Bloomington Progress, Volume 20, Number 12, Bloomington, Monroe County, 19 May 1886 — Page 4
C
OHIO ft ilSSISSIPPT RAILWAY. X
2
Solid Daily Train (each way) between CINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS. i Solid Daily Trains (each way) between 1 CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE.
Solid Daily Train (each way) between ST. LOUIS AND LOUISVILLE.
WO ctuaage mf Cars tmr AST Clan off PotMBfen. first CTajs, Second CUss and Emigrant Passengers, all carried on fast gwai tVnina, consisting of Palace Sleeping Care, Hegant Potior Coackes and comfortable Daw Coaches, all running THROU&B WITHOUT CHANOE. ; Only 10 Hours Time iBtiawm Cincinnati end SL Louis, or 9k
Louis and AoawMMM.
But Four Hours
fc-e 01 at flMmtaaippt Rlnv : i fAs oit uw between St. I and Cinoinna t Under one management, running all ita baini through "SOLID," and in consetjutnce it the only recognized first clfcss troote between those cities, ita, lEasy Grade-, Its Splendid Motim Power, Sled Bails, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed XaaMe the 0. 4k X. to make faster av age time than any other Western Road. laT Ask for Tickets via O. & M. R'y.-J War sale by Agents of connecting line) East, West, North and South. W. W. FEABODY, President and Oen. ATf". W. B. 8 ATTUC, Oen. Pass. ask. CINCINNATI, OHIO:
ORCHARD HOUSE!
8. M. Orchard &43oi PROPRIETORS.
OffMHttBtaw Depot, BUafattij -
TwvDutr Fast txgnm
GMcago and Louisville, Connect ng c eel y vrith the night and day trin oat of Cliicagoon e Great Throngt Trunk Lines Vest ancl Northwest, and with the Horning and sveulug through trains oat of Loois-rilla on Ore Scntbern and Sooth west n Line. Tata Popular Route now runs the most oomftab coaches and Fartor Cars on day trains, and Pnll Steepen on night trains, and baa only one change of cars to ail the principal towns and eft a In the North, Booth, East, or West. Bell Tliroogh Tickets orer all the various crossing and i connecting railroad lines, and check bagv
s roogs to passengers wrm inn, nsunoj
aeaewe annoyances or igcnensing. a
f missing direct connecoona, and
d Exnksrers'. and round-trip
Whiter and Snromer Toorfs ' Tickets on sale in their respective seasons. Will cheerfully give travelers foil information in regard to the best connections, the fewest and easiest changes, and the most comiartab and pleasant route; and will famish Batlroad ape, Thne-Tables and folders, containing mac useful lnfra-rnarlnTi to travelers, on appli-
wT a BALDWIS, CARTER PEEKING,
Gas. Pass. Agent, Station Pass.
Resident Dentists
Dr. J. W.
CRA3N.
Office in the New Block, up-stairs, over
Ooaf Sook Store. All work warrantad.
K2C.
Kr
Calling upon Mr. Lincoln on one ol (he darkest days in the late war, I was surprised to see upon his mantel-piece a couple of volumes one a small Bible, the other Ariemtts Ward, his Book. "Do yon read Artemns Ward?" I asked him. "I don't read anybody else," he answered, with a smile on his care-worn lace; "he is inimitable." In the plain building before which we are standing
the inimitable showman first set up his "wax figgers;" and if we enter here we may--eaoonjttor tfae-ntstj tant editor oi '""he Plaindearer, who was the associate and intimate Mend of "A. Ward" when the latter was the city editor of this jonrnal. He has many anecdotes to tell of the genial showman. He describes iu appearance, when he first came to the office, as decidedly rustic. He was, he says, long and lank, with flowing hair, a loosely fitting coat, and trous
ers too short in the legs and bagging at
we knees. Bis humor was irrepressi
ble, and always bubbling oyer, and he kept all about him in a constant state ol merriment. He was a wag nothing
but a wag bat in that line a genius.
He could see only the ludicrous side oi
the subject. Going away once on
short vacation, he engaged the gentle
man to perform his work daring his
aDeenee. ile carefully instructed nun
h to bra dutaes. and in doing so drew
fron his pocket a tow string about a fool and a half long, and told him he must furnish that amount of copy per day,
leaving on his desk the measure as a retin!er of the quantity. About this time he was called upon to respond to s
toRfc- to the .Press at a Hen f ranklin
f est val held in Cleveland. He rose to his feet, hung his head for a few moments in silence, and then sat down,
having said nothing!- In his account oi
the festival in the next day's Plaindenler his SDeech was resorted bv a blank
space of about half a column of elo
quent silence.
This gentleman remembers that soon
after "A. Ward" entered the lecture
field he was invited by a theatrical man
ager in San Francisco to delivers coarse in California. The season being close at hand, the manager asked him
try telegraph; "What will you take for forty nights in California? Answer
immediately." Ward answered im
mediately, by telegraph, "Brandy and water. " The joke was noised throughout the State, and the result was, when Artemos went there to lecture on his own account, he was met everywhere
with overflowing houses. While engaged in lecturing inltfce West, he wrote this
gentleman the following epistle: "Jfr Dxab Obobob. I want yon to do tee
favor. I relied on one of ray men to Bare me the press notice, lie didn't Will yon colW cithern for me at once, and send them to me at the Bates Honae? Now this is taxing yoni pod nature, but you 11 do it for me won't yon, George? Itoyoa know that yon remind me more and store of the noble Romans? I don't know who they were, bnt you remind me of them ; you Go, indeed. And could I ha vo appealed to one of those noblo Romans to eat out some preen notices tor me in Tain? I guess nob Go on. young man, go on. Deal kindly with the ased, Remember that we are here for only a. littk . while, and that riches take nnto themselves
wings and fly away. Intoxicate the sbnnntng
bowl support your county paper, urn) im Lord, and send me chose notices. Write like
wise. And now, kind sir, farewell. Farewell.
Wh other lips and other beans' "Honr!!, my prettygruselle,
Edmund K'trke, in Harper' Maya-
tne.
A GERMAN chemist, Kof. C. Winkler, has discovered s new' element "Ger-wum-i amineaal named Argyro- . dite, whjeh consiats ciueny of sulphur.
Sliver, pn BHarnuj.
BAZOO JIM.
They sallsd him Basoo Jim fur short,
Tbongb i cant tan yon way,
Unless it war acoordin' to
Bis toEgne, which war snm fly.
Not bad; I've seen a many wnss
Nor Basoo Jim, yon bet.
For playin' cards great Boottl ols boas.
me ekal hain't be'n yet,
His hands war soft an' silky like t
His eyes war meltin' blue)
Bnt when them peepers opened wide,
They seemed to born clean throngs.
In coarse I never liked his trade.
Twas shady, not jist right ;
Bnt tween us both, this Bazoo Jan
At heart was somewhat white.
A heathen Chinee from up-hill
Pat oat his washee sign,
An' kalkertated for to stay
An' do oar dads up fine.
In eoarse that phis war pizen, boss.
Aocordin' to oar sort ;
An' so we told Sing Lee to git
He sickened, stayed, m sbnti.
Smallp0x it war, Great Scott 1 ole boss,
It took onr breath away.
yr knowed as how the thing would syramd
B he war left to stay.
He stayed. A nnss went down to cars
Fur that poor heathen cuss.
SoaB-pox it skipped, Stag Lee got wett,
The nuss war Jim, olo hoss.
VERA BROPHY.
BY CLIO STANIEY ,
What seas do not lovers sail on, what
hills do they not climb, what valleys do they not explore? You cannot find a place eo solitary that ita sunshine has not fallen on their happy faces; nor a crowded city where they have not made a part of the busy, cheerful crowd. The blue skies
sirdle on them everywhere, green trees
over-arch them, streams ripple at their
feet, and Alpine snows beat in their
faces! Yet what matters the snow or the
storm, sunshine or shadow, for does not
love glorify every land?
And so Erin to me was aland of true de
light, and her fields were the fairest that ever son shone on! Green fields starred
with daisies; tiny, wandering brooks with crowds of violets and bluebells on their
banks; the golden furze illuminating pages
fairer than old missal could ever boast;
lovely glens and smiling valleys fading
misty sweetness; lakes lying luce
jewels in the sunshine; and the everlasting
Mils, standing bine and shadowy in the distance. The woods themselves might well
be the abode of fairies, such was their werrd loveliness; trees with their trunks and branches covered with moss of many and many a year's growth; ivy running over
the moss, and sweet wild flowers taking
root and blossoming there, making gar
lands of beauty for the mid-air!
A week before, we had reacnea yueens-
town, and spent some days there; and then
brief stay at Cork, and I bad come alone
to Killarney to see the meeting of the waters, to wake the lonely echoes of the
Eagle's Nest, to visit sweet Innisfallen, to toil up Carran Ton! and descend through
the Black Valley, to sit on the old hearth
stone in Kate Kearney's cottage, and to do
whatever else a romantic interest should monmi. white the rest of the narty went
r r ' . over to indulge in two weeks gaiety in Dublin before coming, for a little rest, to
Killamey.
It has always been part of my creed tnat was horribly selfish to go away into any
land of delight alone; to gaze on the
loveliest features of nature's face without a
human soul for companion, into whose
ear you conld pour all your fervid admiration; and so when, after
manv years of great expectation,
I found I could really afford to travel
looked about me for some one else to enjoy
too. There was my cousin, Nannie
Kemps, and Miss Roland and her mother,
who were awaiting i net such a chance, and
o we made op a party of four and started
in gay good humor with ourselves and the
rest of the world; but at Cork there had
been a sadden inundation.
Three of my bachelor friends had swept
into sight, and our quiet party was quiet
and contented no longer.
Old castles and cathedrals lost their
charms; long drives under the sweet labur
num branches, which, with their drooping blossoms, we had learned to call by its real Irish name, "Shower o' Gold," ceased
to interest, when pnt in the scale with par
ties and hops and one real ball, to which
there were sore to be invitations awaiting
them, if they went direct to ltoblin.
Nannie was ready for fun, always; but
Miss Roland I had rather counted on as
ready to go wherever I beckoned. We
had been very good friends for at
least eighteen months, and I knew
quite well that a gracious approval was
waiting on her mothers smiling hps, but though I had been half-a-dozen times on the verge of a declaration, which would have left me no choice bat to go where she
chose, I had always caught myself just in
time; so that when she, with the rest, voted
enthusiastically for Dublin, I decided to
go alone to the lakes and await their ar
rival.
When once there, free to indulge my own
fancies. I made pUgrimages to all the
romantic spots anyone could tell me of,
spending whole days on the water or the
mountain -side, alone with my good staff
and luncheon-box, the contents of which I shared with numerous rosy-cheeked lads
said lassies, coaxed to my side with the wel
come jingle of silver small coins.
It was when sitting one day on a bit of
broken rock, making a pencil sketch of
two curly-headed boys, twins in an overflowing cabin where there were thirteen
happy children, every one with the
blue of the skies in their laughing eyes, and the gold of the sunshine tangled
in their hair, that I first saw
Vera Brophy. She was coming down the
steep, rooky path, with just a light scarf
thrown over her head, its fleecy ends floating behind her, and she paused and stood on tip-toe, looking for some one, one fair hand shading her beautiful eyes.
She is looking for us," ssid Dennis, in
an admiring whisper.
"Sore, it's for nobody else, I believe,"
said Lenny, a broad smile overflowing his
little round face.
I raised my finger to enforce silence, for
I feared she would vanish at a word, when
suddenly a burst of sweet song rose on the soft air. To this day I cannot speak
calmly of that moment. The sweet song
rose and died away twice before I stirred.
I had heard Miss Boland sing often, and
once this self-same song, bat her voice was
artificial and as "thin as muslin," while these tones rang out like the notes of a mountain flute, and the words melted into the tone, until words and melody seemed one.
"She always calls us with that," said Lanny, his tiny voice exultant. "Faith, she do," said Dennis, nodding. "Hasn't she the voice of a bird?" inquired Dennis, searching my face. "Sore, ifs a whole grove of them," added Lanny. And when I gave them permission to move, and it needed but a glance to do it, they seised each a hand, and dragged me with them. "Here we are! here we are!" they both shouted in a breath, "and this is him with the bread and meat! You told us he was a man in a fairy tale!" A faint flash, like that presaging the dawn, rose to her lovely face, as I hastened to introduce myself in a more regular way. She smiled and at once told me her own name. The boys were so eager that I had to show her the sketch I had just made;
they begged so bard lor another,
with their Miss Vera between them, to take
home to the mother, that she consented, and sat down on a moss-covered stone with
Dennis at one side and Lanny at the other.
I own that I hesitated; could I ever draw
that beautiful face!
"Swrei it's not bo aisy," BuidLnnuy, pure
fun dancing in his eyes.
''Hens different from we!" broke forth
from Dennis.
"Dennis!" said Miss Vera, reproachfully. "Sure, I think it's the hunger makes ns
forget the grammar," said Lnnny, with a
side look at the lunch box.-
At that We both laughed, and tts they
promised me a longer sitting next day, and as many as I needed, 1 put the materials sway, and opened the box, the boys easily persuading Hiss Vera to share with us in the impromptu meal.
Bread and butter never tasted half so
sweet before! AVo had but one course, but it was seasoned with such blight wit, such sound sense, and such good feeling, that
to me it seemed a feast!
I found out that Vera Brophy had gath
ered about her, tho summer before, thirty or forty of the little children on that lonely mountain, and taught them to read ami Spell, and this summer they Wore getting
some insight into grammar and making faint approaches to mathematics.
Well, to make a long story short, I made
one of the school after that. I believe she called me her assistant, but indeed I was an eager learner at her feet.
Day after day, I looked in her blue eyes,
reading there sweet lessons of truth and patience, until at length love crowned my good endeavors!
But would you take a poor girl from
these Irish hills to your home across the seas?" she said shjly, one day, a month later.
Sure, I would if I could get her! as
Lanny would say," I added, laughing.
And then she told me the secret of her
work. It was all labor of love. She had a
small conitHjtcnee. but she was alone m
the world, and for love of her own little
countrymen she had left the city and spent
two summers teaching then.
"But a Bchool-hbuse is to be built here
next year," she said, "and then they will not need me so ranch."
"Not as much as shall," I replied; and
so it was all settled between us.
Miss Boland and her mother came tho
next day, and Nannie with them. era
met them in the parlor or the hotel, with her own sweet grace, and Nannie soon after received her with open arms, and promised to stay for the wedding; but Mrs. Boland turned her back on her,
and her daughter followed her example.
It was not many days before our party
was reorganized. -iney returned 10 Dublin, and soon after crossed to London;
and cousin Nannie made one of a happier
party.
The summer sunshine has faded on the
Irish hills, and the Shower o' Gold has
fallen; bnt though outside our cottage
home the winter wind blows, Vera and know nothing of its chill.
Her smile brightens all our house; hei
sweet song makes it cheerful all tho year round; and when two months ago Lanny
came over to us, to be adopted as an office'
bov. he looked at us both and said with a
rare twinkle in his eyes:
"Sure, it's happy I am to see ye both
comforted!"
BLIND MUX'S VUEAMS.
One of the most intelligent inmates
of the West Philadelphia Home, who
came into the world blind, says tnat,
although he has read a great deal, he never dreams of the things ho has read about, and never dreams of anything
or persons with which he has not in
some way come in personal contact.
He dreams of music, of the voices of persons he knows, of such incidents as might happen at the Home, or some
place in which he lias actually been,
never of incidents in other places or in
other lands.' Of a landscape, a picture,
a tree or a human being he never dreams. Even although he has read descriptions of localities, of natural
beauties, of the appearance of a street
or a city, no idea of what they look like
is formed in his mind, and none conies to him in the fancies of his sleep. There is a class of blind people whose sleeping
impressions are of especial interest
that class of unfortunate people who
become blind when quite young, at a
period when external objects, and the
outward world generally, had just be
gun to make an impression upon them.
Such blind people sometimes, but not always, dream that they can see; but in their vision they see things with the eyes of childhood, and they never
dream of any scene or object except
those which, like a dim recollection,
have remained in the memory from what they actually saw before they became blind. A blind man who was stricken at the age of 5 years and never visited the country, dreams of seeing
city streets, city houses, or city parks,
but never of country scenery. HO STjKKVKS vok this baby.
A woman who is called a lunatic by her husband's family, and who disrespect
fully returns the compliment, has just
prepared a baby's outfit without a single sleeve in it, and regards it with much complacency. The frocks are two
straight pieces of the finest muslin or cambric, with a delicate edging at the top, and a loop running below it through which a ribbon is passed. The under
garments are made on the same-pattern
or lack of pattern, and when baby is
dressed a plain band is wrapped about
his body just under the arms and fastened with a pin. Then he is laid down
on two or three of the pieces of muslin and flannel; one similar piece is laid over him and tied to the upper one be
neath him, the string being drawn mod
erately about the neck. Another piece
is treated in the same way, and so on until each back piece has its answering front, and then his sash is put on ; the
sides of his skirts are buttoned togethe
and baby is dressed. "And," says his mamma, "hit is dressed in clothes of uniform thickness; and if that be good
for me, why is it not for him ? Sleeves
He has some of Miss Nightingale's hos
pital wraps to cover his arms, and as
do not have to worry his life out with
forty other sleeves, he lets mo put those on without any fuss. I can make his
frocks high-neoked or low-necked, as I please, and I can pull them off sideways or loosen the strings at the neck and draw them off, andany way, he's my baby! So!" And then "bis" people are shocked again. If osion Transcript Exact measurements of the oscillations of chimneys have been made. One near Marseilles, France 115 feet high and four feet in external diameter at the top reached a maximum oscillation of twenty inches during a high wind. The man who said that "hope is brighter when it follows fear," has just finished occupying a ohuir iu company with bis wife's b6naet. Chicago Ledger.
JEFF DAVIS' DISLOYAL SPEECH.
The corner-stone of the monument
at Montgomery, Ala., to commemorate
the abortive effort of the slaveholders
to destroy (he Republic has been laid) and perhaps it was fitting that the archtraitor who was the head and center of
that wii-ked effort should have been in
vited to glorify it and mourn over its defeat, to reiterate his treasonable sen
timents, ami to spit out ins venomous
hatred of the American Union in presence of the shouting, yelling crowd of
UHeadierfl aUd "Maialis." Ho has ex
pressed himself with tho rancor th it
might novo uoen expooiou) ana m his frlorificatioii treason has been glorified1
and loyalty dnco more insulted. . Tho spsech of .left' Davis, ox-Presi dent of tho collapsed Confederacy, on
this occasion ought not to pass unnoticed. The Union people and tho
Union soldiers are not yet so far away from the period of the war which this
unhanged traitor precipitated on the country as to forget it or to allow tho
causa for which they touglit to be villified without indienant protest. There
is little in it that he has not said before,
but it is the first time that his treason has been so publicly applauded and sustained, and it adds to tho insults that the demonstration was made on the spot where he took the oath to dsstrov the Union. The sentiments which
he expressed twenty-five years ago atd
those which lie expressed day before yesterday are based upon the same
principle. Then tuey were colored uy exultant anticipations of victory; now by lamentations over defeat. But the treason is the same, and the Jefferson
Davis of 188U stands where the Jeffer
son Davis of 1861 stood. Here is his
position, compactly stated :
JUT inoiKIH. lniUli'l i" lOY am ui wuiwt,
in tri lis and .suffering, 1 haro come to join you iu tho performance of a sacred task to lay tlio
foundation oi a monument at tho cradle of tie Confederate Government which shall commemorate the gallant houk 'if Alabama, who died for their country for slavery, who gave their lives a free-will offering in dofctiwe of tho rights of thoir sires (.to hold slaves won in the War of tho devolution ? and tho Stata-sov-oroientv freodom and independence winch
wore leitus ts an lnnonianceio meir posienry forever. These rights the compact of union
was formed not to destroy, but the better to
prcservo and perpetuate.
"Trials and sufferings." Who pre
cipitated those trials and sufferings on
the ISouth but himself and his cocon
spirators? "Died for then country,'
What country V (Jertaralv not for the
Union. Did thev die for the South ?
The Government was iiot fighting to
take the Mouth away from them, it
was not a war of laud confiscation. Not
an inch of land has been taken away from any rebel. There is not a man in the entire South whose t itle deeds have
beer, disturbed, "The rights won in
the war of the revolution." What rights
wero won in the revolution except the
right to be independent of an island
3.UU0 miles away ; the right to be a tree
and independent nation ; and the right
for idl men to be "free and equal," as set forth in the Declaration of Inde
pendence? What is this State sov
ereignty which ne claims men ot inde
pendence left as an inheritance, ana about which he is continually prating?
'xae State-sovereignty idea means
the human-slavery idea, and it never meant anything else. Since the collapse of the Rebellion and the abolition of slavery the "South" has
said but little about State sovereignty,
Its members of Congress have sys
tematically voted themselves liberal constructionists and grabbed subsidies
and plunged into the .National lreas
urv without hesitation or shame. Be
fore the war a protective tariff was un
constitutional m the eves of the Dem
ocratic South, ltiver and harbor appropriations were unconstitutional.
Even the mails were opened, pur
loined, and supervised by the State.
Such a bill as Blair's, which passed the Senate the other day by the aid of
Southern votes, abstracting seventy
seven millions to substitute for State funds for education, would have been
voted down as unconstitutional. We hear nothing of that kind now. State
sovereignty in practical politics disap
peared with slavery, lor without Slav
ery the South has no interest in the narrow unconstitutional dogma. The
"South" fought to own human flesh and
hold it in bondage; to lash a livelihood
out of the backs of the colored men
to breed human chattels for the market; to buy and sell their mulatto and
octoroon relatives half-brothers, nail-
sisters, half-uncles, half-aunts, and
half-cousins; to perpetuate this brutal
and degrading system: to extend
over the free Territories; and to reopen the African slave trade. This was the sum total of Jeff Davis' idea of Democracy; it was and still is his interpretation of the Constitution. The ninth article of the Confederate Constitution tells what they were fighting for: "That in all territory acquired by the Confederate States the institution of negro slavery shall be recognized and protected, and that the citizens ol any State may carry his slaves into such territory;" and this most outrageous oligarchy the world has ever seen is called "Democracy!" Nothing else is me mt but the restoration of this system of slavery when Jeff Davis has the effrontery to say : "Policy in the absence of magnanimity would have indicated thfit in a restored union or! the Ste.tes there should have been a full restoration of the equality, privileges, and benefits as they had pre-existed." The Montgomery monument commemorates the regret of the slaveholders at the loss of the System of human chattelhood. It represents no achievements except those of treason.
The shouting, yelling crowd welcomed
Jen Davis as the representative ana incarnation of disunion. They honored
him for his treason and paraded their
allegiance to him and his pro-slavery sentiment and his hatred of the Ameri
can Union. The astonished magna
nimity of the American people left him unhanged, and the result is now apparent in this fresh outbreak of ius veaom and its laudation by the South, And yet these disunion howlers hovo ths sublime audacity to accuse Northern men of waving the bloody 3hirt and of keeping alive sectional differences! Chicago Tribune.
Important; When yon visit or leave Now York Oity, save
baggage, expresuage, and t3 oarrUge hire, and stop at the Grant! Union Hotel, opposite
Grand Central Depot
618 rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million
ddllars, SI and upwards per day. European plan. Eiorator. ltestauraOT supplied with the best Horse cars, stages, and elevated rail
road to all depots, families can Uvo bettor (or less money at tho Grand TJnion Hotel than at
any other first-class hotel in tho eity.
Risky, Bui She blot There. "John," she said to the young man
who had been courting her for five long vear8-"John, I sat for my photograph
to-dav. I suppose you want-one "
"O, yes, indeed." "Hv'the wav, John, I had thorn taken
especially for some friends in California, and they want my autograph on the cards. Now, John, I don't know whether to sign my maiUeil name, or
wait a few months until alter l am married. I suppose you do intend to
get married in a few months, don't you, John?"
It was a desperate move, but she won,
and in two months both will be made
one. I7t t laaelp n i a- ueraia.
Tub onlv material for traveling pur
poses which is light, strong, cool, dustresisting and dean-looking is a fine, silky-looking alpaca. It is a thoroughly serviceable stuff for wear, both by land and sea. It is shown in exquisite grays, as well as darker colors.
Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute.
This widely celebrated institution, located at Buffalo, N. v., is organized with a full Staff of ig-htoen experienced and skillful Physicians and Surgeons constituting- tho most complete organization of medical and aura-leal skill in Amorica. for tho treatment
Of all chronic diseases, whothor reuuirlugmcdical or tiurgioal means for their onro. Marvelous success has been achieved in the euro of all nasal, throat, and lung diseases, liver and kidnoy diaoases, diseases of the digestive organs, bladder disease?, diseases peculiar to women, blocd taints and skin diseases, rheumatism, neuralgia, nervous de
bility, paralysis, epilepsy (tits), spermator-
rhn imnotencv.and kindred affections, lbou-
un.ia on eui-ed at their homos through cor
respondence. Tho cure of the worst rupt-
i,M.a ntin tnmars. varicocele, hydrocele, and
Btrlctures is guaranteed, with only a short residence at tho institution. Send 10 cents In stamps for tho Invalids' Guide-Book (168
pages), whton gives an pinioumrn. jvuuroaa. World's Dispensary Medioal Association,
Buffalo, N. Y.
W isv nramle in this world are eo ignorant
that they gain fame as n-swspaper writers.
Jlauericic.
To ebs is human, but von make no mistake If you use Dr. Jones' Red Olo ver Tonic for dyspepsia, costiveuess, bad breath, piles, pimples, ague and malaria, poor appetite, low spirits, or , ' . II... l.f.lnMM 1! ,.m, 1 ll .11.1 liviM
CO cents.
Tv been doing some fine work," as tha prisoner discharged from the house of oorroo-
ttou said.
A luxuriant head of hair adds to beauty
and comeliness. Use Hail's aair itenewor.
Dusrso the deluge Noah was in the habit of
calling his too an ark ang il
Neither mental nor physical labor can be ac-
, iV.W Wlinn tou feel tired, languid.
wearied without exertion, tue mind slow to act,
and requiring groat mental effort you can rest assured that your liver is not acting property, and that nature requires assistance to help throw off impurities Thero is no remedy that will accomplish this so mildly and yet effectually as Pricext Ash Biwebs. A trial will
satisfy you of its merits.
FuUi of writeoui incss: the conscientious
editor.
It is Amazing that any human being should continue to suffer from biliousness, nervous headache, indigestion, or general weakness, when it is as notorious as that the sun is the source of light that Vjneoar Bitters inevitably cures these complaints This medicine is sow everywhere, taken overrvhero, and cures
everywhere. Beader, it will cure you.
Fine two dollars and costs. Finer the
Judge. Bui is the prisoner.
A 50 cest bottle of Dr. Bigolow'a Posihve Cure will promptly and thoroughly euro the worst case of recent couch, cold, or throat or lung trouble. Buy tho dollar bottle lor cbronio
jrieas&ut hi ku.
When you see a man full of liquor the con-
lempiauuu ui a aupiuuio wjs 6i.jo.
ItEMEMDEn! Ayer's Ague Cure is warranted
to cure fever and ague, a never reus.
The devil is a gentleman and will get up and
go it ne is toia nam jonet. A Remarkable Tribute,
Sidney Ourolrandro, of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
writes: "I have used DR. WSL HALL'S BAL
SAM FOB .THE LUNGS many years, with the
most gratifying results. The relieving influence of HALL'S BALSAX is wonderful. Tho pain and rack of the body incidental to a tight
couch, soon disappear by the use of a spoon
ful according to directions. My wife frequently sends for HALL'S BALSAM instead of a physician, and health is speedily restored by
itsjuse."
No opium In PIso's Cure for Consumption.
Cures where other remedies fail. Zoo, "KOVGU OX ITCH."
"Bough on Itoh" euros skin humors, eruptions, nng worm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted
feet, chUblains, itch, ivy poison, naroer s won.
000. jars. "ROUGH ON CiiTAKRH"
corrects offensive odors at once. Complete cure of worst chronio casta; also unequaled a
canrlefor diohtheria. sort throat foul breath.
SOcT ROUGH ON 11XES."
Whv R-iTr Piles? Immediate relief and com
plete cure guaranteed. Ask for "Bough on
Piles." Sure care for itching, protruding,
bleeding, or any form of IMos.
gists or Maiieu.
AtDrug-
PRIGKIY
The Democratic House has had the Senate bill admitting the southern half of Dakota before it ever since the 5th of last February, and has taken no action upon it. It has had another bill before it for some time, dividing the Territory by a north and south line, and has given it no consideration. Now Mr. Springer has introduced a bill for the admission of the Territory as a whole, and it remains to be seen what will be done with the new proposition. It begins to look as if this were a new form of Democratic disunion, and that Dikota is going to be kept out because she would come in as a free State. "Bill" Springer knows well enough that e-fery Western Congressman who should
vote against her admission would be po
ut ically damned. et mm have the courage, therefore, to demand action on his bill, and bring it to a vote. The people would like to know whether Congress proposes to adjourn and keep 5(0,000 people from obtaining a right which has never before been denied.
The Democrats iu Congress are disgusted at the utterances of Jeff Davis, and have telegraphed to the South to put the old fool in a strait-jacket. It if not because there is any disagreement from what he has said, but he is not d: scree t. If there has been a single note of dissent f-om the sentiment he hits uttered, it has escaped us, and wo shall be glad to have oar attention called to it at once.
To Digest Tuloanita
Beqnires acids more potent than tha solvent juices of the human stomach. And yet, in the
form of medicine intended to reform the very evil thay aggravate, to wit, dyspepsia, solids and fluids, irreconcilable In their constituents
that huvo no chemical ottluity one with tha
other, are introduced into it. Are those so-called
rtiTiiniliAa tam-A fltitAnfOttji Minn vulnanita? Pos
itively no I HostotteVd Stomach Bitters, on the otber hand, a simplo medicine, liatmonHnS
in its composition ana reauuy aanuuaui active, and produces ir arked as well ail epofflHiy
.ppreciaoie etiects, because it is a rational iu. ly euited to the stomach. It Is a tonfo in the
true sense, because it harmonizes aid insures regularity of tho operations of digestion. Not tho loagt of the beni'iits which it confers, is a
thorough ropair of the damage lnmctea on tna
unmc-li ty ill-chosen remedies, tor ouious-
ncBs, constipation, malarial compiair rs, rheumatism and Udney taxmbles, it is alike in val-uabia.
Toe Had. "Did you tell me. sir," he said, as he
entered the office of a prominent citizen of Indianapolis, "that wheat would be a dollar a bushel inside of four weeks?"
Why, I presume I did." "Well, sir,
vour four weeks nro un: wheat IS 84
cents and I've lost $3,000 by followiug
your advice." "That's too bad really
oo bad: this is the hiteentn or twen
tieth time I have made a wrong predic
tion on wheat, and I believe I'll give it up. Come around some day next week and ask mo what I think of hops. I always predict a fall of 10 per cent, in hops." Wall Street. Neivs.
"ft olden Medical IMsoovery"
the great blood-pu rider.
A popular air with the ladies "fiweot Buy
and Buy."
A Warning; to Farmers. Every farmer living at any distance from
a physician should at all times be prepared to treat such common but by iio means
simplo complaints as diarrheeis, dysentory, cholera morbus, and cramps. Ti e safest, surest, and quickest remedy for such disorder Is I'eiuiy Davis' Pain Kikleb,
which has never failed to afford relief to
cases of the kind mentioned wlier. properly tried A teaspoonf ul in a dose for adults,
but twenty drops will cure a cm .d of any ordinary trouble of this kind. The medi
cine can be found in every respectable
drug store.
Too-1'okte." as tho horseman ssid to the
irroxessor a periormanuo ou roe piauo.
Free to Ministers, Lawyers, Doctors,
and Teachers.
If van will get your dealer to order from
Vita wholesale drascist one dozin bottle
Wakseb's white wine of tab oybup
ihc beat remedy in the world jor UougM,
Colda, Asthma, vatarrn, ana uonsmnp(in n. I will send two bottles free. Recom
mend to your mends, send name of druggist who gives the order. Hap of Holy Land free with medicine. Address Dr. O.
T). Wakneb, Chicago, ill. All Iruggists.
"I find a ready sale for your Alhlonhoros,
and each customer recommends it to bis neigh
bor." writes C. F. Ximmorman. a druggist of
Terro Haute, Ind., in giving his testimonial to
the merits of the great remedy tor rheumatism,
If afflicted with Sore Eves, use Br. Isaao
Thompson's Eye water, uruggtscs sen iuzoo.
Tkir. Frazor Axle Grease Is the very best.
A trial will prove we are rignr.
Tltc habit of running over boots and shoes
corrected with Lyon's ratent eei sunoners.
OUVnslvc breath vanishes with tha M of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Hcmody. A woman physician is ef no aeoount unless she's killfuL '
nVSPEPSIA la a daozaroua aa wall dhtnta oepplatat If aaxliSSo. it Unda.br. ImpaMna nntrnjoa, and dj-
for Rapid iwouo.
BITTERS
The matorltv of tha Ws of tha human
tcdu arise from a derangement ef tha Liver, affecting both, theetomaehand towels. In order to "ffee a omre, it to wneeenary to remove tha eanee. Irregular and Sluggith atttan of the BawelM, Meadaehe,Btekneeaattheatomaeh,jPat in the Back and Loin; tU., indicate that the Liver U at fault, awl that nature require aeetetanee to imattle thie organ M throw offlmpurltlee. Prtcfcly Asb Bitter ore " eom pounded fur AU purpose. They are mild in their aetfom and efftrtive at a euret ar ptratant le the taiteand taken eailly by both childnm and ad'ultt. Taken according to direction, they area) oafeandpleainnteurefarnympepatm General Debility, laabltnal Constipation, Dlseanea Kidney, etc., etc. Blocks Partfler the are superior to any other medicinal cteaniing the egeten thoroughly, and imparting new life an-i energy to the invalid, Iti a medicine and not mm ltoicatln teni(je. mi mi iMMisT rn latMU mi unm, and uka no other. PXUt:lt, IUX) per Botua. mail ASH BITTERS CO., SALE PROPRIETOR SW lu aaA OHr. eto
CONSUMPTION
I hYO ft poaitlYO rTudy for thB ftWrn Im-m ; br I
sse theuMiii'iaof ctoof tit wartt kind suiaol long luiUomcaPT.Wiftilwl l on4T',0 BOTTLES FBM, locsUicr with VA (eUAOtBTUlTISI on UiU dlittM lOftiif offeror. GUaprealttir O a44r is.
Ohio Improved Chester JittVteUSnK
Send for li:titiiiaoCTai Ian iou breed. atfti-l-M , BUS B. H&yJW -Clvt u O.
"Hough on lists" clears out Ita ts, Hiee. 15
"Bough on Corns" hard or soft corns, bunions,
16o.
Bough on Toothache." Instant relief, loo. WKIXS' HAIR BALSA.-.
If gray, restores to original color. An elegant
dressing, softens and De&utuios. no on nor
grease. A Tonio Eestorative. Stops hair com
ing out; strengthens, cleans, neais acaip. out "ROUGH ON BIXE" PIIXS
Start tho bile, relieve the bilious stomach, thick.
aching head and overloaded bowels. Small granules, small dose, big results, pleasant in oporar
Uon, QOu t aisiuru mt stomacu. kg.
a-PERRy DAVIS"
PAIN-KILLER
16 RECOMMENDED BT
Physicians, Ministers,' Missionaries, Man
agers of Factories, Workshops, Plantations, Nurses in Hospitals in short, everybody everywhere whv has ever given it a trial.
TAKEN INTERNALLY, IT WILL IIB POUND
A NEVEB FAILING CUBE l?OB
SUDDEN COLDS, CHILLS, PAINS
IN THE STOMACH, CH AMPS, SUMMER and BOWEL COXPLAINTS, SORB THROAT, & o. APPLIED EXTERN ALLY,
XT IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE AND BEST
LINIMENT ON EARTH FOB CORING
SPRAINS, BRUISES, RHEUMA
TISM .NEURALGIA, TOOTH. ACHE, BURNS, FROSTBIT, &c.
Prices, 25c, 50c, ant $1.00 prBotQe,
Fob Sale bx all Medicine Dealers, j" Beware of Imitations. -w
nRnpxv
II . w w
TREATED FREIE.
I . TT. ir. GBKEH SONS,
8ne alts for Thirteen Years Fast,
Have treated Dropsy and Us complications with tha most wonderful success i use vegetable remedica, entire: jrhai mleas. Remove all ayPtcnuot dropsy ineiKM to twenty days. Cure patients pronounced hopeless by the beat of
pnyiciana.
two-thirds oi
RROOToai mm i
- sl Bl lsf --"-a I
liUil Ei 191 ii wm
I ; mamm
151 Bel Is! K
HOPSX MALT
BITTERS, If you wMtt Ul be relieved of tho terrible-
-THE
nd oompli
BEST TONIC J etely Cnres Dyspepsia me nrn, llclcbiiic, Taittnf thi
Ontoklr
lj forms, Heartburn, Belchinat, TMtina-tba Food, etc. It enrich nd puriflon uia blaxl.ftlimutatee the appetite, and aids the assimilation of food.
3 aO
that
DHAFF, dunioe.
of the Pe-Mj
Ind.- vm: " I wax n awnnlv ffli(ltd With
IUUIHIU (. t 1 -IJU1U
nnthina? CTlth-Ut. driirL
antra'- iron Bittern tuu cmnplet-iy curea me.
Mm. Oykub
JUVOIA,
taiga
MB. Ohab. C. Baker. FroolHndvUle, Ind., Ma: I nd Bmwn'i Iran Ritrnra for niVinL with
fi-fcUr bB-tit Uin any uwdicin- I arer umhL
HU, UKAIS. O. LiUMlVa., U--H-, AO-., mmjwi " Brown! Iron Bittern entirely cured me of Mm sue of DnpepsuL. I gladly recommend it." Genuine hu -bo ra Trade Mirk end croeeed red anM on wrapper. Take uo other. Made only by BROWN CHKMIOA.1, ?0,. IIALTIMOHK, D,
Catarrh
ELY'S
CREAM
A Gad. - tend is
Ely' Cream jDahn.
had catarrh for
three year. My nose
would bleed. I thought the tores would never heal.
Ely1 Cream JBaim
hat cured me. Mrs.
Ml A. Jackson.
Portsmouth, n. HAY-FEVER
n-.aalaa.lsaa St that BtMl HOMW I
Kctw It will, when taken acooi-tHna; t tiomi, -sure any cause of Hck Warn or Ho'r Stem as ei cleans tb IU ntgem
wtow uu i and feowala, pi not action and iwest aecretions. It ash f.1 , t an.l iria it 're OW. I
nutriment to ererr part. It it the ;
peodleat and wrjlt VeaiBI onr invented for all a oaaes of. t a
aodllrer. J M. Moore, of Fannlneton OA., says: nfltti'lns; from Sick Headahe end avatar toniacb was terrible. Oat hot mm
and slut Hitters cured i
Dc not ret Hops and Malt SB
ronnoea wttn interior
nr eparatio ot
Dffjparaop
Vnr nla hr all .
HQ'S & MALT BITTEBS GO, km,'
jk l ItliS-S WH1KTS, w; will WM ruling- White Mrt, dl1oraedsS WW WK ,m and bands, hind uebed. for 4e. B-
rl3lor03 . lanndried. Hena i c
JUUXMP
1iind!
size of cellar worn (13 to .finches
any m aire you rat
The: DEN SHIRT FACT
Mo, 1 IT North St- Uii
A particle 1 applied in ta:li nostril ands agn-eable
re., oy m ui or m uruKgima. ocuu ur liUOTHKBS. Druggist. Owego. N. Y.
to ueo. Price so era - b.
Circular. au
Nr. r ar,(- Bs s"1. t "SS1 S md Bern KsaraWa eat tm "
n. n win af,
eta. t wrdm 1st te UUmetftm.
oa ll h mm w w
If ran tatSara
Wewaad ttaaaaaa met
lWl.OPHO-08 00. ill w-l U ew Te-
FACE, HANDS, FEET.
It.li Wntirthei. N laBm MS
Uy. FracM. Bai Man, A a.
et.
. all
rjaralaMiMaf, UaW .
Black H. Ba , " S
a. i wise ar.
Fr,.n the first dose .the rartomraldlr dlMP-
pear, uid in ten aaya at wan iwo-tnoas oi au i
torn s c re removed.
lay p-
fiomo may cry humbug without kno'rimj ani'thinf limit it nmtiinbor.it aoea not coat you any in rto
realize the merits of our treatment for yourself. In
leveu, a discharge
PATENTS
' lust tactiot
ts saw Bias v .
H. 8. r. I OST. Patent
ugton, D. Ql opinions a
Attorneys. Washington, D. (X
iucuoua vuisi
ten days the difficulty of breath g In relieved, the tmla. ivQ-iilar. the iirinairr ore ia mad,, to diacharoe
their I'uTi duty, sleep 1 restored, the i well k all or nearly kouo, the strength increased, and appetite made good. We are constantly curing cases if long stand.. Ine cases that hare been tapped a number of times, cn.i a natint dao latad unable to live a week. Give
full In story of rase. Name eex, how long afflicted.
now I amy awonen ana wnere, are uowew
EST8 10
Ten days' treatment furnished free by mail.
Kiillepsy (Fuel positively eureu. If you order trial, sead 10 cents in iitamps to pay poetage. H. H. tJKliEN SONS. M. DSj, 55 Janes Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.
costive.
na hursted and anruca water, ttena tor ires
pamphlet. contaitunK tentimoniais , quetnona, etc.
ElsesoluttV Cure ssatBixcomoMt fclCOlATIPIUS IC.lr.KORTO M roLuo. o.
WhyJUiffer. This Pile Pemade is warranted to cure any ease ot It Mac, Bleodloc of VlceraKd PUea HONIY IJEFUNDSD I have thoa lands ot terti. monialsof pctwafienf cur In 10 to SO days, from Mtltms, Clirgyaat, and leading nrww, A new remedy, and should bi used by every Alan, Woman and Child who suffers the untold agony that Piles cause. Directions: How to prevent Files, on each tube. Dont wait tint have youi druggist order it for you.
Prepaid on receipt of L Addi was,
I Jr. 0. B. MOHOH, Nets, Oils.
All llrngwlsta sell It. Ttdco mo otltt
AlllftBnl ameel Remarkable and
quioa cures. Trial Packages. Consultation and Hooks by Mail F-EEi. Addraas Dr. WARD A CO., Louisiana, Wo. LLig mmmW you ire allowed o n (r(ai of thi'ty daysot the ate of Dr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaic Be It with Electrio Buspet sory Appliances, tor the speed relief sudpermanent cure of Kcnou, beblUty. Imtmtrei ntalUy. and all kindred tjMUi Us. Also for Many other die. e o Conipletar restoration to HeidlVspd, VIgoj !i,T..t.,n,r HiV ta Incnrved. illustrated uam-
T-r..ilI V... AAain-
Without Doubt
Thai; poor fellcrw haa
disei ise of tho Liver or Ki dneys . It is pitiful toseoanuuinetiieb a oo adition.
Ayer's Sarsaparilli
Has relieved and cured dredn of similar oaseo.
John Wylie, SS Moody st., LoweM, Mass. , was troubled with want of appetite, oppre sive weakness, and severe pains In the c-i tall of his back: alt indications of eerioui dcrnngement of the kithxrys and liver. Ayer's Sarsaparilla made him well nan again. Fr. 3. HorpE, Kewaunee, Wis., suffered from bad action of the liver, having terrible headaches, and such pains In bto back he could hardly walk. He was cured by Ayer's Sarrapartlta. Jvi.es Y. Getcheix, St. Louis, 3fo.T mas a broken down man, for seme years, from oo other cause than derangtnnent of tho lit er. He tried Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and scys: " By the blessing of God it has curctl me. I feel young a.-prin. The best that can be said of Ayer's SarsaparO Is n t half good enough."
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aycr Co., Lowell. Wass. tol i by Drusglsta. Price fjl ; all: bcttlea, $t
Sitfeftl
SLICKER
TM FISH BKiWD BLICK u wairsatsa wngry m w. r TT- - s tha tardast ram. The w POiatKI, SU CKCBIe a .l8a Sl S-tt..ttr.aata. B.w,.ra oftedtatloes. Wac..F..i KSr' !itrnd" trajo-m.rk. Ilhut id Catslst ftes. A. Tswaa. aas saag. sasaya a.
mm
WHO IS UNAOQUAINTED WITH THE OEOORAPMY OT THIS OOWITWr,
BEI m T EAAmiHIfSU nio w, tseets ins
i
;ff Vji Jo t ehV
ruir.no rock ISLAND . PACIFIC RAILWAY
By reoaon of ita central position and close reU tlon to all prtacipnl . toos Bastauad Wesbat initial and terrrSrial points, constitute the most impca-tant. nd -ooaa rieSl Unk totSit system or throSrh tranap station wWch invitee andScifr tatea travel and traffla between cities of tb Atlantic mid F Ooarts. ta ateottie favorite and best route to end from points itost ISorOtum (-4 .. anmutins nntnts VB wit.. N irthweat and Southwest.
TbeBook Island system Includes in its inain line and brwehea, CM JolieS Ottawa, LaSaUe, Pooria- Oenoaeo, MoUne and Rock MsnitolU Duvennort. Muscatine, Wns hi nston, Fairfl Jld, Otturnwa, ,Oeuuooaa
Liberty, Iowa. City, Dee. Moines, Indimioia, wmteiw Atianuc, : J Vii,.vria nihra nn-i Ocuncil Blufffi. in Iowa:
Trentonroameron and Kansas City, in Missouri; Leavenwortt and A tc OO. IriKansaai Albert Lea, Mlnrieapolte and St. JaulUta Mtonta; ttertcj-m ia Dakota, and hundreds of intermediate cities, towns, villages and THE GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE Qui wai ees its patrons tnat sense of perse rial security afforded by a sMa tt loroujrnly blaated road-bed; smooth tracks of continuous steelcaU; tWbr BtaayTjuilt culverts and bridges; rolliiisr stock as near pwfectlnp m
DUlnan e can ntase n, wio Beuti.y tjr,a w u ou ww wo, j and air-brakes: and that exactlna cUaclpUne which grooms tbe
orjora on or au lis Bins, visiter bubuiiuuw v a
all connecting points in Union Depots, and unsurpaeeea 1.. ... 4. as ( aaan i-vavs TeVilllrirVl Ari
The Fast Express Trainsbetween Chicago and the Missouri ,Wvw -avrej
posed of well ventilated, nneiy upnoisterea uay t-wacneo, aiagimioi ,rsi Palace Sleepers of the latest deeiam, and etunptuotw Dtaina Cwijta. .1.1mm v wvb- ana la mA lalmirMV AA n. OQoA IaE t WS
Appetite, and Health on both." Between Chicago and Kansaa CRtr
Atchison, are also run to "jejeorawa rcac ttuj wi , , THE FAMOUS ALBERT LEA ROUTE
Is the direct and favorite line between Cihicajro. aufl Minneapolis and at Fatal. where connections are made in TJnion Depotii-for all points in the Terrltrts
f-aat
and 30Cr
wSStl Br C
mad
and British Provinces. Over this route,
Express Trains are run to the)
watering places, summer resorts, plcturesquo localities, and hunting noA intr gi-ounds of Iowa and Minnesota. It Is ah jc. tho most dee table rotxto to tha
rich wheat fields and pastoral lands or interior juo ota. HMH another DIRECT LIMB, via Seneca f nd Kankakee, baa been .
DeitWOBU nswpuru nswn, niuuu u, vy,u b . uu ainwo, ouu awaiaajrani ami Ooonoil Bluffs, Kansas City, Minneapolis and iit Paul and intertnetllate paio,t For detailed Information see Maps and Folders, obtainable, aa -wan mm Tickets, at all principal Ticket Offices in tho United States and Cayinrtn; or by addreaslng R. R. CABLE. E. ST. JOHN.
President and General Manager. Chic 190. Generll TIcHet aad Faasenner Sgeat, I
MUSTANG Survival of the Fittest.
A ViWIlT MKDICim THAT HAS MAUD
MILUONS DBBIKS U TUBS!
A BALM FOB VERT WOTJWIt OF
M A AS- B EAST I
The Oldest ft Best Liniment
EVER MAP IK AM RICA. SALES LARGER THAN EVER.
The Mexican Montana- T.lnlmnnt ba.
been known for more titan thirty-five
ears as the best of all Liuitncitts, for ian and Beast. Its sales tn.,iuv m,.
larger than ever. It omw when all others fail, and penetrates skin, tendon and mnsole, to the very hot. Gold
every wu.
FOUTZ'B MOII8C AND CATTLI tHWO
lSi
Boil-ra will die at OouaBonQr Lmm 1 ntL I ' Fout Powdi UHMI IB t-BMri.
Fr-iti I'AwdAi--rlllnitv snd ra-VCili
Foam Powder wui prcTnt Gin nr
-QaiE-m rovaen wi stt cr em twentjr per
Font s Powrirtra vtll er ir nrv
Dibka to wti'.iih Hoi?-m ami attleiit iM.
Foirrx! Powiwbs will t 8AtMrijlitW. tokt eTerywhcra.
tor
Beat, B salaat to Tike, S d
ttve
Also mod w Cold ta tb Read, Beadarbe, Bay Fever, dx. Hcenta.
QUICK
OPIUM
sa laa.hle us ir maaili n nrt nil talis
SI an hour for el et sex. tfUM
sanmea tree, send st.tnip ami secure a ul asant sum ars btass
ne;t, Mertm Mi's t,(rwm Chicago, Ul.
Hnblt. ttaleMy awt rtleea. r etired t but k' CariMaH toilelied anil ft es tr,l 4W sSa hune,tnvesNRstora. TtltrtA( 5 K jftV Coar-AKT. tt41TSUtt. bad
..He, mo99.
yesa w
rVrltinc to AoveMaara, frisssae tho AjyasrUaessait ia t asa-
s .
