attorney Dickson last night: Frank J. Cannon and Hugh
Cannon, sous of George Q.; Angus Cannon,
nephew; James Buckley, and S. A. Kenner. Indications point to a matured plot to assassinate Dickson. Apostle George Q. Cannon sent Dickson a message to-day expressing horror and detestation at the assault, and hoping he would believe he had no hand in it or anything but con
demnation. He would have written, but
his strength was not equal to his task.
Dickson returned a reassuring message, saying he had never entertained a thought of his countenancing the assault, and hoping for his speedy recovery.
Henry Dinwoody, oniidozea oy me cnuron into recanting his'promise to obey the laws,
was sentenced to-aay 10 six momus imprisonment and 300 fine for unlawful cohabitation. Joseph McMurrin received the
same sentence upon a similar conviction. George Q. Cannon sent word that he hoped none of his friends would bail Dickson's assailants, and all but Kenner are in
jail in default of sureties.
RANKIN'S SUCCESSOR.
Thomas K. Hmhl Eleoted to Congress from
the Filth Wisconsin District. Milwaukee special.
The election in the Fifth Congressional
District was unusually quiet, and the vote
about the liahtcst everpolled there. Thomas
B. Hudd of Green Bay, was elected. Thomas K. Hudd. the Congressman
elect, is a Green Bay lawyer. He has been
aetivelv enoaeed in nolilics for a lone time.
He represented this district in the State
Senate several times. He is rated as a shrewd lawyer and an astute political manager. He'was born in Buffalo in 1835. He is a graduate of Lawrence University at Appleton, and has resided and practiced law at Green Bay since 1869. He was District Attorney of Outagamie County in 1866, and was elected to the' Assembly and Slate Senate from that county in 1868 and 1872. From Brown County he was elected to the Assembly in 1875, and the following year to the State Senate, of which he has since been a continuous member with the exception of the sessions of 1880-'81. He has long been ambitious to represent his district in Congress, and was a powerful opponent of the late Congressman Bankin in the convention at which the latter was nominated. He is very popular in his own city.
SHas Wade, a convict, died at the
Southern prison after along illness, of con
n. He was 53 years of age, and
ksdsnsnt seventeen yean of his life be
hind the prison bars. He had a mama for stealing homes, and wast sent up on that charge five successive times. At the time of his death he had only six days longer to
His relatives live at Evansville.
The work of widening and deepening
the channel of Blue Biver, begun last
spring by H. T. Stock, of Toledo, is pro
gressing satisfactorily, and is completed to
within one mile of New Castle, ihe lm
piovement will continue seven miles south of town, will "make'' thousands of acres of
tillable land of ihe best quality, and will
require ten months to finish.
The Kngw of Iiabor scored a victory
at Elkhart in having the Council insert in the ordinance granting a franchise for a street railway, a clause compelling the company to submit the number of hours the employes shall work and the wages
paid, to arbitration. The railway will be
omit at once.
Newton Talley, residing near Colum
bus, was catting down a tree, which fell on him, the body resting an his leg. He laid under the tree, by himself, for two hours,
when he was found. It was another hour before help arrived and he was released.
He is lying in a critical condition and will
die.
Benj. Knoop, a wealthy farmer living
in Wabash County, was bitten by s rattle
snake forty years ago. He has smce been troubled at intervals by swellings which break and discharge large quantities of pus.
He has just been confined to his bed for
tear weeks from this trouble.
Prof. Charles Harris, principal of the
West Middleten public schools, has been
suspended by the Township School Board. It has been discovered that' Harris, who is a prepossessing yonng man, has been guilty
of improper relations with a wealthy young
lady.
The coopers at Crandall, Floyd
County, are on a curious strike. They
have struck for a reduction in the rateB of
boardmg-house keepers, and threaten a
boycott if their demands are not met.
A Grand Army post has lustbeen insti
tuted at New Cumberland, Grant County.
Mrs. Frederick Hollenbeok was found
dead in a well near Seymour. She
thought to have committed suicide through grief at the loss of her daughter, who
dropped dead two weeks ago. A huge catamount was tracked by i party of hunters, a few days ago, in Hunt
inston County. Traces of the animal were
lost in the woods of Whitley County.
After capturing the prey in a fox drive,
near Versailles, John A. Haines, a wealthy
citizen, fell dead of heart disease.
In the past thirteen months Vigo
County has held insanity inquests on twenty-four persons.
The Shelby Times Printing Company have employed Mr. M, T. Stokes, a young
journalist of Indianapolis, to assume edi torial management of their paper.
The Knights of Labor at Elkhart, of
whom there are three lodges, have ordered
a bovoott on the Chinese laundrymen. The
Chinese must go, they say. John Jennings, the oldest man in Han
eoek County, has died at the residence of
his son-in-law, Daniel Davis, near Green field, at the age of 98 years.
The cement mills all over Clark County
will resume operation March 1. This will give employment to about three hundred
SENATOR JONES, OF FLORIDA. His Detroit Love Affair Jones, of Mvada, Indignant. Washington telegram. Gentlemen just from Detroit say that when Senator Jones learned that a committee of Senators were coming to Detroit he left the city to evade them, and will not come back to Washington. Senator Vance will use measures to compel him to come, if necessary, as he believes Jones is out of his mind and should be looked after, so that he shall not make a public spectacle of himself. It is said that the reason Jones gives for not wanting to come back to Washington is that his brother Senators will guv him about his love scrape, but Vance will talk him out of that. Senator Jones, of Nevada, is unusually
good-natured, but just now he is an indig
nant citizen. Some days ago the Chicago
JViimne printed a story of the amours of
Senator Jones in Detroit, but by mistake
made the Senator from Nevada the hero. Ever since the publication the latter has been receiving a deluge of marked copies
of the paper and letters, and Mrs. Jones has received many expressions of sympathy
from her mends.
TO BE LOCKED OUT OF CHURCH.
Worktaginen' Organizations Condemned
by tlw Archbishop of Quebec Montreal special, It is stated, on the authority of the Sec
retary of Mgr. Fabre, Bishop of Montreal,
that the Arenoisnop ot uueooc nas seni a
circular to all his Bishops, ordering them to issue a mandate condemning the Knights
of Labor, the Telegraph Operators Union, the French-Canadian labor organizations of
Montreal, and every order wiiere tne oatu
of secrecy is taken. The chairman of the local governing committee says the order
will ignore the mandate, because when Powderly was here last week he offered to make any amendments to the Constitution which the Bishop might demand, and they think they have been badly used, and now are in a spirit to defy the church and every
one else.
China Within ihe Great WalL , Of the ancient Great Wall, only ft low rampart remains, with squiife towers diminishing toward the tap. Those towers are generally placed on the suminits of. the mountains across which the yrali winds. I ascended one of them, the' belter to contemplate the view, but had ho one with whoni to share all ihe admiration that I felt at thin moment. It is quite impossible to describe all lhattho eye took in mountains, vallevs, gorges, grass-covered slopes, pastures, farms, lakes. The presence of
man is to be felt : not oi tne local villages or town lite, but the life oi a great state. To the east, a superb valley dotted over with Chinese villages,
surrounded with bushes and trees; farther off, on several levels, chains of
mountains, the tops ot which
were ou a level witn my eyes.
To the west tho ground undulates
gradually toward tho plain, beyond which are inoro mountains. On Ihe south, mognificent pasture-land, intersected by the Great Wall with its mined
towers. On our right the trreat all, cracked and destroyed by centuries, and
covered with plants; on our left, a slope
toward the plain, laid out m artineiai terraces with fields of millet, oats, po
tatoes, and hemp. As to the Chinese,
thev are to bo seen everywhere, with
long plaits and bareheaded, attired in a white shirt and blue trousers. The
women are scant ilv clothed, and the
children, whose heads are decked with
flowers, are naked or nearly so. What strikes one most is tho sudden transi
tion from the barrenest desert of yes
terday to the fertile and populous conn-
trvofto-dov. It seems like a never
endinc village of small houses, covered
. . - . .
with verdure, gardens, and sowers, too
whole extremely tidy and pleasant to
the eye. This, then, is the swarming
human ant-hill, C hina. The Length of Human Life.
Ihterestinflr evidence that tho average
length of human life has been steadily
mcreasinK for somo time past is de
duced from a comparison of the ages at
death of Yale College graduates early
in the eighteenth century and late in the nineteenth. Mr. Dexter's recent volume on the annals of that institution from 1701 to 174D shows that of 473
graduates during that period 153 lived bevond 70 years that is to say. 32 out
of every 100. On the other hand, of 672 alumni whose deaths were reported between 1875 and 1885, there were 271
who had passed their 70th year or id out of everv 100. To put it in another
wav. durinir tho first half of the eight
'eenth century a graduate stood only 32
chances out of 100 of becoming a septuagenarian, while iu the last, quarter of the nineteenth century he stands 40 chances out of 100 of reaching that age. The gain iu longevity is naturally greatest amoner educated men familiar
with the laws ol nygiene, mw tms showing is hardly more striking thau that recently made in England of the extent to which the average human life has been prolonged within the past forty years. New York Evening Fast. Wlrj Charles 0'( onor Spelled His Same with One n. He went to Ireland and visited tho seat of his ancestors at Belanngare, in Connaught, the result of which was that upon his return ho changed the orthography of bis name. Before that time he and his father had spelled Conor with two n's but he then dropped one of the n's upon discovering that the family name was anciently spelled that way. I was once asked if I knew
why he had onauged tne spoiling oi nia
name from two u s to one, ana y answered that he was descended from the Irish kings, and found when he visited Ireland, that they spelled the name in that way, which information Mr. Nathaniel Jar vis, the witty olerk of the court of Common Pleas, who was present, supplemented with the remark that he supposed that the Irish kings had always been so poor that they had never been able to make both n's meet,---37ie Citizen. The Agesi of Congressmen. The oldest mun in this Congress is John T. Wait, of Connecticut, who was bom in 1811, and is 74 years of age. The youngest man is William McAdoo, of New Jersey, who was bora in Ireland October 25, 1852, and is 32 years old. Next to bin comes Charles Voorhees, of Washington Territory, who is the son of Dan Voorhees, and who is also 32, but was born in June, instead of October. There are in the present Congress four roen who are over 70 Wait, of Connecticut; Eldridge, of Michigan; Singleton, of Mississippi; and Judge E.elly, of Pennsylvania. Twenty-seven members have ages ranging between 60 and 70; sixty-seven are between 50 and 60; 138 are between 40 and 50; and thirty-six are between 30 and 40 years of age. Washington Letter. A Word to Workers.
If your avocations arc mentally or physically laborious, if they subject you to exposure in inclement weather, if they conflno you to tha desk, and are of a nature to involve wear and tsar of brain, sad nervous strain, you may oc
casionally require some renovating touio.
Hostettors Stomach Bitters is tba article for vou. it stimulates tha failing energies, invigor
ates tha bodv and cheers the mind. It enables
tba system to throw off the debilitating effects of undue fatigue, gives renewed vigor to the organs ot digestion, arouses tha liver when inactive, which it vary ottou is with people whose pursuits are sedentary, renews '.he jaded appetite, and encourages healthful repose. Its ingredinnts are safe, and its credentials, which consist in the heart' indorsement ot porsons of every class of S'Joiety, are most convincing. Admirably is it adapted to the medical wsnta of workers. .
Tiie Now York World says a child in
that citv was poisoned by a cough syrup
containing morphia and opium. There is
no such danger in Bfd Star Cough Cure.
It is purely vegetable, prompt, safe and
sure. 25 cents.
What in so dry as an Alderman in Juno? Taos SifUndi. Tho same old AMorman in
July.
Coi. i. J. WiUiiAstKON, Quarter-master
IT. S. A., and ex-U. S. Consul at t'allao, Ptjru, spent $2,(MI0in eight years imrying to enro hunelf of rheumatism, but got no relief until he used St. Jacobn Oil, which
cured him.
"Physician Heal Thyself." From Enelish mortality statistics ex
tending over a considerable period. Dr. William Oglo finds that the death-rate among clergymen is lower than that in any other occupation. If the mortality for the three years, 1880-82, among ministers be represented by 556, that an:ong farmers will be denoted by 631, ttmong lawyers by 841, and physicians by 1122. The high mortality rate among
the doctors is a source of alarm to an eminent medical authority, and is regarded as demanding the most thorough investigation.
Decay of the Bones, with some thirty otuer symptoms, marks the progress of that terrible disease known as eniairb. It advances from stag-o to st: e ot l'earl'ul annoyances, and, if iieg-loeted. is certain to end in general debility, and possibly In consumption or insanity. Dr. Sago's Catarrh Hemedy will cure it at any stage. This medicine has been long before the public and thousands havo been teste red to health by iu never-failing virtues. Not Frightened.
A little 4-year-old girl was put to bed
in the third story of her home, and left,
as usual, in tho dark. A terrific thun
der storm came up, and her mother,
thinking the child would be frightened
at the liKhtmnpc, went to her. On en
tering, the child called out with delight :
"Mammal the wind blow the sun up
inst now : did vou seo it ?" Fear had no
entrance there. Detroit Free Press.
At least four incorporated towns in
Colorado are at an altitude of over ,000
feet above the sea. Pro mat ure decline of manly pow
ers, nervous debility, and kindred diseases
radically cured. Consultation free. Book
10 cants in stamps. Address, confidentially, wot Id's Dispensary Medical Association,
Buffalo, K. Y.
Domestic pursuits-chasing the man of the
nouiio wim a oroomsucs.
Titpt arA trvinir in Onrmanv to find a substi
tute for India rubber. No one who has used
Ti- llicrnlnw'a PiMutivefhira desires a substitute.
as it is eminently successful in coughs, colds.
and ail throat and lung diseases. The coachman's occupation is more agreeable than that of the hostler; but the hitter's is more stable. Puke Cod Liver Oil, from selected livers on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazzard & Co., New York Absolutely pure and sweet Patients
who have taken if prefer it to all others Physicians declare it superior to all other oils.
Mormons ougbt to bo good livors, as they groneilly have p'outy of "sparo rib." toutmcur Heraltl. PHrstoiANS prescribe Aysr's Cherry Pectoral, on accsount of its great curative powers. Opening of tho Beason uncovering the mustard-pot liostoa Jiuiktta. I cheebfuixt recommend Bed Clover Tonio to those Buffering from troubles of the Htouiach and liver. I am now on my second bottle, nd it makes me feel iilce a new man. C. JL Coskob, Nashua, Iowa. What class of women are most apt to give tone to society? The belles. PiucKM ash Bittebs is an unfailing specific for all comnlainte arising from a derangement
of the functons of the liver. It purine.-) the blood and infuses new life into the invalid. I'uinn in the side, gi-neral uneasiness, loss of
appeiito, headache, bilious attack, 40., c, are sure indications that a corrective is needed. Poicsi.r Ash Bitters is especially adapted for these complaints. It arouses a torpid liver to action and restores it to a healthy condition. Tt Is said that a dandy young Bostonian addressed his iuamorata as "bewitching d sol." Chapped hands, face, pimple and rough skin cu red by using Jumper soap, made By Caswell, Hazzard & Co., New York. The cuuflrmed dead-beat sincerely subscribes to tho n iving: "Call no man happy until he is dead." JUalclut. The most desirable hair dressing ever offered to the public is Hall's Hair itenewcr. The easiest way to mark laule linen Leave the baby and a blackberry pie alone at the table for three minutes.
A TorrlMe Fire
arouses tho apprehensions of a whole city.
And yet the w.id liavoo or aiaeaso eiurueo no one. Sad to relate, women suffer from year to year with chronic diseasesand weak
nesses peculiar to their sex, knowing that
they are growing worse witn every any, turn still take no measures for their own relief. Dr. Pierce's "Favorilo Prescription" is tho result of life-long and learned study of female complaints. It is guaranteed to cure. The paragraphor takes his summering in Summarising. Yonkmn llazetle. The Prince of Wales. Why is the Prince of Wales like a cloudy day? He is likely to reign. Taylor's Cherokee Bcmedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein is now tho king of all cough medicines and is (i crour prcveutitivo. Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctors, and Teachers. If you will get your dealer to ordur from his wholesale druggist one dozen bottles Wakneb's White Wise op Tab Sxbop -f Ae beet remedy in the world for Congha, Colds, Asthma, Catarrh, and Co-asump-tion, I will send two bottles free. Recommend to your friends. Send nime of druggist who gives tho order. Map of Holy Land free with medicine. Address Dr. 0. T. Wabnbb, Chicago, 111. All druggists. UIci'tliiiK' nostrils. It has done mo so much good, I want you to tend tne two more bottles immediately. I have been afflicted with Catarrh for over ten years frequently my noee would blottl arid leave the nostrils iu a dry, intlamcd condition, with constant soreness. I experienced relief after the first trial of Ely's Cream lialm'. It is the best of a great many remedies I have tried, and I enn fully recommend it. B. Gill, Madison, 0., Editor of the tidier.
.Telephone Snlts. I Washington dlapatoh. It is expected thot tho papers will be filed
in a few days in the hiipreme uonrt at Columbus, Ohio, in the suit of the Government against the Bell Telephone Company.
W. E. Hale, of Chicago, who with otner
Chicago parties is largely interested in the
Uray Telephone company, is spending sev
eral days in Washington watching the
S reparations for the suit. He said that in is opinion the suit would result in the overthrow of the Bell patent, and would
admit of the development of all tho other telephone projects. So Chinese Proclamation Issued. (Ban Francisco telegram. Respecting the origin of the published report that the Consul General had issued a proclamation advising the Chinese to return borne, his secretary emphatically denies that any sm-li proclamation has been issued. He said thot Chinese Consul Bee had made arrangements with the steamship companies to carry the poor, sick, and unemployed Chinese back to China for four trips at half rales. Notices concerning this were sent out, reijuosling the Chinese to take advantage of the cheap rates.
Coi,. Higoinsos, of Boston, says that "Gen. Grant's Memoirs" is better worth reading than any military autobiography since "Cajsar's Commentaries." A philanthropic young woman in Boston has opened u bathing establishment for dogs. Qcbsn Victoria has ordered that Buckingham Palais bo lighted with electricity. Massachusetts sharpshooters are to set up a granite shaft at Gettysburg. A Luxiok outfitter has made u "IndJ-
1 dress tjunk." long, shallow, and light.
Public Lands and ltoads. Until I 1862, all land grants for the purpose mentioned were made directly
to the states. The only grant maae to a Territory was a cession to Minnesota in June, 1854, but this was repealed two months later. In July, 186U, the Union Pacific Bailroad was incorporated by a direct act of Congress, and the grant of land was made to the corporation, tlutt; completely reversing the former policy. In September, 1850, Congress made a grant of lantl to Illinois, to aid in the construction of a railroad. This land the titate granted to the Illinois Central Bead, and in return for it and the priv
ileges of its charter the rniiroa t agreed to pay to the state from 5 to 7 per cent, of its gross receipts. This fund has been a great source of advantage to the State, doing away largely with the necessity of taxation for State purposes. Land was granted to the several States from time to time for wagon roads. No Stale made any roads for militarv rain3ses, the several im
portant route known as military roads being all constructed by the General Government. The roods made bv the State were generally known as State roads, often as pikes. Inter Ocean. Henky Ibving has written to a Liverpool paper contradicting the report of ' misunderstanding having arisen between Ellen Terry and himself. The
fair Ellen lias not the slightest intention of giving up the best position ou ihs English stage, and a safe all-the-year-round weekly salary of $375. A painting is called a rare work sometunes, because it ist't well done. Button Trmucript. Important, When you visit or leave New York City, eavo baggage, expressage, and J3 oarrUge hire, and stop at the Cramdi Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot 618 rooms, fltied up ai a cost of oao million dollars, SI and upwards pel dny. European plan. Elevator. Bostaurant supplied with tho bast Horse ctrs, stages, and clovatod iai!road to all depow. Families can live better for less money at tte Oraud Union Hotel than st ay sthsr first class hetel is the city.
Nearly all that we know we accept on the testimony of somebody else. If thoee who have never tried Ds. Walseb's Oauvobnia VniEOAE Bittebs, and are suffering from dyspepsia, bilious or other fevers, kiduey or liver complaint, or from impure blood, will receive tho testimony of the msnv thousands who have tried the Bittors, and been oured, they will be acting wisely This more wo associate with ward politicians the more our soul sroea out to dogs. CWrwi Eye. KIv's Cwniu Halm is the most effective, convenient and agrrecable catarrh remedy I ever used, and 1 have tried them all. a B. Cook, Henninif. Lauderdale Co., Tenn.
Ditfebent members of my family have used
Athlopboros for uenraigia am .'" troubled with Ihe disease smce. I think it will do nil that you claim it will I send for anouwr bottle. Dav. I P. Sheets, Mooresvdlo, Ir.d. . . The best cough medicine Ij Piso's Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. 85c. The most obstinate cases of Catarrh are cured by tho ui-o of Ely's Cream Balm, the only agreeable remedy. It Is not a liquid or snuff and is eatily iipplied. For cold in the head it is magical. It (rives relief at onee. Ail druggists sell it. Pr;eo 60 cents. A Case Not Beyond Help. Dr. M. H. Hinsdale. Kewanee, III., advises us of a remarkable euro of Consumption He ssys: "A nuishbor'f wife was attacked with violent lung disoaeo, and pronounced beyond help irorn Quick linnumplion. As a lst rciort the family w9 persuaded to try DR. WJ1. HALL'S BALSAM F3ETHE LUNGS. To tho astonishment of all. by the Ume she had used
one-half dozen bottles, she was about the house, doing
her own work."
ft!
THADEUJ MAI
TAR UK.
oughIure
25
Vrt from. Opiate
SAFE. SURE.
PROMPT
VMS CiUBLES A. TSSSI.KB CO-lAU'lSORl, SP.
fit
IHEUI
ASH - I n OlBITTERSl ..J H CURES '1 aUDISUSESOnBQl 1 LIVER 1 HI
mwm Ikidneybi
. I STOMACH i kWaW lun sWsm
mmnmm auwiiMjaMa mw s kan .: 'WM
n w -"A by.' rkr
i all druggists l w
K priceI doidulB
I O'USEl
4m
BROWM'S
RON
BITTERS
Comblatsr IBOK wtta MBS VEGETABLE TOXICS, salekly sad eomsletelj CLE AK8E8 and EKMCSEg THE BLOOD. Qatekew tte action of tie LtTSf Hid Kldssrs. Clears tat eomplexlM, mikes ike Ilia Mieflth. UflOMM tajsre the testa, cause kesdscke, or proaSttes' StlpatlOB ALL OTHEB IBOK HEDICIHES DO. FhisMaaa and DniSaitracTwhnitonrniniind Is. Ha R Kabshauu nt 8 Hew Jerjej St., InUs-apollB-lnd.,says: " f hid blotched H ora-my boar, caused by impure blood. Two bottles sf Brown's Iron Bitters out cured m.n Mas. F. M Forms, WjnehMtsr. Ind.; san: " Brown's froa Bitters enrsd me ot esrsipelsaalso of a weak stomach. I sratifullr rscoarroend ft." Mr. J. A. tlEBEH. SI a Grubb St.. Columbus, Ohio, asm: "J hare been troubled with humor in my blood fur Um last seven years, 1 could et nothirur to relieve me until I oied Brown's Iron Bitten, which has lienuflted rue sreatly." lifts una JcmtsoK. ft Ohariee, Mleh.. aars: "I have used Brown's Iron Sitters for semrnla sndsktt diseases wi:U west eettafactorr refohs. I amianar it has no eo.ua aa a blood iurine." Genuine hi alio Trado Mark and enweed red Unas on wrapper. Take no other. Made only tor BHOWM CUES! 1CAI. CO., B ALT IMP HE, MB.
"'" FOXJTZ'S HORSE AND OATTLE POWDERS
So Hoass wm die of Ooua DOTS or LOTTO I Vxz, If Font? Powdera ere used in time. Foutz'i i'ovdera wilt cure and prevent Hoe Caroxna. Fouurs Powders will prevent Gam w Fojraa, Fount's Powders will Increase the quantity of mna and cream twenty per cent- and make tSe Donsrasni "awEm Vowters will (ore orprevsnt almost avnaT Disease to rblc.li Hornet and Cattle are tnbjse. Form's Powmtss wiu, am SanaVAOTlav. old everywhere. ixavxo a. votjtb, Prsprissaw.
MALT
elsjai
BITTERS,
XT xm THSJ Blood Puiufier Health Restorer,
act? e. loss o f A peJUe and Debility, NefirafsrlsU
ruuiu vnimi r"""" " -
dav and nigtaE from the tlapuMsynar-w-y. mixtures of wile twhUfcy "7Tani aromatlea. Hops Malt BHSLtLSR N ii rsos as fc !n tbs ase Family Meidicwje .sompounded Any W.SunorceUI4cMtatatli. "From my knowledge of hwrentawseW nociixminrot can it InjnrsjuW ooeiagK. tt contains no mineral or other tal nance. Poeauasing real merits, nedjr doserving ant cess.' j. an Safer, Fh. 0, Detroit, we. The only ft ensttne ara nuioufactirred by! HOPS I MM.I BITTEM CO.. . PERCHERON MORSES!
aunaawiaa
DwspepsSa, General Debility aTansdioe, Habitaal Convtlpav tlon, Liver Complaint, Siok Haadaolae, Diseased Kidneys, Etc, Et. It contains only the Purest Drugs, among which maybe enumerated PSIOXII ABB BIB ABB Statin, HASSXaXZ, BUCHU, ElfflM, Its, It cleanses the system thoroughly, and ss s PUBIFIEKOF THE B LOOD Is TJneqrxaled. It is not an Intoxicating beverage, nor ess tt he used as suoh, by reason of its Cathartic Properties. PRIOKJLT ASH BITTEB.S CO. Bole Proprietors, T. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY. DYSPEPSIA Cl ltKD. 50 doses ft. H.MSFFEU, M. 1)., 3H Gwvo St., Jersey City, H. 3.
..... bII-aI St tfinl nf thirlu dan ot tha
use of Dr. Dye's CuloBWcd Voltaic B-lt with Electric
Buawnsory Anpltanoes. ror iiw speeay ivhci ri irjimaneut cure ot A'crvota VebilUu, Imjaired t uaiap, and all kindred tr..u. les. Also tor many other diseases Complete n-storation to. Health and Vigor guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Illustrated pun-
'OLTA1C BELT CO.. Marshall, Michigan.
IEPAGES
LIQUID GLUE
iNIEHDS EVER VTff stl Woo I.Iather.Parier.Ivory.GUlM. Chir a, Furniture. Bric-a-Brac, c. Stro ar as Iroa; Solid as a Bock. The tctal quantity sold durtairlh past rive years amounted to over botti vERvSobr vajSI rr.
AH testers can sen "-r-ySYaa1 Jxwu?OSkC AV ClrMiu. 1885. rrroucuaced Strongest Glue known fiend .lealcr'a card and 10c. nosuuze
IWaiiM nn Aril for sample can FREE by mail. MBIUB BO AOS. wimMcsnVsTCo.01oucester.lIeaa,
mm
a k
Jpllk. ttrerewdiewwStad-BooeW HBBBav of ITance- aod America, .sssSsbhHhHsV now ppnand RjLwHm tOsIaw?f"rmsjfclS ftflswr J&ftmmnmmnWEmBnnmW
" rtv 1
- pe,
mm
B.ln !-J
wnore engio. iity w """ T TrT, Tniallloas IM iliaree. ( have a few ' P"r
individual b c eueucB t" "VT "JVlh t illl In tba l..rr.nr.n Stad-Book) WWCB I WW
at halt tho I rice of pedigrJMamjaJS m
w$henijravrigs sketcW Ijg.
aensxxoe, 'HmXmi Co.,
nROPSY
THE GREAV
Ail PI
nia us
Cures RheuinillsmJMursioia,
uaaaaaaa, aiMam, J!lJSlSiL
.q. ni:n'.m ND nKALIIBB.
fus ciuni.r.3 a. voutisu to., bactisobe, an-
Ar. actita Mn or Woman In orerr imiv to aril iur uooat salary la.
bbt Saalkiind SaRfnan. Kapeiuttt ad-
........(...... Ml BKKI I'niiK-tijan
Iree. standard Silver- war Co. Boston. M
Piso's Hemedy for Calarrh la the Best. Easiest to Use, anil Cheapest.
Also Bood for Cold ir ti e Head,
Headache,
Hay Fever, eic. W cents.
JL
I CURE FITS! ,vi i mTTmeau m iroTy to atop tuew Bi
i .lino an J 1U'H lia.e ) m rv u ysiiJ-SEU Temv
S FAIiINUiONESSa IKe long rtaiiy. ' warranlml
fcraouy te cure Urn worat eaaes. .""L,2Ld 3
rmiidv. Ul Kauroaa aaa roat mm.
IIKluV t..r a jlal, uJl JJ'"!.. AMttm Pr. U- la. soar, wa reaal Sea, w
V MBTOlsVlilk I""" ill uiLniWNiiL.M ma. A Ufa Experience. Remarkable and quick euros. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed partloulara. Address
Dr. WARD CO. Louisiana, Mo.
aa. X. r. semtock, en Watt lake Smet, Gbieate,waa
Hcucss
phyalclaa fbareu MiputMioo r tte
k( would aa aaary. He trie ATHL0FH0K08, and in a daya wai eared. AUHanoaroa la pronaoncad alially aafc by one of tbs leadlni phyrtctaai of Uia cooawy. Aak tout drugafet for AUilopaoroa. U yoa cea&ot tat Hot bua do not uy aeowtatai etaa,vat order at on:a rraea aa. Wa will WO(i u exprau paid on receipt of price, ft.OSper batoa. ATHL0CB0B0B 00,, 111 Wall St., Xsw Yexk FOR COUCH8, CROUP AND CONSUMPTION USE ,
AT
BB m Ml MB
bUf
reMI
OF SWEET GUM AND MULLEIN. Tho Sweet Gum from a tree of the' same name ktowImk In tbo South. Combined with a tea made from tho Mullein plant of the old fields. Forsaie by all uruitBlata at25cents and $1.(0 per bottle. WAIiTER -A. TAVLOB, A.IJauitau On,
Consumption Can Be Cured I
DR.
WM.
FOB THE
HALLS
n n A I 0 A u
LUNGS.D H La Hm
iarmF'lSmlft.
II,.,. -
t'nuiih, mud all
Wlinuniru
;es alike urentning ur. heala tue Wirmbrnne af
aa oy iaa mailt aweau and iek afflaalaar
inearsiMe nwhtdy.
I ear yH, even
thoHsk prllal "r'djglii
Kthna, Croup. iHiaafla mf Iks 111
. . . f. .. .. .1 iiuu Ik I.i.
l.naaN. iatlaineU hm Mlieara oy iw
Hie I, linn", ianamou " ease, and preve..i ihe lki llghtnes-) acrqss ths eh at yrfcU
HAi.I.'a BALSAM will, ears
BI!fBi-Js.lliawsa11lrlalM
-Piso's Curo for Consumption saved rayBfe." L.a
Wmrt-K. Druggist, Klntner, Mich.
Will buy uc other Cough Medicine s lone; as s
can pet Piso's Cure." O. B. Iasimkr. Kirswooa. U'
-Wat. E.
leal LUflti wntst Bit aaaa '"'aa. feS Besttv.ugliHvrup. Tastes good, use aJMja " 'ssIMlrtVs?B
'Piho'h Cure cuivd mc of Consumption." ItoBEBTOOK. nrandrwiur). Md.
Inwmn. rtotealleBr in time. Sold br tlruKglsts. HI
1
10's l ure for Consumption is the I est mediims
c tver ua.d." O. L. Bopeb. Abilene, Kan.
r.SWss WHfkF All EtSt FAILS.
Cinigli fiyruo. Tiistea good. Use
In time. Uuld iiv OrUKSUas.
19 Besl
Pil
gfe,igis..iai
H
i'iao's Cure for Consumption Is doing wonders for
i. -II . U. Htavseu. Hewark, N, V.
BestC
Why Suffer.
This Pile Pomada is warranted to ears any esse of Itching;, nisrrliag oc Cleeratcd Pllea MONET REFUNDED I have thousands ot testi. raonialspf perntaneaf caret in 10 to SO days, from Ctttim, (Satvaea, and leading rkyildiai. A new remedy, ruid should be used by every Man, Woman and Child who suffers the untold ngony that Piles cause. Directions: How to pre. vent Piles, on each tube. Don't wait bnt have yous druggist order it for yon.
Prepaid on receipt of id. Address,
Ilr. S. E. ItUTOS, blade, Ckto.
AU Draniaata sell tt. Take no aMater
TREATED FREE.
lTt. II. IT. GBEEN 4e tSOltleV epeclmllHta for Thirtnen Tcaan Plsst, Have treated Drop y and its comnIicattp09 wi fh most aronderiul success ; ohs vegetsoM wnjeaaes. et tirelyluum 'i'S. Bcmovs ail symptoms of eBopaw in eightto twenty days. Cure patieBiii pronounced hopeless br the Met of nliVlHana
From the first doe) the symploirrs.lTOirfly peir.and to b d daya at least two-thirds of aO
corns ir Somo
atjont i realize
eu t nulse
ihir I
nMrlvirone.l
tog cases thai bave been tapped a number of Csaesy
ana tncpaoer taeciarawi oBawowawaawiwT full ldatory oi case. Name sey, lsr long aflictsd.
have legs bunted and dnpinid. water. Send to tess
, psmpnlet.ci ! Ten days' i
Eptla-psy
tS Joties Aamue, Al
H TOUOl
am am tasneBaaaa.1 iSaBaam D C2 a, a Tgirinr.
PATER T5 ,uaWoS
toDatontablHt'FRgE. BTIT taatfaumtmm, LOOK! iLOOKJ gtWrj?
a i ifiiirA
-V I 1 m K
VkllVllaklll
CV TUE SECT WAT KftQOnarBIMHn MAT.
W a na. aea.a a a mi a; ..- T.'gar.-
IAhJ ctnamtaaeaCMaaaVhvaMwauaaByiwanTHyw flaa SaMrraiywlKre. lltoMtited caralaeaa nea. A. i. Tawar.
BKamsBSBSBBjamBsmsHBsmBsmBsmBsmBsmH '
WHO M UNAOUAINTID WITH TH1 QBOOKAIHIV OF THWj OOUNTKV, W
H BIT EAABllalinu iwi sari i njaa ana.
CHICAGO. ROCK ISLAND sk PACIFIC RAILWAY
ronofitsntrtlon
ea of the AUintlc and Ifwifro CoaetB.
t ftvxorita omd beat route to and from points Bast, Nortneoai ana
jouTtMf .shssrjnW Sooe
5F:!?2-S?..,Z'nZKr4 rvS?r r,Tfirt dounint Bluffe. in Iowa:
SSH! Kr.i Tr!; l,, MlBonnH- I tmxranvcorOt ajid Attl
lni; Albert Let MtoniTpolla and St. Paul, to Minnesota; Watertown la IoiTand hundreds of Intermediate ciUea, tow is, villages and stations. . THE GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE Guarentoes its patrons that sense of personal security afforded toy a aod, tooroajrlily bfjlaated road-bed: 81000 tracks t.f continuous eteliralii substanttafly f5Ui!.t culverts and bridges; rolling- iitoc aa perfection human bMU can make It; the sttfeVappllanceii of patent bitfTers, platform and alr-briakes; and that exac-tin dlscfollne hlcfi sovermi tho practical operation of id Its trains. Other specialties of this route are Transfers i all nrnnaotlntr nolnts In Union Depots, and the unsurpassed comforta end
luxur es of ata Passenger Ekjuipmen
cennectintr .points In Union Depots, and
ur?.es of ata Passenger Kouipmenr. . . . .
The B"ast Ekpress Trains between Chicago ana tne Missouri mverswe con
XS?" "in"".""T" 3 ,rm m ii(i Tlrnlrlt (tara. in wl
elaborately cooked meals are leisurely eaten, good Digestion wedttnar on Appetite, aatl Health on both." Between CW obm and Kanaaa Gy and Atchison, ar also run the Celebrated Eoclinlnff (3ialr Csn. THE FAMOUS ALBERT I.EA ROUTE
Is the direct find favorite line between Chicago and Minneapolis: and 6Bj mham onnTn'fioTi mra miula in TTnion nenots for ail noints in the Tsrfll
and British Provinces. Over this route, Past Exuross Trains are run to watarln.v nlaiAft MimwiM1 ronnvrji. ninfurASaue localities, mid nuilonfi fUKi 1
ing grovinds of Iowa and Minnesota, .tt is also the most desirable route to
rich wheat fields and pastoral lands or interior 1-aKota,
Still another DIR1 between Nownort Ne'
Council Bluffn. Kansas
For detailed information see Mai is and Folders, Tickets, at all principal Ticket Offices in the tjcitud
Dy ttoaraesma; R. R. CABLE, IE. ST. JOHN, PretMuM and General Manager, Chtctsa. Seneral licket and Fassenrier Afsnt,
SOT ltnb. via seneca ana tanitakoe, nas laWflMW ws. Richmond, Cincinnati, inclanapoUs. and Iafayetceand
Cltv. Mlnneanolia and St. P lul and intomedtaw POintaV
obtainable, as wen aa
.... c'
States and Canada; or
US 09 DMKASSS ALWAYS OURABLB BY VStm MEXICAN MUSTANG U1TIMEOT.
of htm an ruon. Hheassatism, Bans find Scalds, Stings uud Sites, Cuts and Vraises, Bprninii A- Stitches, Contracted Mancles, gtiil' Jiiints, Backache, Eruptions, frost Hues,
OVAHlaAU.
'Sermtches, Sores aad Gaits.
Spavin, Cracks. Screw Waran, Grab, Foot Kot, Hswf Alls Lameness,
Swin.y, Foaastess, Spmias, Stvalan, Sere VeeM
IStlonsss,
andalleternald!ca,aaeyeryhuMoraoeldent, for eniital use in famlly.sUblo sad stooksrd,itls TU1C BEST OF AVU LINIMENTS
ViNlABBiTTBMl Is the iprt Bloayel Porllsl end Title C aM -. Priuclpln; 1 Gentle PrirraafidTosdo;aBa4saV Benovator uidlnvlgoiatortaftbAsyateBa. In Vla egsar iuerra Qnm Is Vttattr IMI no alooholi eor mineral poirion. niseasee or tsta Skisa, at siaassief Bsjsjsa or natuio, are literally due up and csThd94sJl thesystuni tnitshort Ume trjtoeviseoClai 1 taWmi V'lncyiir BKtersadlawsf ulerisatprsi, ttjaa, lieves, and in timo cures lUwarssdlsip, HirawlsV Oout, and siroilawpairaMdaVBsam Vtnesitr Mlttora cares CaMsattaa aaa' prevent! Diarrhoea. Never before has a Benteta bean est pounded toesslng toe powsc ot VlaTaaua Pa rsiis to U al th sick. Send ibr either of oar valaabh! rfatsMMQ
books for laaies, tor lanners, ror n Medical Treatise on lltseaHea. or 1
on Intcuni eranoa and TobaxKlL whk
ne read b; - every child and youth la taela 1st tire of the above hooks raaOed I
eceipt of four eents for reriatrattoa fans
MM. McDoniJilDrug Co., HI Waabhaear?t nVVa IF YOU WANT TO KNOW 1.001 imp iiiMtthtocs.voamverluiew w tltesaiiat of ab' n 1 1 lis human body sad its ouriona asaa.
mw to i uWaUtof fgnoiaoj avrxt iWsowfasa, Tow le up pllf Home-Ourt to :Ui famuef dlatasiT Hew f citi Oroup.oiat JEyee. Jena(i. mtmrntMsa.
.-.V
s
.13
St-
aiaftshoasl
04. Hist
k. v., r. w
When rVrllinart
so. a-.").
