Bloomington Progress, Volume 20, Number 8, Bloomington, Monroe County, 21 April 1886 — Page 4
OHIO ft MISSIS8IPPT H. .A.I H. W -A. " . X
4 Solid Daily Trains (each way) between CINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS.
3 2
Trenchant letters Exchanged by tionld
and Powderiy oh the Railroad Strike.
Solid Daily Trains (neb way) oetweett CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE. Solid Daily Trains (each way) between ST. LOUIS AND LOUISVILLE.
SO Chaag f Cars for AST Clan PaMtagew. First Clan; Second Class ana' ntsraa Passengers, all carried on Fast Express Trains, consisting cf Palace Steeping Cars, tlegant Parlor Coaches and comfortable Dag Coaches, all running THROUGH WITBOUT CHANGE. Only 10 Hours Time JUtmesn Cincinnati and St Louis, or 9L Louis and LonittUl. But Four Hours fgf Between Cincinnati and Louisville.
The Ohio A. MIMmlnrt Rlrar is the vnlv Lin between-
Ionl-s nt Oinoinn at
.Voder one management, running all its trains through "801.ID," and in conse
quence la the only recognized ant claae route between those cities, its
JEasg Grades, Its Splendid Motif
rower, Steel Bails, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed
Xnable the O. fc M. to make faster aver-
age time than any other Western Bead. 0-Ask for Tickets via O. & . R'y "Bt For sale by Agents of connecting lines Bast, West, North and South. V. W. PEABODY. President anal Gen. lTf'r. W. B. 8HATTUC, Sen. Pass. As. CINCINNATI, OHIO:
ORCHARD HOUSE!
S. M. Orchard &.
PROPRIETORS.
'JkJWeaiBhi
ilm!iSh7awaacBBK
Twa Daily Fast Express Traiasia Eaea Mreefiaa Betweem Chicago and Louisville,
Concocting closely with the night and day trains out of Chicago on the Great Through Trunk LineS West and Northwest, and with the morning and rvenins through trains out of lAraiaville on the Great Southern and SMtthweatem Lines. This Fopolar BoBte now mns the moat comInrtahVi Mhs and Parlor Cars on dav traina.
and Pullman Sleepers on Bight traina, and baa
only one change of cars to oil we principal unrna awf citi in the North. Sooth. East, or West.
Sell Through Tickets over ail the various crossing and connecting railroad lines, and cheek baggage through to passengers' destination, avoiding the disagreaeble annoyances of rechecking. the ilmnt - mlwhig direct eonneetioiia. and the ex-
pense and worry of tiresome lay-over cm tbijonr-
Lc -rate. Land Einlcr-ra', and ipurdj-trtp
Whiter and Hammer lourisw amnn a amen ta in their resijective seasons.
Will i-1ii rullv irive travelera fall infon: lotto
in regard to the heat connections, the fewest and easiest changes, and the most eomfoctaUs and pleasant route: and win famish B-ilroad Maps, Time-Tables and folders, containing much useful information to travelers, on appU-
KNIGHT AND KING.
The eland Master Invites Litigation,
and the Money Monarch Seams Fearless of Threats.
Powderiy to CMnldb munifenJo Was written iV Gen
eral Master Workliaul?Owdolrry on the llthtasfe :
"SCRANTOX, fa., April u.,i 'ToJayOOnW, Esq., President Missouri racitic Bailway, Now York': TYr , n stn Thn Acuta of tho oast fottv-elKht
hours mnst have demonstrated to you tho absev
lute necessity of oringtne. tms terrioio smukbo; m the Southwest to a speedy tetmlnetlr-n. -eu
havo the power, the autuority snei win means l-riTurthectrikatoanoad'. I havo done every
thing in mv pnwetto end the strike. Thogontlemwa ftSsoetated with me on tho licniral
executive Board of the Knights or iduior mi ye.
done the se.me. jsverytmns iwotwu. honor and manhood has been done in the interest of peace. No false notion of pride or dignity has .waved as In our doallugs with
MireMi to Thn onlv method of arhitrution
that was discussed was in line with that suggested in the letter which I sent to you in the name of our board the day previous. 'There was nothing particularly agree
Upon, as you well know. You said that In armtrattng the matter the damages sustained by tho company daring the striko ought to reecho consideration. I said to vou that it would not be the part of wisdom to bring thnt question up in tho settlement of the strike. When I called on you that evening votthad prepared as tho result oi your understanding of tho morning s interview a tetterwhieh von intended to give me. That letter included a telegram t j 1,8 sent to Mr. HoviOj ard in that telegram you said that the dnunges sustained by the company wnnlu tie a proper subject for the Arbitration Board to discuss. This latter part Of the letter or telegram yon agreed to shrike off. After we had talked the matter OYer for some time, I left yon as you were about to go to your room to rewrite tup lettqr, which you afterward placed in i)X .lands of Mr. McDowell to be given K hie, for I had to leave at that tinuS iii order to keep an appointment at the hotel where I' stopped. Too statement which you have since then made, to tho effect that you had prepared that letter before. I called, is not quite correct, or, if yon did have it prepared, you changeu it after wo had talked the m&ttar over for some time. This, I Believe, vou will admit to bo true tit the conference held between tho members of our Executive Board and the directors of the Missouri Pacific Company on March 80, yoa said you understood me to sav thai the men along your lines would be ordered back to work at once. I then reiterated the statement which I made to you, and tn6w repeat it: 'The men out along the lines of vour railways can bo ordered beck to work. ut if they aro given to understand that they are deserted, that wo do not take any interest in them, it will not in any way mend matters ; on tho contrary, it will make things worse. There are all along tho roads out there e great many men who have no regard for organization or law; men of hardy spirit, energy, and daring. Such men as have left tho East and have taken up their homes out in a
mtM Konsirv will not Bubmit 0 ouiotly as the
men thev have left behind in tho bi
East. They are
to
WM. & BALDWIN,
sen. Mrsas. Chicago,
Gen. Pass. Agent,
HL
CASTEB PEBSrae,
station fass. jh BlooBungtcn
Resident Dentist.
Dr. J. W.
CRMN.
Office in the New Block, op-stain, OTee
CeVs Book Store. All work warranted.
Etchers sad Etching.
Tt is not nnnsnal amonsr the Tmini-
tiaied to hear the term etching applied
to pretty little vignettes drawn with the j two
pencil or pen. J. ma is mturrcci ,
etefaina- is not an effect, bat a process.
To prodnce an etching the artist takes a plate, usually at copper, and coats it with a preparation of wax and other insxedients. Upon this ground he
draws his subject with a sharp-pointed
instrument in sneh a manner that eaen scratch will expose the eopper, and in
exactly the same manner as it ne were Tnnlrinpr nen drawing. He then im
merses the plate in dilnte nitric acid, to the end that the uncovered portion or scratched lines may be bitten or eaten
into bv the acid. This is a rnde de-
scriotion of the process, but there are
many modifications and peculiar
methods used by individual artists.
The most important of these is what is known as Dry Point, the effect of
which is" to (rive a velvety richness,
when printed, to certain portions of the
work.
The nrintme of an etching is an
operation reouirinsr much artistic skill,
as the plates depend largely for their effect upon the manner in which they are inked. It is for this reason that
many etchers print their own plates.
The prints are made on dm wing paper and velhim paper, but proofs are usually drawn on paper imported
from Japan, made principally from the
cocoons of the silkworm.
Etchings, unlike steel engravings,
cannot be vnnted m very great
numbers, and have a commercial value
of from $10 to $100, and even more.
While we most admit that we Tiave
no names to put into competition with the two or three great reproductive etchers of Europe (that is, those who reproduce well-known paintings by
means of etching), Jerhap8 in no country in the work) has more original, free creative etching been produced than in the United States. Among the number of men who have done good work in this direction is 3. A. S. Monk, the
etcher of several well-known plates,
such as "In an old Pasture, " " Xhe Mill
Bide." "The Mountain Top," etc. ; the
premium plate for the Magazine of Art,
and plates in the published collections
named respectively, American rutcners and "Recent American Etchings."
Mr. Monks' last work is a plate llxSi inches, made for Messrs. Proctor and
Gamble, and printed on Japanese
paper. The subject is a noek of sheep in an old Tjastore. with farm buildings
in the distance; the time of year, early sDrinir. indicated by the group of
lambs in the foreground, and the leaf
less trees in the distance ; the time of
day, in the gloaming, lust before night
fall. There is an air of expectancy
about the sheep as though they were
awaiting the coming of the shepherd,
and felt some anxiety on account of
their offspring.
Mr. Monks is yell and favorably known for his excellent drawing of sheep. The plate is full of poetry, and
the movement and grouping are
both alike excellent.
apt to de rasher things than they would ao elsewhere, and 1 have no doubt we have some of them in osr order.' , "Both you and Mr. Hopkins heard me make that statement, and I believe the latter agreed - . L . .In, T1,A IrttMTrtrnf ttlft
strike spreading was also discussed, and I said to you that it would not spread; that an effort had been made to havo the men of the Union Pacific take a part in it, but that the Knight of Labor on that road had a standing agreement with the management of the road that tnerts was to be no trouble or strike until tho last effort to effect a settlement had failed, and not then until the court of last resort had been
"It was my firm belief when I left you that night that yon meant to havo the entire affair
submitted to armtrawon ac mo mat
moment. That beuet is snareu iu oy air. vioTVia-nll vim w&s nresont duriuc the en
tire interview. When you sent tho teleMvam , Ur TTrwln von sent it 118 Presi-
dent of the Missouri "Pacific Railroad Com-
m. Van sent it as the chief sends his
message to an inferior officer, and it meant as much to a sensiblo man as tho1no3t imperative order could possibly mean. When I, as. tho tiiaf nffioer nf the Kniohts of Labor, send a
message such as that, it is understood to be my
wishes, and tnose wisnes are kikxi snhonHnate officer to whom they are sent. It is
not bis place to put a different construction on, them and give them his own interpretation. His i4n4-c la tn nhav the Rnirit of the instructions.
The man in power need not be an autocrat in order to have his wishes respected. "I would
like to see it done, comes witn as great a mrce from the man in authority as 'I must have it
done.' Vii snttln this strike. Its lonster contm
nance rests with you, and you alone. Every act at vtnlanm. everv dnm of blood that may bo
shed from this time forth must bo laid at your door. The Knights of Labor were not founded to promote or shield wrong-doing, and to-day
see araei ui use jxmsu.a wi stands between your property and rain.
We are willing to absolve tho men
along your railways rrom tneu aiieciance 10 our order; we leave that to themselves. We will not allow any claims which the order may have on them to stand between them and thuir restoration to their former positions. Tho ordor of the Knights of Labor asks of no man to remain a member if it is not to his interest to do
so. xoa may aeai witn tneui us cuizeua u vu will. We will surrender our right to claim these men as members if they wish, but we will not surrender our right to see this affair thoroughly investigated. You havo said that the order of
tne Ajugnts OI ijaoor was a cuuspimuv, u menace, ete. I am willing, as its chief officor, to lay everything connected with our order bare to the world if you will, on the other hand, lay
open to tns public tne means auu mi-uiuua whereby you have piled up tho wealth which yon control, and allow the tribunal of public opinion to pass judgment on the
two ana say wmcn i vvmspiracy. Do yon accept tho challenge? You have instructed your legal advisor to proceed against every man connected with the Knights of Labor for the damages sustained since the strike began. Two-weeks ago I said: Ho not do this ;' to-day I say begin at once ; lay claims
ArintmuMtnfliiTT court witnin viunu juii-
diction a knight exists. Proceed at once, and in every State where you can recover damages do
so u tne law win sustain, you iu u i j uutrlahtthatitshnnld be SO. We OTO Willing
to face you before the law; we will fight you
with no other weapon.
"There axe people M
who sav that this Ktruccle
is the beginning of the war betweon capital and labor. That statement is false. This ci rtoiuly means war, but it is a war between iegitimate capital, honest enterprise and honest lalwr on the one hand and illegitimate wealth on tho
other hand. This is a war in wnicn wo court tne fullest investigation of onracts. Do yon dare to do the same? This war means no further strike, no shedding of blood. It is a war ,n nich everv business man. every commercial
man, every professional man, every working-
t win oe mvitea to emisc it win not, uo & the innaeent. and the battlefield Ulion
which it will be fought out will bo before the courts of law, and that which makes law, public opinion. There will be no mobs in this su
preme nour to silence any man uiuuiuu. in converts will be made by physical forco. 'That flag which floats over press or mansion at the bidding of a mob, disgraces both victor and victim,' and under such a flag as that wo will not
wage the battle ; but tms uattie oe tue xwojue iinn mnnonolv mav as well be fought out
now as ten years from now, and what field no
eminently proper in wnicn to ngni it i
as neiore tne couxuir xei, u nu" uuwt' taws were made to bo obeyed or not, anil if they were not so framed then the people must make laws that will bo obeyed. No man, whether he be rich or whether ho be the poorest of the poor, shall in future shirk the responsibility of his acts and shield himself behind tho courts. It was to see that tho laws were obeyed
that the order of the Knignts oi laoor was founded, and if the day has come to nuke the trial, so let tt be.
Yoa have been warned tuat your me is iu
daiunr. Pav no attention to such talk : no man
who has the interest of his country nt hettrt
would harm a hair in vour head, but tne system wMA reaches out 611 all sides, gathering in
millions of dollars of treasure anil keeping them out of the legitimate channels of trade
and commerce must die. and tuo men wimho
money is invested in tho entorniises which
stock gambling has throttled must make common cause with those who have been denl d the right to earn enough to provide the merest uee-
MMnfiM or me rar noniu wiu iwuu.
"When I sayto you that we will meet yon in the courts I do not speak rashly or iil-adviedlv. 1
i.va taken counsel irom tne ochi iceai minus 01
the United States. We aro prepared to face you
before the courts, and now await your action in th matter. This is no threat. 1 iday no name
of bluff or chance. I speak for .HK),vWOori;iiiiiaed men, who are ready to pay out tho last farthing
inoruertui.ii juBtioe muj pifiiii. jv iin your power to make friends of these men by iu-tine the intrt of the man ; by taking thin mat
ter in vonrown bands. Will yon do so and end
tt is strife in tne interest oi numami.v nun our couunon country? It is your duty to brush
&ifrlA every obstacle, assert vour ancuont.y. huu
take this matter In your own hands, Bettle every grievance, restore every man to his place except those who have been engaged in the destruction
of property, or wuo Have broken tne laws, win
vn lo Tnifi ' Itm call lllu iiianu imn u,im
aereements with your men which will forever ..... .11.1,1. ... ,iii,..
WHtntROil U1R IKIUhllilllbV Ul HUUMIOl nil' I, IIIUM
trous conflict as this oiie has proved itself to be.
I remain, very truly, yours, 'T. V. Pownisai,!-, a. M. W. h, of L.
tho letter will never ooo the light of day: but
if ho does not so net, men u will ie puunsnuu to the vrorld, and from the time he iippus up the balllu legal wnv o will eontil've o w age Lho b'attfo with liliil. His wealth conn l save him If this light is begmi. 1, t no one know of lho oxister.ee of this" lettor until after '. o'clock of the dar vou deliver it ; then if he makes no reply let it .'otj the world. l,ot him know the limit i f t:me allowed. I sinrei-elv hope thnt there v ill bo no in re m eer sity for its publli ity. Hoping for tho bust, I remuin, very I uly yom s, " v. 1 nvnum.v, " To W. O. MeDowWl, Kstj.. New York.' "t thus received Mmr letter to ino dated IWvaUcoii, Pa.. April ill WSO.' at tile winlo time atldln the siimi' ngenev Hint 1 rocvlvecl jour Jotegiijilg ietter 0' msWtietions to Mr. Mc"Th animus and puriwae of j.mr lettef tH me ciumo. Be (ully understiioil with ut Knowing the contents of that oiie. I was peremptorily oliilod u,t the same time that I must answer your letter h.-s o'clock, to-dny and I was graciously given until that hor.r to ri'siHiiul. -Your U tter, tj me emlrn -os two nnbjei ts, ono relnting to mo personally and the other to the relation of th- Knights of Labor to aratlrond eoimmny of which I am tho l'ns deut, mid in s mho dorree tho representative of its public and private duties. I sir-ill refer to the lirst subject very briefly. The i irennistnue -s above given under which yom l-iter was delivered, ns well ns its t ui v nml spirit, plneo its pin pose in writing it bejMid anv fair doubt. It wonld se.'m to be an otlic'isl -b olaratit u thnt tho Knights of Labor had dot nniiiod to puisne mo personally unless the Missouri Tiioiftc Coiupanv should yield to its demands in what you call tho strike on that road. "In answer to these personal threats, 1 bos; to Sav that I am vet a freo American citizen. I am past 19 vears of age. and was bom at Boxlmrv, Delaware Comity, in this Suite. I begun life in ,. irra-iv w-nv. ami bv industry. temiKinince. nml
attention to mj-own' business have been success
ful, ptrh'ips, bovon.l tn ' nionsir.'ooi my ueserm. Tf, as von suv, I inn now to be destroj-ed bv the Kntghts of I,abor unless I will sink my ni'i"hoo.1. so be it. Fortunately I haio retaineil my earlv habits of industry. My fi'iomls, neighbors and business nssocinti know mo well, and I am quite content to leave my personal record in their bands. If nv V of them hn ve aught to complain of, 1 will be nnlv too glibl to .jubinit to any arbitration. If such parties, or any of them, wish to appoint tho Knights of Labor or yon as their attornej-, such appointment is quite agree
able to me, out, umu sucu an eii'i-nou i it will nntnriillv occur to you that any interference on vour part in my personal affairs is, to
say tho least, qmto uratnitons. . . "Since I was nineti'en years of age I have boon
in the habit of employing in my various eniorpri es large numbers o' peraons, pcobiuily at
times as high ns 50,0.rt, distributing onen tnreo or four million dollars per month in different pay rolls. It would soem a little strange that during
all these vears tile aiHlcmtv witn me oiukiikw Labor should bo mv first. Any attempt to connect mo personally with the late striko on tho Southwestern roads or any responsibility therefor is equally gratuitous, as you well know. It is true I am tho President oi the Missouri Pacific, hut wh?n the strike occurred I was far away on the ocean and bovoiul the reach of telegrams. I went away reiving on y .ur promise mad to mo last Anghst tnnt there would be no strike on that loul, and that if any dithculttes
Bhould arise J-..U wouni come ireutij . . i., u vi.,.. 'J,.i, I'mirtfintnT
wiui tuem. jui nuinvmi', ; - this cotapan v, w ho was present nud cognizant or this arrangeiiicnt with you in mv absence, seot
vou promptly when tuo present suiko kw -
the following t.'lem'ams:
New York, Mmch (.. iiw-iu i. y. J"-
DEBLT, Scbantos, l'a : Mr. Hoxie telegrnpns that Knights of Imbor on our road have struck and refuse to allow anv freight trains to run, saying they have no grievances, but are only striking becauso ordered to do o. If tlu ro aro nnv grieviuicos we w.mld liko to talk them over with von. We understood you to promise that no strike would bo ordered without consultation.
-A. i.. nuriuMiThen follows n ser cs of dispatches between
Messrs. Ooiild, Hopkins, ana rowuorij. ju. Gould continues : "When, iu spite of all this corresjiondeiice, you desired to seemepersonallj-.I cordially met you.
and, having putmvsenm coinmuiiienwoo .mi Mr, Hoxie. arranged for arbitration. Ever since then Mr. Hoxie has stood ready to receive any and all parsons iu the actual employ of this companv, as a committee or otherwise, and confer upon or aroitrato any matter of dilfir mce or complaint ei h-r between the compauv and themselves, or between the company and" its Into employes, ami for that matter between the companv and anybody else. o such committee or individual employe has, so far as known to me, ever mado such application. Iu this connection it will bo rem ubt red thnt thej' left, not because of any complaint whatever of this company's treatment of themtolvos, but onlv be;-aiise of the company's refusal to comply' with their demand that this company refuse 1 ..... i .-(i t-n anv of mter-
io uu Wllltl iiie iiv ,i.-,i,' -- changeof busineis w,tli another comi'aiiy with which some of vour order bad a quarrel. "In th- meantime this company has of necessity gone on tj extend employment to such of those lersom. who n c:mtly. and without even alleged provocation, left its service, ns say nt . Tl,. a ,.-,-rttin,' elimlnVOS llttVO IiCen
iTvery mniiy, and in this way its roll's are already,
if not quite, as full ns its snops ana equuuuum, crippled by acts of yiolence attendant upon recent action of yo ir order, can employ. .Mr. Hoxie adiises me that every such person applving to lie received back has been employed unless believed to lu-ve taken part in recent a ts of violence. This company nii f,io venrtr hi mnko tfood. in the
fullest sense, its "agreement as expressly set forth. In the face of all this yon notify mo that unless bv 5 o'elockl personally consent to something precisely what I do not see then personal consequences of a sort vaguoly expressed, but not hard to understand, will at the hand of
your order bo visited upon ma i.et mo uguui remind von that it is nn American citizen whom you nnfi your order thus propose to destroy. Tho contost Is not between your order and mo, but betweon vour order mid tho laws of tho land. Your order has already defied those laws in preventing by violonce this companv from operating its road. c.u held then that this company should not op?rat" its road under cenditions proscribed by law, bat only under conditions prescribed by 7011. on now deelart), in effect, that I hold my individual property and rights, not as other men hold theirs, but onlv at the peril of your letting loose irrevocably, after .1 o'clock, j-our order upon me. If this Is true of this company, and of me, it is true of all other men and companies. If so, j-ou and vour secret order aro the law, and on Autexican'citizen is suoh only in name. "Already for weeks your order has, m your attack upon this company, not hesitated to dis
able it ov violence irom reiinuiuiK i tho public and from giviug work and paying wages to men at loast three times j our own number, who, working as thoy wero by your Bide, wore at least deserving of your sympathy. Havm" pushed this violenco beyond even the. great forbearance of the public, and found in this direction cause to hesitate, yon now turn upon me and propose that the wromis jou havo hitherto inflicted on the public shall now cul
minate in nn attack upon iiniiiuivi.iiiai. in m, as I have said, tho rt-al issue is betweon you and tho laws of the land. It may be, before yon are through, that those laws will efficiently advise von that evn I, as an individual citizen, am not'bovond their euro. Very respectfully, "Jay )ouli.
An Inifttfhiatlve Qotrgiua's S o j. A gentleman who lives in the eastern part of this county toils sue oi those atones that few' pcop'e will believe "without seeing it." He says that lie mw out 'ox-hunting, and, when the eh .so was at. the height f its excitement, his lorse ran into nu old well thirty feeti doep. The 1 torse was instantly killed bv tho fall, but the driver was unhurt. The wal .1 of tho well had onved in id the bottom it ciistanco of tlucd pr ft.ui- feel, and tlto gen,t!eirn -says this prevented getting out bv criiig footholds. Realizing his situati . ho began to ca'l for help ttt the top e h's voice, but no ussistai.conme. Ho
was compe lea to romani in tne wen j all night, mid tho next morning tho j Btenoh amjig from tho carcase of tho dead hors? was anything but pleasant, and he noticed that buzzards wore soaring over the spot. Finally the buzzards began to alight in tho well, nnd it was then that iv bright idea struck him. Ho decided to catoh tho buzzards by the legs ns they enme down until ho had a suflicient number to carry him out. That ho did, and, when he had caught as many as his hands would hold, he "ahoood" at them, and they flew up, carrying him out of
the well. lint still the fox-hunter was in a dilemma. The buzzards flew up so rapidly that he could not turn them loose when he reached the top without falling back in the well Upward the buzzards flow with their human freight, nr.d the fox-hunter bestaii to despair of his life lifter all. When about ono hundred yards above the ground, the fox-hunter was just about to let go and fall; when ho was. struck by another bright idea. He decided to let go o;e buzzard at a time until his weight would D-.il! them downward. Acting
vmmi this nlan. he was soon landed
safely upon tho ground. Co lumbiis (Go.,) Sun.
Poverty Among the Esquimaux.
While traveling along our rocte I
talked a good deal with Nowleyout about his strange people, the Ooqueesik Saliks, who for tho first time had
ivhitn men visit their village.
There nro no walrus in those channels oi the Arctic- Hea as this animal will
not remain where he cannot have open water all winter and seals are not very plentiful until the Xetschilluk (meaning self-eating Esquimaux) country is reached, and this they seldom visit.eo the Ooqueesik Saliks are barred from the blubber-producing animals, aud consequently have no oil to bum in their lamps. As a result, their snow-houses are cold and cheerless in the extreme during their long winter of fully six months, and they are compelled to eat almost all their food in a raw or frozen state, the latter being the better, as it is reallv a method of cooking. They nave no wood, and their sledges are mad 3 of musk-ox skins, turned headforemost, and gathered up about the head so as to form an inclined surface. Tiaey can kill reindeer only in the summer when they drive them in the water and pursue them in kiaki, and at this season their skins are not the best, so
they pa:ch out in many places witn tne si: aggy musk-ox that gives them a very fierce appearance, but here the fierceness censes. Their dingy brown clothes contrasted pitiably with the glossy gray of mvown natives; and take it altogether, thev are about as pitiable and forlorn a set of creatures as one would hn ant. lo see. oven in this pitiable and
forlorn country. There are grades of
prosperity even among the Esquimaux. L ieu t. 'Frederick St-h n-a lha.
(gVIL-BEEYICE KEFOBM. The Civil-service reform comes hard, because the evils against which it , is aimed havo been long entrenched in tho body politic, and can only bo removed by heroic treatment. Because an abuse is of long standing, however, is no reason why it should be tolerated, and the assertion of such a principle is without rhyme or reason. Diseases which afflict tho lumnn body are not looked upon ns blessings bctttiso long endured; nor should those which
afflict the state be considered so. Hver.v-
, thing which is inconsistent with the most j
jK-rfect working of tho body anu goveruI ment must be gotten rid of, Sneh, at
least, is tho belief of Mr. W. V. Murphy, of No- 310 Yandcs street, Indianapolis, who has recently been cured of rhouumtinn of twenty-five years' standing by that groat
remedy, Athlophoros, Age gave the 01s-
ease no charm iu his eyes, and he swept it away at the first opportunity. He himself tells f.H about tho matter in this way:
"My rheumatism dales way back about twentv-fivo years. I first contracted it in the war, in which I served four years and six months. After returning home from service the disease seemed to assume a periodical form. I would have nt least two seven? attacks every year, but even between these attacks I would suffer all tho time. These attacks prevented me from getting about, and many times I could not wa'lk or get out of bed." Thoy would catch me in the legs so that after Btandiug awhile I would fcjol suddenly weak and in danger of falling." "It was during one of these attacks that you used Athlophoros?" Mr. Murphy was asked. "Yes; that's the time, and that's when tt did its work for me. I saw it advertised and sent to B. Brehrn, the druggist on Colfor a bottle. It was iu the
afternoon I took the first dose, aud then at night I took another. I slept soundly thnt night. Tho next morning when I awoke I had no pain. I took a few doses more, only using about two -thirds of a bottle altogether, and my rheumatism was all gone. 'J'aat is over it venr flfo and I have only felt a little
twingo of the pain since, but nothing to
speak or. "Do yon know of any others who have noerl AihloilhorOS?"
"Yes. I have recommended it to many
different persons. My confidence was so groat in tho medicine that in several intnnees I have boucht bottles of it and
given them to people, saying at tho time r, -a ;i . J ,..-,-.1. 1,i, nand ot
a Fatnf.ii Keumsiier,
first Ft.t Man - What made yon
in so at the circus, Howard .'
riecond Fat Man Oh, dear, did you
T-fictt it'l It was the big elephant.
BraJtuia.
First Fat Man- All, J see. I'aidon
me. ray dar fellow. I elidii t 'hink at
tint how it muss iia.e i'4.'iuiwei yvn uf
GouMto I'owl.rl.y. Following is Mr. Qoold's reply : "Nbw York, Auril 14. "T. V. Powderiy. Esq., O. M. W., K. of 1.. : Dkab'Sib At H o'clock t.-day I received from Mr. William O. McDov ell. whom yon brought with yon to our recent .inf. renco. a letter in which fie savs: 'By j est rtlay n mail I received a letter written by Mr. I'oaerly addressed to you, inel sod in a lett-ir addressed tme With this I hand you the letter mtdri ssed to you by Mr. Powder! v, and a copy of Mr. Powder! y's letter to me iiwloniw the same.' -The following is a copy of the lettor Mr. Mo Powell soutmj a., coming from you: " Gfnkk.u. Assembly, Oiidkh or Kmki of i Labor op America, Office of Oem'.bi, J Master Wobkman, Scuaxtos. Pa,. April 13. I "My Dkaa Mb- MclKwKr,t,--l iuclosu you u. totter which you are to rend aud deliver to the man for whom it is intended. I do not care whether you deliver it In person or through the medium of another. I only ask thft' it be placed in bis hands. H you have succo-(led in effecting asottleDsentwith him do not give It to him. If you think there is a, prospect for on immediate suttloutent do not give it to htm but if urn h is
not the case then i v unt it piaci-a in oii r,iimj. Allow him to u'tiwr couw nt or ,12 jko a replj'. If Joe cunseBti to an hoooratdo settlement, tfeoa
Mr. Puwderly Interviewed. fgeranton ll'a.i spec ial. Grand Master Workman Powdorly's attention was callod to a dispatch which represented .lay (iould as sajlng: "This eimpauy will have nothing further to do with either Mr. Powderiy or Tiny other member o his committee. Wo
have been aeceiveu enougn oy mum. ami n v mv not propose to havo anything of tho kind occur again."
"if Air, Ciouul nsou tnat language, sum ti, Powderiy, "lie simply avails himself of the words I used immediately after the Now York
conference. I then told a innn, who afterward
carried what I said t Mr. doulfl, tnat 1 woum have no more dealing with him through any third partv, and that, if I should have any occasion tei confer with him again iu this matter,
I should denl with Mm direct, ami msucr away as to leave no reason for nilsiiuder.-,tnndii g. As
to the deception w ith which lie charges us, I
have only to say Hint n tne puunsnea interview
with Mr. (,o-..M is c nrect ue noes not ten tuo tnith. The Executive Cnmiibtti e iniuticeil no
.lee.eotii n .ml M,-. flottlit knows it well euonglu
He likens me moor I'-ll'ieri. u n kihk wn-mmi n scepter. Ilispropi r tosuy thai Mr. Could will
tinu out ueiiire tne trouine is eiiiteu mm me labor lenders are not wholly nowcrles-s. Tills is
not a battle between capital and lulnir, l.ut a
great fight against the- syst. in of oppression which Sfr. Gould represents and which menaces
the country's welfare.
,luy fiimUl llenouiteeil. I Yoilligstown ill.i dis) nteh. ; At a meeting of the 1 e il Ti mie.-. Assembly,
resolutions condemning .f:u cii.iild were passed.
Tbo Assembly blniues Mill lor Hie dentil ot mo
people at Kast Kt. I.i.m. It n snived that tne cowardly nml imird.i'm:-iu.stmltof (iotild's hire
lings deserves and should re.-eive speeuy ana iust liunishment The .Useiulil. ploilges llnau-
cial aid to the strikers.
A Waif's Fortune. IFrom the Hacraineutn T'nion.! Headers of the 1'uiuu will remember the romantic affair of h buby being mysleriomly left, one night three or four vein's since, at the residence of Mr. Sluyhack. at the Dnvoek mansion, near Shingle Springs. The midnight ringing of the bell was responded to by Mr. Sl.ivlmi-k, when a lmbyof only a few days old wni found in a basket, in which was also n most extensive supply of infants iliitliintf of finest fluidity, and made with utmost care. A perfect mystery Hiirrouudi'il the entire tifl'nir until n lew weeks afterward, win n a Mrs. Taggalt died at San Diego, soon after which application
wn- made in court by juss Alice MinyuacK, her friend, for letters of nuar.liaH.ship :for the baby, us being the infant .son of Mrs. Taggart und entitled to her estut:'. A long: and hotly contested iw in court followed. Mrs. Timeiirt'H relnlives resHiuK
the c-lnim of heirship f the lWln waif, but the cits,-, alter going to the Snoreme Court two or three times upon
different noints. waK tiuiiilv ended on last
Monday by the concluding Kottienieiit of ndmiuistraticm of the Tnggart estate, when,
after all expenses iiaul, the child -now
unite a lad bus left to him rfltl.lKHi worth
nf monertv. with an income from it siiffi
cicut for the e! lid's support. Mi-s .sluylinek has curried the c-a-e MlecesHfully
thiouih. und has proven r. heroine in the
romantic affair.
A sorXBTY of bache lors has bec-n organ
ized iu New York , and oach member is to
receive S?o00 oo his wnddiuu day. It is fcr
the purpose of encouraging Tiiurrkgo.
Xv, iviV-I-'ori: tons of suur. w-'ra lUrown into iiiiblia Hay fur nou-biivtoont oi daw
, reunjli,v-
Value of Lemon.
Vnt.hino- will keen the hands and nails
i soft and clean as the use of lemon
iuioe instead of soap.
A drink of lemonade before going to bed will often break up a cold and cure a sore throat. Xinmim iuioe has long been known as
one of tho best anti-scorbutic renxsilies
ever fo mil. It not only cures the ehV no lit. urevonts it. Sailors on long
voyages use the juice daily to keep off
sourvy. When one becrins to feel any dis
turbance that shows a disordered state of the liver, the clear juice of one or two lerjons. overv morning and evening,
will ward off serious illness, and give
a healtay tone to the system. As this is the cold and inclement sea
son, wlen there is much suffering from sore throats, liver troubles, etc., particularly among old people, the remedial eiiects of lemons, purely, reliable
agents, are very useful. The iuice of the lemon taken clear,
with no water or sugar, several times a
dav. is on of the most reliable reme
dies for rheumatism and gout that is
known, and in case of jaundice, gravel, liver complaints, inflammation of bowels, and in fevers, if promptly and
faithfully taken, is most eltective.
Lemon juice will keep the gums healthy if they aro bathed in it every nicht tind morning. Mixed with hot tea
or co:fee. without any sugar, it is
restorative in intermittent levers
and bf. thing the parts affected faithfully and often in lemon iuioe, or simply rub
bing with the lemon, frequently re-
neuralsia when all other reme
dies fail. Sailors Who Don't Go to Sea.
A naval officer, in sneakine of an as
anoint-, said to our correspondent : "He
is a trood fellow, but he is a Coburger."
When asked to expkin the term, he
replied : "There is a certain class of
men in the navy who have always held noft hnrtha. and whom it seems impos
sible to dislodire. They are official
favorites, and we call them 'Ooburgers
There are 6cores of them m the navy
department here. I know of o le who
has attained tne runic oi ran commander, and his boast is that 'he never stood a watch.' He was graduated from
the naval academy near the closn of the war, and promotion was actually so ram'd that his boast is the truth. He
has lieen floating round Washington
over since I can remember, and will
probably be here when I am gone.
There is a choice assortment of soft
things in connection with the Judge
Advocate Uen'erars uureau; jiuiro
Advocate General Homey tun.se it has
nrattv oasv time of it. He is only
' , 1 1 r . .. 1.,, I 1
captain in ine murine -w o, u. i.
sea duty is very small. He has boon so long in'Washiugton that peoplo havo almost forgotten his real rank. 1 knew
of another case which is even worse. A
certain officer, now stationed at tho League Island navy yard hasn't been more than twenty-four hours' ride from Washington for 'the last sixteen years. The navy department here is full of just such. How do they mur age it? Petticoat influence. I can mon ion live women in this town who can keep me here until I'm a rear admiral if they only said the word." Unnecessary Violence, For vhicb outraged naturo exacts heavy penalties, Is done to tho bowels by persons who with dras'io, drenching purgatives make war on those org: us In order to relieve their constriction. Constipation is not one of those desperate disouses that re quire desperate remedies. In fact, it is not a disease at all, but the incomplete dise'inigo of a function, to tho healthful renew, d of which HooU'tttr's Stomach Bitters is tar bettor adaptod than drugs, whose action is .......im nml ciiiihoiiuciitlv debilitating and
Iniii ious. IHsordorof the liver, .ontimiinittion
of the 1il..od with bile, sick bendaeh-. s and dyspeptic sybip,iins aro the attendants of coetlve.mi n,,Vl nro likHwise remedied bv the Bitters.
Its i'etioii is not limited ti reliovlug tho bowels naturully and without pain. Used with persist-
111CI as Uirocueci, Id uuiirtiKunwo ivKitl4v
that if it did not do its work they need not nnv for it! hnt there is not a single caso
I ' T .11.1 1. miwnir u-ilhin
elr There is Mrs. Wrieht. an aped lady
few miles from heie, who.
after suffering from rheumatic ptiius for fifteen years, was entirely rid of tilt pain.
bv three or four bottles of Athlophoros. 1 rieommenilfirl nnother ladv. who was sup
posed to be suffering from dyspepsia, but
ho m reality naa neuralgia ot iukoimuioi.ii, iw .Uhlnnhoros. and it soon cured her.
Mv neighbor, who had a severe attack of neuralgia, his face being swollen out of all cho,,o wuo eiireel bv a few doses. My con-
ndencem Atmopuoros is icij mrhj. " I believe that if any one suffering with rheumatism or neuralgia will take it right
it. will rare ninety-nine cases out or iw.
It is worth 100 a' bottle to every sufferer
from rheumatism,
-r,., nnnn an- ATTTTopHoaos of vour I'rufi-
i-..,.M -i!i ..n ti evTireas nald. on l'ecelbt ew
regtJar price one dollar per bottle. We prefer that you buv it from jour druggist, but if ho hasn't it, do not bo pursuaded to try something
else, but order at ouco irom ua, u u..v...
AXZOUOPHOHOS vOm AI- lui
High Demands Upon Womanhood.
Never were there such high demands
mvm womnndood as now. They see
trior, thev urn AXliected to COUIO UP to
lnft.v Rtandard. and that society de
pen'ds upon them for its highest pleasures. To be an ideal and yet to be
severelv real is tho task set iietore
them. The result is that mam women
iimWfnke too much. Tho mind
overstrained to meet
A Word to tho Wise Is SafBoient.w iSuarrh is not simply an inconvenience, unpleasant to tho sufferer and diss ustlnjr to ot'ioru it is an advauccl outpost of approaching tUseiiae of worsu typo. Do not neglect its warning; it brings deadly evils in ltd train. Before It Is too late uso Dr. SHge'g Ci'tarrh Itemodr. It roao'ios tho snat of th' ai.nicnt, and Is tho only thing that will. You may doo yourself with quack medicines till It is too late till tho strot inlot leooraes a resistless torrent. It is the matured invention of a scientific physician. "A Word to tho wise is sufficient." A act loss is liko a little gi 1 in ono respect Whon fil e gets mad she won't play. New 1 orfc Vial Habitual constipation is not only one of the most unpleasant, mil at tho same timoonooif tbo most injurious conditions of the human sj-s-tom, and is bat a forerunner of disease nnloss: removei This is usually aoeomplisliMl by tho ubo of purgatives, which for tho time afford relief, hut after their immediate effects hava
passed tnoy icavo tuo sj-Miefiii m p iiumow than before. To effect a cr.ro it is necessary that tho remedy used should bo ono that not only by its cathartic, effect relieves the Bowels, hut at the same time acta as a toni. so as to
restore tho organs to a sonnet, lieauuy conention. This I'bickiv Asn Butebs will do. It removes tho cause and restores health.
T,. .ifl.ditir of the millionaire of tho frf-
luro will probably be a billion heiress. Afca
1 or Morning journal.
Cebtais SIiXBitAiA onco foi-miug a part of
almost every medicine, aro now regarded dangerous and nimecessarv. The evils- they
produce are worse than tne diseases tuey wero
supposed to cure. Kb. Walker s I'aufoksia YiSBQAB BrrrEits contains nothing but tho juices of plants aud cures all disorders of tho liver, skin, kidneys, digeafivo organs, and Uood.
Amono manufacturers of prasartes there is
slwaya more or less jcllyougly. MercliaM
xraveur.
Wmsmu's Peptonized Beep Tosxo. the
only preparation of beef contaiiun? its entire nutritious properties. It contains blood-making, forco-genorating, and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for ineVgention. tlyspopsfa, nervous prostration, and all forms of general
debility; also in enfcobled eoudiUons, whether tho result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, fivorworit nr sen to di8iase. narticularlv if re-
sulting from pulmonary complaint-i. CasweU,
Jiazzaici (V- uo. . iiropuevoiw, aow xura. ouiu
by drtiggigta
Av evebniffo has a poem "On the Birth of I
Twins," and didn't kii"W enough to mako the
rhyme a couplet. v. raw jjay.
Those who take Dr. .Tones' Red Clover Tonio lever have dvsni nsia. costiveness. bad breath.
piles, puuplos, ague and malaria, poor appo-
Ilte, lOW SpiIIUI, lll31tUtte;", v. ntviuvj vuu.v Price 50 cents.
It i sHioiiisbine: how lone it tikes a hired 1
girl to soiub a front window. Kentucky State
Journal.
"We are selling Athlophoros, and it gives
..,.n,.T,t uniiufnetioii. better thau anv other
rheumatic remedy no nave ever foul- is mo :
exporience of C. KldrcHl Hon, druggists, ot Ijgouier, Ind., voioiug tho general approval of the great romed'.
nnovrniTis Is cured by frequent small
doses of Piso's Cure for consumption.
Tv nrHieted with Sore Eves, use Dr. Isaao
Thompson s taye water, uruggusunteu ihak.
"Uough on Itats1' dears out Hats, Mica 15c.
i ook AT THESE BOTTLES
.a which vou had rathfir hava-the big "lOetit wiwi " .
a,iiM v ..... 0 . 4.rt tafith
nniini r THE QUANTITY. AfflD BETTI 9ALITT
w
"Bough on Corns" hard or soft corns, bunions,
too. "Bough on Toothache. " Instant relief. 15c. VliiTl.S' HAIK BALSAM.
If era v, restores to original color. An elegant I drnssimr. softons and boautiflOH. Ko oil nor 1
CToaso. A Tonio Restorative. Stops hair ooraV .4-- A.ana tio&lu Aeavln UVv
Ulg OllVj OlItJUg"WM", VWJ"' "ItOCe.H ON BIU!" I'lXXS
Start tho bilo, relieve tho bilious stomaoh, thick, aching head and overloaded bowolB. Small granules, small dose, big results, pleasant hi opera
tion, don t eUstm b tne atomaon. aoo.
HOW TO USE fV.T&DDlJ
untum uitLiid
colds.
MotaLipidorSnufl
Ko poisonous drugs.
No offensive odor.
Apart!;
to use. i circular,
iu tl.'o habit of body, and in the opsratioas of
the :tigc8tive organs anu iiyoi. r,w uiu ihjiwi lheumatism and kidney troubles aro prevented
and cured by It
Why is a bald-headod man Uko a houndl"
Beia-uso Ue; iiiakua a littiu uiiro go a grew way.
S ioEbiiusGB on the latest foot-wear may be
ooniideroet wtA-iSr4Km:m.
.-iiie.if worst chronic eases; also uneeiiialod as
nuruU fm- diiilitlieria. sore throat, foul breath.
SSi" UOUOH ON FILES."
ict. ur Ptioav Tmrnneliate relief and com-
plute cure guaranteed. Ask for "Bough on Piles'' Sure cure for itching, protruding, hl.Mj.Une. or any form of Piles. oOc. At Drug
gists or Mailed ..
Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctor,
and xeacners.
If vou will get your dealer to order from hi i wholesale druggist one dozen bottles
WaBJIBB 8 WHITE WINB OF 1 iM -'"- the beat remedy in the world for Coughs,
Colds, Asthma, uatarrn, ana vanmmv t will sfliirl two bottles froe. Recont
,i . fnanda. Send name
UigUU IV- jua. , T1 , druggist who gives the order. Map of Holy t.,,h fron -wifli msdiome. Addross Dr. C.
T). Wabseb, Chioago, IB- All druggists
Get Lyon's Patent Haol Stiff era applied Co boob and shoea-bsfece jminntium Mt
sj JL QIbitters i CURES IjAllDlSiASESOnffi 1 LIVKH . mm 1KIDHE7S 1 STOMACH K 1 BOWELS. Un I ALL DRUSS1ST8
Plitce a particle or t!. Balm Into each nn.-i ; and drawHtrongltreitt J ithrouffb tbo none. I will bd absorlK'! a.i biffin itrt worli of cli'aii
iiig aw 1m aUui: the ;
ooMrt v- ! eased w-iubrano. 1:
-, a A1..
v, - siiuya luuaiuuiuuui:
pectation, and tins inoaern lyimmy ot t prilTeoto & ,,,
ideal women works havoc among uiose
who, most sensative to duty and impul
sive aims, are sure w ue iuuau w.-
pletely sacrificed. Louise runups, wc
The current.
The Richest Man in the World
would be poor without health. Tho dying-
mi! iionalre consumptive wuuiu iai-uiiiiiii he is worth for a new lease of lite. Ho could havo had it for a song had he used Dr.
Pie rce's "Golden Medical Discovery iwiura
the ditoasc had reached its iasr. stupes, a urn wouderfut preparation Is a positive euro Tor consumption if taken in time. For all diseases of the throat aud lungs it is unequaled.
All druggists.
OXJ3 eiav during an eclipse of the sun
a boy sold smoked glasses at a penny
apiece. "You ought to make money, said the purchaser. "Yes," said the voting merchant, "ours would be a good business if the dull season were not so long."
Wateh forms of man twenty-five per
cent, of the bones, seventy-uve per cent, of the muscles, eighty per cent of the
blood, and eigbty-tne per cent or tne gray substance of the brain. Thus the highest
functional organ comes near to nemg merely
organized water. Much is being written or late of the advisability of drinking considerable water, to afford new supplies and to
keep things moving that is, tne secreiivmt active. Dr. Foote's Health Monthly.
nkiin,,A diseases of cither sox. how
ever lneluoeu, promptly, iuurweiK"j, nannanentlv cured, c'ond 10 cent-1 in stamps
lor largo uiustrateu ireauae, eusniiu
means ot euro, auucc-os, iii sai-y Medical Assoolation, 003 Main street, Buffalo, K. Y.
The fibrous tissues in tho leaves of black
pine, a common tree m uraawi been worked into a cloth called Lamtz s
itahI veOAlnhle tlnimtH. It IS
claimed for it that it possesses remedial
properties when worn next to tne sxin oy sufferers from rheumatism. It must be washed only with warm "water and pine-oil n to avoid destroviuc its iroma and
curative virtues. So says Dr. Anna Kings ford. Dr. Foote'a Health Monthly.
To eradicate ;landruff, and keep the scalp
molf t aud clean, use itan s nan- awinw.
"It's stew lonesome here," remarked the
oyi'ter at the elmivJli fair. Merchant Traveler.
ipiis. ,t,,ui. ReieiiHnc eomnonnd fo:r tho cure ot'
nnn.rl coltl. and all throat and Iv.ng troubles
is r. Higelow's Positive Cure. It is pleasant,
prompt, and safe, uu cents anu -
Ye may not like hotel-keepers, but wo hf.va
to put up with tlicin.
The lives of many children havo Ix-eu saved
by tho tunoly uuo of ayers vuerry recturai.
Bon Ise'.wssoLi. built his house stiiare, boeftiise he etoesu't believe iu an L Merchant
Traeclit: Tun Testimony ot a l'liysU'lau.
James Beee-lier, M. D., of Sigouruey, Iowa,
nam: "For several years I havo lwn using e.
i -,; .!, Knlsain. called DR. WM. HAUL'S BAL-
i SAM Ft Ut Till'! I.t'KUS, and in almost every
esse throughout my practice I havo had emtiro success. I have used and preseri b n hundreds of bottles niiie the daj-s of my army praotico
(!$!), when 1 was surgoou of Hoipilui Ao. 7,
Iiouisville, Ky."
"ItOI'tiH ITCH
ininimh Tbili" cures skin hunoi'S. orup
It'nnii vmff worm, tetter, salt rhuum, frosted
foot, chilblains, itch, ivy poison, earner's itch.
6U1!. jure. "KOl!H ON CATAKUH'
corrects offensive odors at oneo. Complete
ASH
H H
9 0
I PBICtfoOUAR.
Dyspepsia,
tw It in enact feBredaction of a bottle of
gins sxtsnjlvely stdvertlsod I M a
lo-nent article." a.ju a
pECEliEl) H
GraHlgtiSoinditigS Naows. Vt Rf ' mil -i id i ii -
PNOT
This cut shows 1 he smallest sfaejf
LePACET '
THE TOT.t- UUANTVTY Of LePAQE'S LIQUID GLUE
sold during tho past five years In all parts of the world amounted to over 32 MILLION Bottles. Everybody wants it. AJ.t kinds of Dr.At.Ena find it a good thing to handle. It. brings new customer .ana mak the old o" STICK. TWO COLD MEDALS london,1883; New Orkans, 1886. At tho New Orleans l-.xpositlon Joints made with it endured a testing strain of over 1600 POUNI39 TO A SQUARE INCH. PfonMtiewlih Strongest Gltio Known. IT MENDS EVERYTHING, Wood, leather, Pawf, Ivory, Glass, Chins, Fnmftiire. Bric-a-omc, tc. "J8LffA ROOK. Indispensable in every hotuekold.
IF Pi
LIQUID CLb'S
dpi tie.-vutww um
If your dealer does not keep it, send hi card with five 2-c
hw mall. ,www," .
'
HI X t
g you r h 1 GET 1 i WHEHYOUBUYV
int sttmps forsarnpfr; Clouoester., Mafia T
HAY-FEVER
irtii'leisapplledintoeanhnostril and is agreeable i. Price .Vets., hv mall or at druggists. Send for ir. ELY BKOTHERs. Druggits. Qwego. S.Y.
General DebUity
tuidloe, HahittiRl Constipa
tion, Iiiver tompiainv, ascat Headaoho, Diseased Kidneys, Etc., Eto. It contains only tho Purest Drugs, amoDg which maybe enumerated PR1CILT ABg BUS i snuia, iuhsiau, sircss, tsttk, att.
It cleanses the system Ihorougtuy, ana as a PURIFIEB OF TH13 BLOOD Is UnoqualedL It t not an Intoxicating beverage, nor oaa U be used as suoh, by reason of its Cathartic Properties. PRICKLY ASH BITTERS GO. Sole Proprietors, T. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY.
GIIUC A line Breech-Loading Hhotgun for BUN5. A. J. Kei.lv M ASOr'0. Co., Brooklyn. IN. T.
mm m nrfmlTty n. S. a. P. Lacev, Fvteat PATr NTS Attorneys. Washington. D. p. 1 ft I mm II I W instractloui and oplnioni ai
to natenlaMUty FB17 jeaw'eraamnee.
FACK, JiANUS, FEET, ui ill lfc.li- tmpttbcltiiu. luclndlnl facid, n.T.t.KiwBt, 8isitirai Blrlk MwU, f 11m Rl Nu. Acu.
fa Dr. JOHN H. WOODBURY, .
I-Sri. VvriSI. AUuax, . V. tlViUlrtO. MlKni
CONSUMPTION,. .,n.;h oMAoil.olsM.il of thn want klaU ad lot loss
SiiaSSlua VA LVA DI.S TSBATISB onthlj H.,,Qffr.t. olYa.xiir'M.iuir-0-.r.
PSLV.A.
WDKBIUTI FEKiLE JhP DKCAl
A Life Bbxperience. Beniaraanie isbb oulolr. ourea. Trial Packages. Send stamp for sealed particulars. Address) Dr. WARD & CO. Louisiana, Mo.
TO A l-RBEND who is suf .'erind from Boils and Carbuncle no better advieie oait tw siwn than to try .. Ayer's Sarsaparilla. " ORLAsnw Ssell 133 Ford sL, Lvwf ell, Mass. , was tcrri aly afftlcted with Caw, buncli on tho back of his "neck. A.yertH Sarsapnrilla cured tl o Carbuncles, and Is kept lilmi'ree from them. V. P. CoGGKsnAix, Bookseller, Lovk t-tt, says: I have besn taking Aytr'rttarH sapaiilla tor an Impurity of the bteodi which m mlfests I self in troubkstaa Boils and Eruptioi s, and can truly sajj" that I hai'e never f auud any medietee eat prompt and certain in curative effect. IK has done lucgreatgsod. "I
Leaxd-eb 3. McDonald, i6Wr Charlestotcn, Mast., testifies; One yn it agoIsuffin-edgretttlyfroorBelfaandCaWf I huncles. und for nearly two months rrast
unable to work. A. druggist advised not to take A yer's Barsaparll ia, which I pat chasdl. After taki ig twa bottlea of bt medicine I was entirely cured, and ha remaiued well ever lince.
1
For all diseases originating in impure Wood take . i Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Vwomni bv Dr. J. C. Aj er Ss Co., LowiU, Haas. Bold by Draggisti. Price V ; sht bottlen, $li
SiLlCKER'srl i S Ti'!ia 1 ThnFisn luieKDSLincEn ; w.rT.1,1 w.t.l rloof, ml "l u, jki dry i Ask Tr, ft SsiSS aiSStf i
WHO 18 UNACQUAINTED WITH THE C2O0RAIHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL i ,. EE BY EXAMINING 1 HIS MAP, THAT THE J
k art A mrkV IS1 AMD A PACI-IU KAIL.WV Jl (
t.lwwf ... . . i .i ti n-in(.ino7 1 ! v t TJVi r. nrtd
iithBait and ceirfesDonding points W est, Nc rtnwest i ma epusuweot.
THE GREAT ROCK. IJi.aiwm nuu i t
humanl skin can irite it; the eafety appUau6)s of pitent buffera, P'ouormsi ians.nS&ttai exacting Ldlffea. ffisfs
nnnmnnn or nil ir nuuio. jvuxi . .
all connecting points In Union Depots, tano tne uoturiKKocvA vwu.-.- -
.S, .i",iii."'".... h , WisRonrt Rivera
.Si,r:r TfiST ,VrrrTr.ito.i riav Coaches. Masmiucent, i- aimian
PUBOU vt wou ywuiuuwi """'j j I , "r. ,r
iarl nf TerAll Tront lltttea. 1111151 V UDnoisbeivu i--l';vv--i
JJin-ntr e .are, in wum
eetion nai-ng tin u-City and
AteSSso-, also run the Celebrated Reclining Chali Care. THE FAMOUS ALBERT LEA ROUTE Ib the direct and favorite line between Chicago i imd -.inneapolis i and - t whero rarmectlona are made in Union Depots for all :olntii m tha Tei-rltortaj .SdBria-tt Provinces. Over this route, )?asc E.:pres i aro rat to tfc miterlncr places, eummer resorts, picturesque losaUUns, an i hunting end fls SljorTowa7-.d Minnesota. It is also tho mo. it deiratole route to th rich wheat flelda and pastoral lands of ir terior iJako ;a, . -. StttMoSr DIEECT -INS, via Seneca end Kamtaktie, has .hMBMml between Newiiort News. Richmond, cancinnatl. In.iianf polls. aayetfe and CoimcllBluffa Kansas City, Minneapolis and St. Paul imel uitonnedljp P'n; For detailed information see Maps and Folders, obtainable, as well as TlckoM, at all principal Ticket Offloea to the UiUted Stat-M and Canada,; or
by addressing' R. R. CABLE, President and General Manager, Chicago.
15. ST. JOHHf Conors! Ticket and Fassoascr Afloat Chicago.
WELL
MAKING
' TO
EGGS
fresh for monCT in
: for 60 cents.
DOES XT PAYI
Free catalogue tells what customers say; This is the Ureal Ohio" tVell Uritlina and n-il,- Ma.lalni. Drills
all -inels e-lirtll ami rock and ! nump cutilnga to surface at i each stroke! Tests ihe wnttjr without taking out tools. Drives tubing or enlarges hole KAiu.it. rams with wuiKierfitl 1
casei and drops tooli 70 or hi j
minuici jioithi - , steam power used, i We also make niacUne.s and tools for . be rlnn large wells. i UJOMSS 'YMA.. I TllriS,UH10. I
unw TO PRESERVE
UlO wliile cheap and keep perteetly highest wlnteriTleen, and doulito orirefcle
monej Invested. KtiJI illr..-tlm liue W niau
ViNEGAB BiTTEES 1 tho ercjn'. 1 Hood. rnrlBer and Tjfe-grrjgf l'riiidili-; a W'l lle rnrgiitive and Tecjc; a pertsos Itenovaior and .' i ivigor-tor of tho sysiein. In Vinofra r Bhlers there U vitality hot no alcoholtcor j liuera? poison. nicas o I' Hie sk In, ot whatever name or natures are U terally dug up and earrtodout of the system Ina f beat time by the use of theBwteta, Vlnofrar Bi tters allays feverithness. Itrlleres, and in ti' ae ?uns UheumatXi, KeuMKla) tiout, and aimilir painful diseases. Yiurttar Blttorm cures Oomtlpation aad prevents Diarrlieua Never before lus a mocilclno ben cosa. ixinuded postes ing tho power of Vikxoab B-T TEns lo heal "Uie sick, Send for itber of our valuable reference honks for ladle ;. for formers, few merchants, OUT
iledic.H Treati! e on ! ilKeases, or our erne on luteniperani o am : Tobacco, hleli lost i
UH OV DISSASBAIiWAYS CDEABU I BY VSOSXt MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT.
lou are aliened ,rni trial ul thiriy a-c- too
use oi Dr. Dye's cviobnted voitmc neit wuu J;'"'-''' Busiiensory Apiiliaaccs, for tlie tueeidy relief and iicrmaur it cure if .Vtos HeWUv f"'lM'"L,' i,i..i ,-... i At.,, t.ti. manv otlier dlt
cise.. Coinpl-to ii-storilion to Health md Vigor
i l lot.in wol-d -ii-clone, mailed fxes. by .eldreaiiing
VOtXAlC BELT tlu.. Mar-ium, aiicimran. DK-OHEIOD BUT Wagon, Buggy or Sleigh
of
r im i n.v ye
0? ITOlliN FIiESH. Rhaanatism, Dttras aud Hcalds, Btlttsa aad Bites, Cur.i aad Braises, Sprains Stltchca, Contracted Mwscles, Btif.' Joints. Backache, Kirartlaaa, arrest Bites,
OF iXlliUS.
Scratches, Sarea and G alls. Spavin, Cracks,
Screw Worm, Grab, foot Ret, lloef All,
Lniacncse,
BwJnny, Foaadcrs, Sprains, Strmltn,
Sore Feet. Stiffness,
Iu In- AINU v chilli nnd vouth iE. the t
A . 1.1, a 1 tl. ...viva nnnlrM ntftilfld VBA tSm
tecetpt of four seats fir ri'gistratioii fese. JuH. McDonald Drug Co., 532 Vt.5iaogtoo,3t-,K.T FOUTZ'S "' HORSE AUO C VTTLS POWDtWI
no Rum 11 die nn. if t-'iMib.'s l'owele
Foutic'n I'owde.nwl!!
( Colic. Bon or Itnre na
'owelen are ased In true.
nro sue. nrerea t naa eiouu,
Foutzt Powilsm wi l prevent Oait.. vt tyij Foulz's Powell ' i will Inrivase tits qniuitlty of mnk
warrii ro
KOTGHKIN CARSSflQE WORKS
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
mWWW ntKHS TO
aadaU external diseases, and erreiyhiiMcracieldsnt. For general use lu family, suband stoo: t-yard, It Is TUB BEST OV ALL
i LINIMENTS
Mid cream twen y per int and make UM
snii sweet. iu.t. Pnwilr ra will cure or nrvftnt almeist
DI6USI to wide h Horn, nad CtiUle are suhifct.
rOCTZtl rOIVl'SK Wll.i.JIVK 1HHWII.i gold everywi.1 re. SAtis b. FOtrrs, rrcpiietei, BAVriUOB , MO.
8al,,bigmoaejan4 steady for eithvr soi. S'o traveUnn.
cnUinte. $1 p.ci free. Hastt
me :i einei vvmen n-iertesa f ai i
e a. !'. . Merri U i Co. C
Plso'; Hem' dy lor CaUxta Is lee Best, nslest :o V, and Caesptat,
ninp.M
N. V.
V.....1 No. i ia.""
Also rood br Cold In the Head, Reada Ihe, liny Fever, Ac. aiceats.
AVhn Will Ins I AdvorUsers, pUntec Senfl.
yoa s'r Uw AdvecWsMMMt toi MWfcl
