Bloomington Progress, Volume 20, Number 14, Bloomington, Monroe County, 2 June 1886 — Page 4
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HIO ft MISSISSIPPI
4 Solid Dsity Trains (each way) between cixayyATi axjd st. louis.
2
Solid Daily Train (each way) between CI&'CIXltATI AJVD LOUISVILLE
Solid Dailv Trains (each wavl between ST. LOUIS AND LOUISVILLE.
GENERAL LOGAN'S BOOK.
tTkt Great fonspiraey Its Origin and HisUrjr" Secession the Result f a Deliberate Plot.
HO
Chaage of Cars for All
Clam of Passengers. Firni Class. Second Class and Emigrant Passengers, iiU carried on Fast ExpressTrains, consi- ting of Palace Sleeping Cars, elegunt Parlor Coaches and comfortable Dag Coache. all naming THBOUQH WITHOUT CHANOE. Only 10 Hours Time Bitween Cincinnati and St Louie, or St Louis and Louisville. ' But Four Hours tSf Between Cincinnati and Louisville. the Ohio a, Mtsolswlppt aVwajr is the only Line between (St. IiOBis and Cincinnati Voder one management, running all it trains through "SOLID," and in consequence is tha only recognized Brat elaie route between those cities, its Easy Grades, Its Splendid Motive Jfower, Steel Rails, Stmight Track, and Solid Road Bed Enable the O. & M. to make fasten ttage time than any other Western Road. K3$Ask for Tickets via O. A M. Ky "ia
For sale by agents of connecting
East, West, fcorth and south. W. "W. PEABCDY, President and Gen. tTat. W. a HHATTUC, Gen. mas. Agt. CI 3 CIV If ATI, OHIO.
Tn Solid South. Defeated at the Foils and
la Ansa, Finally Secure Control at the Country by Subverting Republican Forma of Government.
laws-mil Kmiwmtt Cmcaso tetfey m w 1
Twe Daily Fast Express TraiaaiaEaeh iHreetiea Between Chicago and Louisville, Connecting closely with the night and day traina out of Chicago oo the Great Tkrough Trunk Unas Vnit and Northwest, and with tbe morning and evening through trains cat of Louisville on the real Southern and Southwestern Linos. This Popular Route now runs the most com fortable coaches ocd Parlor Cars on day trains, end Pullman Sleepers on niglit trains, and has only one change of cars to all the principal towns and c ties in the North, South, East, or West. Sell Through Tickets over all the various crossing and connecting raiixo&d lines, ind cheek baggage through to passengers' destination, avoiding the disagreaeMe annoyances of recheeking. toe danger of missing direct connections, and the expense and worry of tiresome lay-over on tBojour. "ow-rste. Land Explorers', and round-trip 'Winter and Summer Tourists' Excursion Tickets on sale iu their respective seasons. Will cheerfully give travelers full information in regard to be best connections, tbe fewest and easiest chanpos, and the most comfortable and pleas nt route ; and wIU furnish Railroad Ifaps, Time-TableS and 'folders, containing much nsefnl information to travelers, on application to . TIL a BALDWIN, carter perking. Gen. Pass. Agent, Station Pass, agent Chicago, lit BtoominRtm Ind.
ORCHARD HOUSE! S. IX Orchard & Son PROPRIETORS.
From the Chicago Tribune. "The Great Conspiracy Its Origin and History," bv General John A. Logan (A. B. Hart &' Oo.), is the work of a man who is thoroughly in earnest. Others have forgotten that rebellion was a crime; ho has not. Otters have drugged their memories that they might not remember the deliberate conspiracy that caused the Civil War the sacrifices of that great straggle, the unspeakable infamies and cruelties of treason in arms, and of more cowardly Copperheads at the rear; the pretended submission of rebel leaders at the South; the campaign of assassination by which the Constitution and the laws have been suppressed in Southern States, and the people therein deprived of a republican form of government; General Logan has not. Gen. Logan has been too much in earnest to polish his sentences. There is no pretense of literary finish, no effort at fine writing, in this grim, soldierly recital of fact; and yet there is at times real eloquence of expression, and throughout a remarkable wealth of information marshaled with the power of one who feels that others must share his own intense convictions if he can but get the same facts before them. Gen. Logan begins by a history of to origin of slavery in this country, with characteristic frankness he states his belief that the fathers of the Bepublic were blameworthy for consenting to what have been called to compromises of the Constitu-
Briefr reviewing the adoption of the
nntinaiinti of 1787. and the Louisiana pur
chase by Jefferson, he points out the Act
tot Mr. Jefferson coum not nave oeeu unaware that the acquisition of territory thus
affitcterl insnrad the extension or Biavery.
The history of the Missouri struggle and
comtromise is briefly stated; and there fol
lows in the second chapter a strong review of the early history of the country in' the matter of taxation. It is shown that the
first tariff on imnorts, "approved by Presi
dent Washington July 4, 1789" a date not
without its significance was, next to the
act escribing to oath used in organizing to Government, to first act of the first Federal Congress. Besistance to the protective polinj , on the
part of the South, did not begin until comparatively a late date; even the act of 1816, it ia shown, was voted aoainst by New En
gland, and ably advocated and voted for by the South "the twenty-five Southern votes
cast for it havh jr been more than sufficient . . , . 1 J ,1 1
to nave securou us asitmi umi uioj au inclined-" The orioin of State-rights doc
trine is next reviewed, and it is shown that Mr. Jefferson, though attached to the American system of protection, unwittingly played into the hands of the free-traders
by drawing up tneiamous Jvenracay resornrkrns of T8.
Tne annexation of Texas, tbe war with
Mexico, and to- defeat of Mr. Clay are hriaftv reviewed: and it is shown that the
compromise of 1850 was quickly followed
by attempts to organize the Territory of Nebraska in violation of the Missouri compromise. There follows a very full account of to meat debate between Mr. Douglas
and Mr. Jjlncoin, in wmcn, notwithstanding
Oppastte the Depot, BloaiaJBgtaa,
BP- BoPatns-wBl a spans s i
Resident Dentist.
Dr. J. W.
CRa.N.
Office in the New Block, np-staira, over
C lie's Book Store. All work warrants.
tion and belief which everywhere pervaded
the nation when rebellion was conquered by the legions of the Union and whioh especially pervaded the South."
.But lilt) old lenders soon oegiiu iu iu their powo, and were "unfortunately too well aided by the mistaken clemency and magnanimity" of tbe Bepublicnn party in
hastily removing tne political aisaoiuues vi those' leaders." Besistanco to reconstruction and to the constitutional amendments intended to garner the fruits of tho war continued without hesitation until "the Mississippi plan" at last succeeded in making
the south solid, tnus:
"The plan was this: By tho use of siiot-
guns and rifles and cavalcades of armod white Democrats in red shirts riding around
the country in doad of night, whipping prominent Republican whites and nogrovs to death, or shooting or hanging them if
thought advisable, tmoh terror would tall
upon tho llepublicou colored voters that
they would Keep away irom vne pons, uu consequently the white Democrats, nildeterred by such influeudos, and, on the contrary, eager to take advantage of tliom, would poll not only a full vote, but a majority vote, on all questions, whether involving mere election of Democratic officials or otherwise; and, where intimidation of this or any other kind should fail, then a resort to bo had to whatever devices would bo found necessary to make a fraudnlentconnt
and return, and thus secure a Democratic triumph; and furthermore, when evidences of these intiniiJa ions and frauds should be presented to those people of the Union who
believe in every citizen or inis iree nopuu-
lic having one free vote, and that vote fair
ly counted, then to 'laiujli tne compuunis out of court with the cry that such stories are not true, are 'campaign lies' devised solely for political effect,' and are merely the production of Republican 'outrage mills ground ont to order.
"This plan was first thoroughly tried m
Mississippi, and has honco been called the 'Mississippi plan.' So magically effectual was it that, with variations adapted to locality and circumslances, this 'Mississippi plan soon enveloped the entire South in its
mesnworK or irauo, ouruantv, wm muwu.
The massacres and other outrages, while
methodical, were remittent, waveliko sometimes one Southern State, sometimes another and occurring in years of hot political conflict until one after another ot those Sta'es had, by these crimes, been
again brought under the absolute control of the old rebel leaders." Briefly touching on the attempt to buy the Presidency in 1876, and upon the potency of the tariff agitation in securing Democratic defeat in 1880, the nuthor mentions the result in 1884 in these words: "At last, after an exciting campaign, to Presidential election of 1884 was held, and for the first timo since 1856 the old freetrade Democracy of the South could rejoice over the triumph of their Presidential candidate. "Great was the joy of tho Solid South! At last its numberless crimes against personal freedom and political liberty would mnn a nanamna hnrvpst- At last rjartldDa-
tion in rebellion would no more bo regarded as a blot on the political escutcheon. At last commensurate rewards for all the long years of dishonorable waiting, and of hard
work in mght-ndmgs, and nouse-ournuiBB, and 'niotrer' whinviinos. and 'niccrer' shoot
ings, and 'nigger' hangings? and ballot-box stuffings, and all the other dreadful doings to which these old leaders were impelled
by a sense of solid Southern patriotism, and pride of race, and lust for power, wnnld come, and come in profusion.
"Grand places in the Cabinet and foreign
missions ior tne oiu reoeis oi aisuucuuu, now chiefs of the 'Solid Southern' con-
sniracv. and for those other able Northern
Democrats who had helped them during or
. . . - . , - . t . i since me rceeiiion: iub uuuauiawo nwww
antnorsstrongTosnipior mr. xuk- , . stomces with
"""SSJtXT rSe out stint for the lessSr lights-all this, and Lincoln convinced his judgment Xhnshe The W-hidden liaht
. . . , . . t I of a fflorious dav was about to break."
-nut agB P"-" HU" In the doting chapter.it is shown that the was so far from settling the public nvmd . f . & k state
and public conscience, naa me contrary ei- f;i , . that a
feet." It added to to ferment which the "
ErTTnA rtrrXrfre toexist in a part of the States; that there especially those of Sonth Carolina were , RMic where part of the pao-
ftttnriihny un so grave auu and the rest are kept StlJfttS! m subjection by terrorism; that aU rights
aaaw vjruuvuf " j Mr
BASE-BALL.
Detroit Leading the Race for the League Championship, with Chieigo a Good Second.
In tbe American Association, I3t, Louis Still in th9 Lead Miscellanuous Base Ball Noto3.
The clone of the fourth wofk of the league season found the Detroit nine still in the lead, with Chicago a close second, New York third, St. Louis fourth, Philadelphia fifth, Boston sisfh, Kansas Cily seventh, and Washington eighth. Detroit has been playing great ball, not only at the bat, but tut ir fielding has been almost perfect. Chicaaohas three postponed games to plav, aid Detroit one, which, if both clubs win faem all, would leave them a tie for the penuaut, while New York and Philadelphia ara not out of the race by lorn odd. In the American Association St. Louis maintains her old place in tho leal, with Pittsburgh a roo-.I second, th' Athletics, Brooklyn, md Cincinnati tied for third oa games won, Baltimore one gau.e behind them, Louisville one gam-! behind Balti more, and the Metropolitans bringing up tho rear. The attendance has kept up in numbers, cad bids fair to outnumber any previous season. The following schedules show tho standing of the clubs at the close of the fourth week of the season: THE NATIOSAL LEAGUE. Post-
Clubs Won. Lost, poneil
Cbicoso ..
New York Detroit
Philadelphia, fit. Louis
Boston Washinirton . .
Kansas Cilv
Won. .. n .. 10 .. 16 .. o
7 3 9 10 13 12 9
THE AMERICAN ASSOC1ATK S. Games
Clubs wen.
Athletic W
Baltimore 12
Brooklyn
Cincinnati.
IiOUtSVlllO.... 11
Metropolitna
Pittsburg 15
St Ixrais i
Ga.nes
lost.
10 IS 10 16 16 16 13 10
GHASTLY BASE-BALL.
The Lime-Kiln Club. When the meeting had been opened in dno form Brother Gardner said :
"It has bin suggested by seberal mem
bers dat die club orter her a watchword. We started out wid one, but it
some how got lost in de bushes an noliody eber wcaat back to look fur it. "While I has no pertickler objeckslran to a watch-word, my experience wid
'm has tauirht me dat dav has got to
put up in a good deal of snijar to bo of any 'count.
Libert v or D eath am a ood watcii-
word, if picked at de right season of de year, but it won't prevent butes from wearing out nor ohillin' from cryiu' fur bread.
"I once knowBd a man who took ae
watoh-word of 'Dar Am Boom at de
Ton He kent it in his pocket all day
mi' put it under his pillar at night. In
two y ars he wan in ae poo nouse. tie found room on de top floo'.
"I knowed aaoder man who 'doptett
de watchword of: 'Neber Despair.' It hit him exactly. When his wife was
b'aifut, lus olulren hungry, an' ms rent two months behind he put on a smilin' face an' thought of his watch-word. He sat on de fence in de summer, an sot by de saloon stove in de white, an' do las'
heard of him he was in lail fur six
months fur pick in' up property belong-
in' to anoder man.
"It ain't in de motto so ranch as in de -. , , , , , XT .1 ,
man, xou Kin anout: -upwtirti an wu-
ward !" an' still go down hill all de time. While I has no intenshun of bein' per
sonal, I would iiuggest de follerin' personal watchwords:
"Samuel Shin : 'Let Polio, Alone "Whalebone Howker: 'Sell Off Some
o Yer Dogs.' "Pickles Smith: 'Laziness am de dosh to State Prison.'
"Trustee Pullback: Domnnwlio libs
off his nayburs tihouldn't growl ober de faro.' . .
"Rotunda Jackson: 'De man who has too much gab am wuss off than a dumb man.' " De subiiek am one which will keep,
an' any of you who am deeply interested
kin bring it up at ae next raeenn . Free Press.
The mother of Gen. McPherson receives a pension of $50 a month, and
that amount is also paid to the widows
of twenty-six deceased generals of the
late war HachelmaB, BJchardson, Wallace, Plunier, Stevens, Baker, Whip
ple, Sumner, Bedwell, Harris, Berry, Lovell, Anderson, Canby, Thomas, Heintzleman, Stanley, Mitchell, Casey,
Taylor, Bossean, Custer, Jfrencn, 11amsey, and Warren. The widows of Ad
rniralsWood, Bejmolds, Hooffe, Bell,
Davis, Window, Paulding, Bodgers, " Spotts and Goldboro, and of Commodores Galliigher, Frailey, McCanley, McGarver and Qoest of the navy receive a idmilar amormt, as do. the widows of Colonels Harris, Delaney, and Twiggs of the marine corps. The only widow of it civilian drawing a pension is Mrs. A. B. Meacham, whose husband was a chic f of the Modoc Peace Commission, and was crippled for life in the massacre of l73, when Gen. Canby was killed. She receives a pension of $30 per month, granted by Congress in 1883. The pension of $2,000 a year that has been granted Mrs. Hancock is the largest paid to the widow of any soldier, except Mrs. Grant, who receives the $5,090 a -year granted to all the widows, of Presidents, Mrs. Polk, Mrs. Tyler and Mrs. Garfield. The
widow of General and ex-Senator
Shields receives the next largest sum
81.200 a year, eranted to tier by a
xtecial act of Congress in 1879.
A HOREiBts deed of blood committed
near Girgenti gives an illustration of the use of the knife in the Island of
Sicily. Two butchers, father and son,
of the name of Irulehcato, .who kept
shop in that town, not long since took two brothers named Alfonso and Gio
vanni Cannetoni into partnership.
Before long the Cannetonis began to . trade in lambs' carcasses separately on
their own account, and disagreements arose, which ultimately led to a collision between Baldassare Indelicate and Alfonso Cannetoni They drew their butchers' knives from their belts on each ..other. Alfonso aimed a well-
directed blow at Baldassare. He
parried it with his left arm, which was cut to the bone, and at the same instant drove bin knife into the heart of Alfonso,
who fell dead on the spot. At that moment a young son of Alfonso, aged
19, came up with a bludgeon to his
father's assistance. Baldassare struck
him to the ground, and then cut his throat across "as be would have slaughtered a sheep." Mad with rage, Baldasnsre then rushed into the shop, and tailing Giovanni, the younger brother of Alfonso,, bv surprise, killed him with, a slash across the abdomen. Turning then to leave the shop he inflicted a serious wound on a person just entering. All tliit occurred in the space of four minutes, the result of the collision being three persona killed and two wounded. ' The papers are searching for the man who is always ready for an emergency. The woman always in waiting for an offer will be found first. w-Gtycago Ledger,
the eyes of the world for the contemplated
secession ox tne Slave Diaiea irom me Union. Gen. Logan's work is in no part stronger ton in the overwhelming array of proof that Recession was to result of. deliberate
and long-meditated conspiracy, having for its nlt'iya end to establishment of a separate aristocratic government, in which to detested idea of equal rights should have no place, and of which free trade should be to corner-stone. Even to those who were active in public affairs in those days the recital will come like a revelation, so strongly does the author group facts which all remember, but only as isolated events facts which many have forgotten, and other facts which are now for the first time made public Mr. Buchanan is not regarded as. a conscious tool of to conspiracy; of him it is said: "But a weak and feeble old man still suffering from the effects of to mysterious National Hotel poisonino was now in the
Executive chair at the White House. Weilmeaning, doubtless, and a Union man at heart, his enfeebled intellect was unable to see, and hold firm to, the only true course. He lacked clearness of perception, decision
of character, and nerve. He knew secession was wrong, but allowed himself to be persuaded that he had no constitutional power to prevent it."
xne persnHeuii rejtrcuim uj. wuiuumise by the Southern leaders is effectively described: and. after showing to nature of
the Crittenden and peace Congress compro
mises, each a complete surrenaer ox au vital points, the writer says: "To spurn such propositions as these with all to concessions to the slave power therein contained was equivalent to spurn
ing any and all propositions tnat coma possibly be made; and by doing this the seceding States placed themselves as they perhaps desired in an utterly irreconcil
able attitude, ana nence to certain eiifiii, which had not entered into their calculations, weakened their 'cause' in the eyes of many of their friends in to North, in the border States, and in the world. They had become implacables. Practically consider
ed, this was their great miBiaae. The account of Mr. Lincoln's inauguration and his touching appeal to the patriot-
of the people is followed by a passage
in which to deep feeling of to writer is shown: ..
"How to great, and just, and kindly brain, in to dim shadows of that awful first night at to White House, must have searched up, and down, and along the labyrinths of history and 'corridors of time'
everywhere in the past for any analogy for excuse for the madness Of this secession
movement and searched in vain.
"With his grand and abounding faith in God. how Abraham Lincoln must have
stormed the very gates of heaven that night with prayer that he might bo tho means of securing peace and union to his beloved but
distracted country! How his great heart
must have been racked wiui the altercations
which the Constitution intended to guaran
tee to the people are now, and for years
hnve been, persistently denied in certain
States: and that the Constitution makes it
the duty of Congress to guarantee to every
State a republican torm or government, which it has not done.
The closing thoughts may best be given in Gen. Logan's own words: "Were Abraham Lincoln able bodily to
revisit the United States to-day, how his keen gray eyes would opeji in amazement to find that manv lceitimate fruits of our
Union victory had been filched from us; that
save the honorable lew wno, accepting tne legitimate results of the war, were still honestly Btrivine for the success of principles
harmonizing with such results, and inuring
to the general welfare tney wno strove with all their might to wreck the Govern
ment were now throuch the fraudulent
and forcible restriction of voters in their'
right to vote at the helm of the state;
that those who souirht to nun the nation
had thus wrongfully usurped its rule; that
free trade after "running amncK oi panic and disaster from the birth of the republio to the outbreak of the rebellion, with whose
failure it dionld naturally have expirea-
was now reanimated and stood dofianthr threatening all the industries of our land; that all of his painstaking efforts and (hose of the band of devoted patriots who stood by him to free the Southern slaves had mainly resulted in hiding from sight the
repulsive chains of enforced servitude un
der the outward naro ox rrocaom; mai tue
old black codes had simply been replaced
by enactments adapted to tho new
conditions; that tno oia system ui
African slayery had merely been succecaea
bv the heartless and callinc system
or African peonage; mat mo sacriuces
made bv him including; that of his martyr
dom had to a certain extent been made in
vain; that all the sacrifices, the sorrows.
the snfferiucs of this Nation, made m blood,
in tears, and in vast expenditure of time
and
certain
to bo sure, was saved but saved to be
measnmbly perverted from its grand pur
pose; "that the power which animated rebellion, and which was supposed to have
expired m the ' last ditch, with 'no Jjosi CauBe,' had, with political legerdemain and jugglery, with violence, been regained; that the time had actually como for patriots to take back seats, while unrepentant rebels come to the front: that the Republic still lived, but only by sufferance, wilh the hands
of Southern oligarchs about its palpitating
throat a Bepublic, not such as he expoctted. where all men are equal before tho law,
and protected in (heir rights, but where the rights of a certain class are persistently trampled under foot; that the people of the Northern, Middle, aud Western States, observing nothinc beyond their own
vicinage, so to speak, aud, finding that
each of their own States is still republican
in its form of government, persistently and
perversely shut their eyes to tne election
As a rule, says the New York Herald, the
young doctors attached to the city hospitals
are ambitious ana uevotea to me sumy m
their profession. Thev are alsa human,
and when they h ive an hour to spare they
like to sue ml it ia healthy exercise, in
their eollo.tre davs most of them were ad
mirers of the national game, and when luck and ttlent have given them a hospital practice they seek further practice in tho nnnnlar soort Nearly all our city hospi
tals have more or less ground attached
where the staff can play "fungo" or "catch-
Gouvertieur Hospital cannot lay ciaiin j
nnv nlav-cround at all. Its situation pre
cludes the possibility of the enjoyment of
such a luiury. Xhe absence or me practice grounds does not, however, dampen
he ardor of tho house staff for the came
visitor to that institution lately came to this conclusion. It was 5 p. m., aud the hard
and patience-trying work of the bouse and disnensar were over for the day. The
doctors adjourned to their room in the top
Boor, away from the waras. a game oi
base-ball began. There were only three
donors; taerefore there were on lypiicner,
striker, and catcher. But tney piayea enine all :he. same.
Un, ye or the national ueague, wubv
game was there! rne Dat. was a remur or thigh bone of some adult and defunct member of tho human race, and the pitcher said
ihn hall was made from an epithelioma
taken from the ginglymus joint ar hinge of his mother-in-law's jaw, tightly rolled up
in a surgical bandage, liacn took me oa in turn and "strikes," "balls," aud "fouls" were called as in a regular game. When he who wis related to the ball by marriage took the bat a satanic smile stole
over his tace, ana irom tue way ne puuuuvu that ball one would think he bora no goodwill toward the original owner. In this maimer almost noiselessly this novel game of base-ball went on till a shrill whistle like that of o. boatswain reverberated through the haUs, followed by a voice, "Ambulance !" . .
That settled the came. Quick as a Hash
the striker picked up his cap, slid down the
elevator table, ana away rouaa me uiuuulanco on a "hurry call."
BASE-HITS.
Fob thirty vears Dr. 0. Fawcett baB been physicifin of the 1'nion Protestant Infirmary, Baltimore, Md., and his publiKhed opinion is that helms used Red Star Cough Cure most effectively in curing obstinate coughs and in treating consumption. Price, 2D cents. A suiisCH limit advertises for "A plain (rirl to cook." Ho proiiablv was afraid he would be banged If ho cooked a pretty girl.
Hon. .Iamkh Haiilan, ex-Vice-Chin-cellor, Louisville, Ky., says he uses St. Jacobs Oil, that it is a mo t extraordinary and absoluto euro for rlieum.iiisiu, and kindred ailments, and that every family should have it. Long Live the Grand Duke. A German school teacher was instructing his pupils ho'w to act when tho Grand Duke should pass through
on tho railroad, an event which was to
occur noxfc dav.
"Heinembir, children.," said the pcdng-gup, "that as soon as the train
arrives vou are to veil as loud as you can: 'Long live the Grand Duke!' until
ho loaves.
Next dav when the Grand Duke
arrived at' tho station, and ftraoiously
bowed from the platform of the special car, tho whoolirhildronriado tho welkin
woarv bv vellinir:
"Loii-i live the Grand Ptiko until he
leaves I" 7V.iv.s Hijlinaa. "Fire-proof Paper May Be Made,"
savs a scientific exchnnsre, "from a pulp.
nnisiinc of one nan voirctable liber, two
parts asbestos, one-torn pare uorax, auu iino lil'tli nart nlum." It Is a pity Ihttt such
facts as iho one foiloivinjr cannot l.e writ-
ton, printed, or otherwise preserved, upon some sort oi imle'ti-uctitilo paper. "My wife suffered seven years uml was bodriddon.
tr.n " euid w. K. Hii'-stis. oi l-.miioria, Kan
sas; "it number oC pttysiciuns failed to help her. l:r. 1 lorec's 'O'.lden :. edieal IMseovory'
cured tier." A1J druggists sell this rjmedy.
Everybody ougnt to Keep it. it omy nouus i trial. ,
What a Change!
A fow short weeks aero that young srlrl was
tho porsontllcation ot health, vigor, and beauty, 'lho blush upon her cheeks rivaled that of the rose; her stop was light and buoyant, her every movement was a revelation of perfect physical health. Yet now she ia pallid and haggard, and her superabundant vitality has g-ivon place to a strange dullness and lassitude. What has caused this chungo? Functional Irregular
ities, which can be cured by lr. werco a
"Favorite Prescription," a remedy to wniou
thousands of women te-day owo their livec All druggists.
Tan anv connection bo shown between the
day rate of gold and tho nitrate of silver?
T.vnx'K Patent Heel Stiffener. the only inven
tion that will make old boots as straight as now.
Piso's ncmody for Catarrh is agreeable to
use. It is not a liquid or a snua. ouo.
Red Star TRADE VV MARK. AughAre SBBBBaia0aIftLnaBBBv
and Polei
oltrfefcf
jn-ea from Opiates, JBmeUat
SAFE. SURE. PROMPT.
250
MALT
When Is the "winter of discontent?" must be after a fall in prices.
The Chieasos have not lost n game this
season in which McCormick pitched.
Thomas Yobk. an old League player,
has been appointed an official umpire in tho
American Association.
The Chicagos have the largest number
of "stolen bases" to their credit ot any League dub to date.
The Detroits are. undoubtedly, pist at present playing the best ball in the league. They are making a greater number of hits, and fewer errors, than any other club.
Tm Detroits have not lost a came or
postponed a game on the home grounds this season, playing twelve consecutive games.
A most- remarkable teat in oase-oaii auuuw.
f'oMisifEY. of the St. Louis Maroons,
was reci ntlv fined $225 for "sassing" the
umpire. Miiwouri always was n great State for garden "sass," and now seems to be producing a very high-priced article of baseball "sass."
A retired baseballist, of some litertry
skill, was asked to write au epitaph tor a man who had just died, after marrying his third wife. The ex-batter produced the
following terse but expressive sentiment:
"Out on third."
Krn Vnmn mtwn it as his opinion that
rhA AVashinotons are a better team and will
have a rmch higher place in the race than
most neonle now cive them credit for. Nio
treasure, had, in some degree and in a-s n pretty good judge, and his good opinion tin sense, been useless; that the Union, I ought tc- inspire the new club to greater ex-
r.t Wn, anil fnmhndiniy nt lmslfnln s I terrorism practiced in the solid South, by
.-i . " , . I - 1 1 - . l , ! 1 I ...l.iV. , r; A.-. 1 i .1 t-in( llAl-T! RfrifAK
anuouuuE. AnxMjtuuj no iuu jiu v luvmevi i wuivu mu wawiu ww..,.. - ------ -
were ana are roiiuneu uy meso cuubmuuiu. oligarchs into one compact and powerful political mass, ever ready to be Lurlod in and ont of Concn ss. atraiust the best in
terests of the nation sixteen States, all
republican' in form, but many of them
desnolisms m substauco sixteen Mates,
misnamed 'democratic,' many of them ruled not by a majority but by an oligarch-
ridden minority sixteen Mates leagueu
handed, bound solidly together as on'?
o-1-ear. eontrollinir oliiarchv. to hold, in it
merciless and selfish hand's, tho balance of
power within this republican Union; and
that these confederated Southern Sta'es are now actually able to dictate to all the other Stales of the Union the 'particular
man or men to whose role tho nation must submit, and tho particular policy or policies which the nation must adopt ami follow! " 'What next?' vou ask' What next?'
Alas, it is not difficult to predict! Power
IbwIakhIv imined is alwavs mercilessly uretl
Power usunied is never tamely surrendered.
The old French proverb that 'Revolutions
never go backward' is as true to-day as wln-n it was writtt n. Aln ady wo see tho signs of
oreai. nrenaration throunh the Solid Mouth.
Air ady we hear the shout of partisan hos 8
marsh lied behind the leaders oi uisanneti
Rebellion, in order that the same old politi
mil organization which bronoht distrops upon
this land shall acam control the uovermeut.
Already the spirit of former aggressiveness
is defUntlv bestirring Us if. i no oia cniei
tains intend to take no more chances. J hey
feel that their groat conspiracy is row assured of success inside the Union. They
hesitate not to declare that the power once
held bv them, and temporarily lost, is re-
earned. Like the Old Man of tbe Sea,
they are on top, and they mean to keep
the; if toy oau
tor to light of to morrow, that he might gather from the press the manner in which Sis inaugural had been received. Not that he feared to North but the South. How ! would to wayward, willful, passionate South receive his proffered olive-branchy'' The latter part of Gen. Logan's book, only two chapters of twenty-three pages in all, is devoted to the history of the country since the war and to the present situation. The thirty-seventh chapter begins thus And now, to war.having ended in the defeat, conquest, and capture of those who. inspired by to false teachings of the Southern leaders, had arrayed themselves in anas beneath the standard of the rebelBon, and fought for sectional independence against National Union, for slavery against freedom, and for free trade against a tariff
protective alike to manufacturer, mecnauio, and laborer, it might naturally be supposed tot with the collapse of this rebellion all to issues which made up ' the cause 'tho ' Lost Cause,' as those leaders would term it would be lost with it and disappear from political sight, and we would never again hear of a section of the nation, and last of all the Southern section, organized, banded together, solidified, m the line of its own secKonal irleaa. as aeainst the national
ideas prevailing elsewhere through tho Tfairm! that free trade, conscious of the
I ruin and desolation which it had wrought,
and or tne awrux sacrinces ui www uu treasure which had been made in its behalf by the conquered South, would slink from sight and hide its famine-breeding front forever; and that slavery, in all its various disguises, was banished, never more to protrude its hateful form upon our libertyloving land. That was indeed to supposi-
ertions ior a good record
As unusual event occurred in one of ths
PhinnDii-PhilRdelnhia sames at Obic-acc
when Daily, pitching for the Phillies, had three Chicagos on the bases, two of them
from called balls, and deliberately gave me third one his base, allowing a base-runner
to walk home from third,
The in-oalcst pitcher is not the one against
whom the opposing nine scores the least number of base-hits, but it is the man who keeps lis head cool, his brain level, and bjs
control of the ball perteot at critical mo
ments. Such a man will puen nis greaiea name at that iunoture. and, when well sup
ported, thera is but little greater danger of
a run oeine maae wnen men are un uw
bases than when thev are vacant. No bet
ter illustration of this could be had than in tho setond came with the Washingtons at
Chicatn, when uiarason was pitcnm or
the latter club. Hines led at the bat with a
two-bgger, and was followed by Carroll
with h sinsle, which sent limes to
third. Joe Start then struck a "grounder
between first aud second, upon which
Hines attempted to mu home from third,
but wai put out by Pfeffer's throw to Flint
at the home piate, aian getting nisi tip
nlav. Knowles was next caucht on a ny
and Crane struck out, ending the inning
withon-. a run. Hines hit LUarkson in this
game for two doubles and two singles;
Carroll , noxt at bat, hit him for two singles and eot first base on fielding errors; Start,
who followed him. made one base-hit, and
got first twice on play; while Knowles, noxt in order, hit him for one double, and got first oi error once. Result: Hines, one
unearned run, left on base twice; Carroll,
no run, left on base three times; Start, one
earned run. left on ease twice; Knowles,
no run, left on base twico; nine hits for a totel oi! twelve bases, two runs, and nine
men left on bases. In this game Clnrkson
played without au error, and struck out nine of his opponents. It is such games as
this which make a pitcher s record.
Before Kansas City had won a came
the Kansas City rimes editorially advised
the K insas City team not to come back
home unless it did something to distin
guish itself. After tho 2 to 0 beating given
nt. AjttlllH. iup l fum. j u iw nun-
sas Ultv iiase-uau ihud: iuu uuvo usiitt
the mop fcdiciously aud uuspanugly. Come
home whenevr you please.
The most interesting part of the fight in
the American Association race is for the
rear cud. That place is now hold by the
Metropolitans of New lork, out tne louisvilles ure after it, and thus the struggle be
comes moro lively. However, tho Mets
have a cood team, and by judicious mnn-
ageme H they may capture that place before
pie seiwm enoi.
Important. When you visit or leave New Yoik (Sty, save baggage, expressive, and 93 earrings hire, and itop at the Crantil Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central Depot 618 rooms, fitted up at a cost of one million dolhus, 1 and u pwards per day. European i.n F.tontor. Istaurant aunt lied with the
teat Horse cars, stages, and elevated railroad to all depots. Families can hvo better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other first-class hotel in the ci-.y. Tea Growing. It is a noteworthy fact tha-. there are few large tea plantations in China. The plant is mostly irrown upon umall holdings of a few acres each, the picking and drying being done upon the spot, whence the product is transported to the various sea-ports, sometimes many hundreds of miles, by river or by whatever mode is most convenient. Here the buying is done and on this branch of the business lieing skillfully carried out depends the individual success of exporting firms. She Came from Vassal.
Fond Husband Well, my dear, what are you sobbing about? Young Wife Why, that sponge cake I sent to the agricultural fair has just.
taken the first prize. Boo-noo. Fond Husband What is ttiere to cry about in that? You ougtit to feel proud, my dear,- of your knowledge of the culinary art. Young Wife But you don't understand. The judjjes gave it the award as the best specimtn of concrete sent in.
Boo-hoo Kamoier.
A Multitude of Allmeiuts.
The ailments which afflict tho kidneys and
bladder are so ntfmiirous, that merely to niymo
thorn would fill a sp ten far ontnmu "g the limits Of this article. Suffice it to say that they are both obBtinate and dangerous. To their prevention Hostetter'a Stomach Bitters is well adapted.
The stimulus which it lends to the action ot the kidneys when they are lethargic servos to counteract a tendency in them to Ibjiso, first, into a
state of pernicious inactivity, and aftmvards
into oro of positive organic disease, which soon
destroys their delict! mtegumnntii, poisons tho blood, and causes tenth. A doat-lo purpose iu served by this depurent. It promote-) activity of tholiiinoys, and expels impurities from tha blood which have no natural channel of outlet exeept those organs. Constipation, biliousness, fever and asu, rhot inatism, and uyspepsia, are
also rernediea ny wus meaiuran ui ujurouuu action and wide scope.
A Certain Corn Cui-e.
"In speaking of adventures," re
marked the man Jrom Aruna, in the court yard of tho Palace Hotel, "I have
bad mauy tnruuag experiences on uio frontier, but the most singular aceident that ever befell me was when my right leg was run over by a street car. I
have never Had a corn on tnat iooi.
since.
"Ah. I see. replied the San iran-
ciscan, "you have an artiflciid leg."
"Yes. I acknowledge tue corn.
California Mavsrick.
A lierTeet specific Dr. Sajre's Catarrh
Remedy, t
The first cyclont happened in Eden. It was
a perfect hurry-tain.
rW n-nr A V ftnrl r h vaifti MIR recommend Hall's
Hair ltenewer for diseases of thesealp aud hair.
Wnev a vnuntr n an Is flnjrerlnir tho ea"b
loft him by his grandfather, cau it be said 1)J Is reveling in his a iccstral hauls?
How to Shorten T-if-o.
The receipt ia simple. You have only to tako
a violent cold, and aogleot it Abernetliy, tho great English surgeon, asked a lady who told hiin she only had a cough: "Wht would you have? 'Jhe plague?" Beware of "only coughs."
Tho worst cases can, however, bo cured by DB,
WST. HALL'S BALSAM FOB THE LUNGS. In
Whooping Cough and Croup it immcdiatoly
allays irritation, awl is sure to prevent fatal
termination of the disease. Sold by druggists.
Ansa's Ague Cure neutralizes the miasmatic
poison wlucn co.uacs lover ana ague-
YVhy is an empty whisky barrel like Hades?
Decauso it is the place or aspartea spirits.
Jvie.
"Barren late than never," but better never late when trouble.! with a coagh or cold Take n- niiii.ra--j I'.isitivo Cure at once, winch
euros all throat aud lung troubles speedily aud
thnmnirhlv. Pleasant ior cuuuren. ou ueuia
and L
A SoMEtti-ii.i.K yomis man who has a redhaired Bwcetiwart appropriately refers to hol
es his tlame. ouiKif.
Neitheb mental norphysijal labor can bo ao-1 ennmli-died satisfactorily unless the system is
in order. When wm feel tired, languid, woa.rie.1 without exeriion. the mind slow to act,
and nnniiriiiM great mental effort you can rest aciiro I ili.it v.mr Liver is not actum properly.
and that nature requires ussistanco to help I throw off ir iimnii is. Then is no remedy that ... ,1 .1.: . it.!.. ..... Afft I
W1U aCCOIllWIIBII Wl "O UlUt.iJ ttuu jc, ouw nallv as I'KICKI.Y Asll BlXTEItS. ' A trial will
satisfy yoii of its merits.
Ai.Tnoi-uii cremation relate-! to dead subjects, it is one of tho live questions of the
a ,
Wm,-o vni, iiwd n friend select a true one.
Dr. Jones'' lle.l Clover Tonic is the best friend
mailKinu inei im an iiifuar-w w . livMi- rail ki.lnevs. The best blood purifier and
tonic liiiow!L ou cents.
Peoci.k who go to tlit. mountains in the
summer enjoy high living.
I have used Athlopboros .vith tho very best satisfaction. 1 ha I nenralj-'ia for many years, but a Dottle of the remedy cured me. 1 have a
Lottie on hand but have no aso for it at pres
ent. It. rosier, furniture dealer, asu street, Torre Haute, Indiana, KD-lH'iS. FI.IKS.
,.-i .- . ... l.,mo ,v.t, t,i,,ra
rues, ruii'-iii-.--, m, ....-..f,, motha,ratB,iiiii'e,sparitwH.jackral)bits,gopher8
ehip-muuka, cleared out by "Hough on Hats,"
15c
MC HI'-I'AIHA.
fin-Mi nil Kidnev MTeetiniiK. ficaldiiirr. Irri
tation, Stone, Gra vi I . ":i tai rli of the Bladder. L
I'KOrt.Il ON HATS."
clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, bed
bugs, vermin, wator-bugs, tauniis. lac
"Bough on Corns"hardor doftcorns, bunions,
lo c.
"Bough on Toothache," Instant relief. 15o.
Cons Rhaaacaaw, ItaraMk,
rm r hi
Wl aaiii
anrill n 1 1 111 CatarrH
UnCAin DnLffli It is vonderfio horn quirk Ely I 'vara Balm h-iped ami cm-' J me. 1 suffered from antle iuflamution in my ttse and head. For a week at a Ihm I eovM noi !. Ji-3. Oeorgie S. Jadson, Hartford, Conn.
A nirtiflo is applid into each nontril an.l is ai-co.iulo t use. l'rioe etf ' I y mill "rat ilniejctsis. bend fur
r,-ul.- KI.Y UU'HIlKltS.iinlKKl-ts.tiu'eir.)..!.
PEieKIiY
Pf? I vi'-HB
HAY-FEVER
ttrb IVay.er Axle CSrease. 'tis tho best In tho
world will woar twico as long as any other.
THIN PKOIUB.
Well's' Health Benower" restores health and
virmr tviren iivsnA'nsiR. Malaria. Impotence.
Nervoub Debility, Consumption, Wanting Diseases, Decline. It has cured thousands, will euro you.
HEART PAINS.
PalniUtion.Droria.eal SwollingH.Dizzinoss,In-
digestion. Headache, Ague, Liver and Kidney Cuniplant, Sleepless iess,cured by Wells' Health
ltenewer. " Elegant J omc lorAuuus or cuuuren.
MFBrKESKllVKK.
If you are losing y mr grip on life try "Wells' Health lienewer." 3oes direct to weaksuots.
Great Appetizer, md aid to Digestion, giving
gtreugiu 10 Biomacu uver, juuut'yn, uuwyia.
OH! MY BACK Krerj l train r (old attacks tkat weak back
ana avariy piwuia um.
BITTERS
ti.. mrfn-ttu of the ills of the human
body arlte from a derangement of th l.tver, 'affecting- both the etomaeh and awl. In order to effect a cure, it Is necessary to remote the cause. Irregular and Sluggish action of the Bowele, 11 -nrlnnhn. Sickness at the Stontaeh, Pain
in the Bade and loins, etc., indteate that the liver U at fault, and that nature requires assistance to enable this) organ to throw off impurities. Mrirtv Ash BttxersisaesPMto"
tompouKdedforthlsparpote. Xhegara mild in their action and effective as et cure; am pleasant to the teste and taken sastlubgbothchildrenandadulte. hen according to directions, they are a .enA oleosa nt ireorHy91etiSlB,
Oeneml etoHlty,:etatoltiiat Con.
stlnatloa, wiHcustu n-.uuwvt ".J ...,. Um a BMad rarlfler then
are superior to any other medieinos tleansln j the egstcm thoroughly, an imparting new llfeaml energy to the invalid, it is a medicine and not an
Intoxt:atluiar occercse. A$l f OUR BRU801ST FM FStCIlT MH ilTnit, ndtakaaootner. rWOI. SLOO per Bottta,
f RICXLV ASH BITTERS CD., SOLE PROPWETOBS
St.IiouU and Kaiuaa
ETi -a
111 yiP
ISUSl 11 151 El
si isl
Hi NIACHINil
Send for our HSW TOCC
ATA t.iuu K maiieu iiuu
iimiiton, DetroitiWiop
an
MS
I
MUa PreiMfv Ail' (VtATftl 18 t
Be i. Eaateat to 0, nod Cheapest.
9 Hi
Also good for Col In tbe nca.
tne, ua
Ttendncl
lVver. Ac. Wli-ento.
wnmeii, boys and irlrla
THE
BEST TONIC
t rMtaarthnaa Am IM MawifHa.
Htcn4l the Nerve, Enrlrhe the Blac4 Ulvtm Now Vlr. Mm. Mikkos Kece. 701 K. Jeawm St., South Btmd. Ind.. csjr: "F.lic time I h-va kuHbitkI riUiUmtineaof th bavok aud wvareamum bm wbd. Hu bottlw of E rowa'a lion Ilittors biw eotirebr cured ma. and I feI like noir oma.n Mhs. Mauy Casiemon. 256X Fimtiay -St., Olncinnati. Old", un: " 1 hi.Te been ftiBicfced uith Neund.
tm far t'veuty niri in ny head ami beck. Have
been coat inod to m b sd weekt at a time, not able to
at or sleep. Hcittioa mat I ma etf me reiiei oei'v Brow ii'h Iron Bit wi, and that has geatir benefited me. I feel butter than I bate in liO yearc. Oeaoinu taaaboreTnule Mark and crowed rod line
VI AJ JL VAt easily mate tv I0 a day.at nomo In a !! a-iiint Iitisiliesi .-tnotly ti"ii" ral.li-. tor nil i nrli.-ul ns i I ! I I .n,t Ml t il". address
jWICDlSlIISSEt-i' rnWHUti u..! itlBl.ur.'.fa. Don't 1 nivt IhtK-ha ue. Wittctu-Uu'j. Meutien this p-iper.
'VdRSAUi! ItKNT, Olt TKAOK. A Strain Saw and i'iatinut Milt, two lli-aajs and Slnlile nml lime Acr. s in in ml. I 'iree , 1 ,tOO. It. DAVIS, rouiiiulitlflV.il, Shelby Oo., Ind.
II. s. Jt A. P. Lacbt, Patent AttonO'S Washlniiten. I). C limtrui lleua and iniinluas as
lo oatontatil itr V K K K . I if 1 1 yeara'iiiDurmuco.
m i r ki: to ursic, in.ilspeiisatiie -wrvme -.. I'lni: i: u-. rtir iiy li" J?" ..... ! vvi.1 -. t.- 111. New Y'.-rk r.i
O YS and til BI.S mate from Si oents toll after
wnooi. seen i. i nii' im v-iv. . ..hv" .- - - ed. NuilTHUtie Javm s. llrMueiMirl. I onn.
UAMriltKI of till) linujiis "upnuqira IIW : 1 onlye, Mitttti J. 0, t'KttSY, h, MM
PATENTS
looa ft'-
B
i?Vtv''vi v-rVofijirs.
IT T,R,II1,,,M1 AMU
TBI COABXIS A. VOSK1JU CO.BAZSU0BX,aB.
33ITTERS. It win cure ny case of liver and Kidney troubles when propei-ly taken. It ia a perfect, renovator a: id invigorator. It cIjiim i the aym ten of the pr Isanoui humors that develop la Liver, Kidney and Urinary diseases, carrying away all polsoaoas matter and rem storing; the Blood to a heolihy condition, enrlrltlnif it, refreshing; and- invigf.rating ITfind and Body. It prevents the growth to ficrtona Illueaa of a Dangeron Clam ot Diseases thut bejln in mere trivial aliments, and ar too apt to be neglec ted as aacb THOUSANDS OF CASKS of the woret forms of these tsrrlble dliteases havo hi-en quickly relieved and ta a short time perfectly cured by tho use of Hop em malt Blttc re. Do not jr ; Hops and Bfalt Bitter conrounded with i m'crlor preparatioua of rimilar name. Take Nothing but Hopa Matt Btt ters if you wa t a sure t'nre. HOPS & b ALT BITTERS CO, Oothx. Ibav FOR SALE! FLOUR MILL! Olio I Sty Boll m Mill at Fond du Im, Wto : onaof the beat steam.-1, ur nulls In tho hUU ; anlenUdloation. nnd ap.-oll- .i )h- investment for a iUlmlUj5r. Also, the itoi e Tly known as the -nlU 5"S Mill, walet-p er, three miles from . Fond do be. doin? a Ron-t I n iino, h t custom carding and ttea an esbfe. Ai r.:i W. H. ALliuKiH. Admin latwtot, 8' North Halsle I StttMi. CMealloEU .1 . CONSUMPTION. I hiwa a poet H o romedr for uwabwadleaaea; Wll me ihoou,i f caweol tha wotat kind and of Ion standing l'To wucwed. ladwyl, matrpngmm. fatm la iiieiaoaty. Iiatlwl 1 wmdlO BOTTLES E, Sltctbocillnl .TALCABI.BTBISATISI on tbl,dliaa te MIT anffit-ot . Clvo exprocs ssd F.O. nddr M. w M' pa. ! . A. BLOCVK. HI M St., Kow e-
HaMt. Quickly n l ti.le ly cured tlroae Corrawondfinea suiirlic-u sad free, trail ot cure scat hones, InveetlRAto-s. Tn lime KB Keaxdy CoarAKT.Luforcue. lad.
OPIUM
Nervous Headaches Are ofter tha result of a disordered, c indition of the blood, and, in such coses, are perma nentlr cured by the use of Ayer'5 Sarsaparilla. " For years I suffered intensely with Bick and Kcrvois Headaches. Kf parents were similarly afflicted, and, t.n tluiy had never been i bio to find a rcmody, 1 concluded that .here was tittle hope of relict for me. A friend finally suggested the use of Ayer'j Sarsaparilla, and urged mo to try it. I took six bottles of tills medicine, and was cured. This was eighteen lnouths-ago, rnd I have not had the headache miicc."' -Alfred D.Guenioy, Bridgeport, Conn. "Ayer's carsaparill.t lias benefited tne wonderfully. Formonths I suffered from Kervous lie ulaches. I had no appctue, was restlcs: at night, nnd very much debilitated. After taking two bottles of Ayer's Sarsjparilla my headaihcs ceased, my strength and appetite rcunncd, and my health was completely restored."D. H. Fishc: , Oswego, N. Y.
.Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Prepawd'by Dr. J. C. Ayer : Co., Lowell, Mua. Bold by Diu t&st. rrii:e$l; e!x bottle,.
" lafin i PMBPJarn'
pas aaa
SUCKER
l ZTT .. lt imsm M Hr Semi ' -Jv
eoerata.e"U ni " f" "J'2rl-. ' r," .
BranJ" t-tilfPltiark;,
IHestratcMl Cat:do rue fw,
WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE CSOCRAPWV OF THIS COUWTRT, WH.I.
SCtB BT sSAAIilIMIHU linio WMru i n n
.
isaSBsSfeaSLSlt i ejLm
'v
CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILWAY
tmtiflnffii
ea of the AtltnUc and
Pacific Cornsto. It
nentfi Ui to that system of througl
ISSlSo&lcii THE GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE (immntaM it natrons that sense or personal security afforded by a tyS. ftSSSS?.? iSiSSri adVodT irnooth tmefce of ontlnuoua steel wU;wb
"S"ii,rii? .TTft9 and brldires: rolling stock: as near periec
hrTrSneWU can maia it; the safely appliana or patent ounera, jftanamw
mnnimMtioi nnintH in union uenoce,
ll:tvnCUcajgo and tho Mlesovtrl River a.conii. '?l:a5'.r?PfiH T? ,V Coaches. Mecivifleont lultaan
r ..r , 1 nininiv ensa ivi. wrnrii
operation or
all liu
Bosed of wawM, fl?ely Mtotend
f0.ie.ca pworoui u ",r.ri?i,iT, r-S-KSTU nnrrlon wi
AhSnaon. are also run the Celebrated Rocitong air vara. THE FAMOUS ALBERT l-EA ROUTE lathe direct and favorite line between Cnttawro. and Mlnneauolla ana fit. Fata, where ccrmectiorts ore made in Union Derjofc! tor all points m to Tet ribortoa and Mttsh Provinces. Over this route, Past Bx-res3 Trai is are tottte watering ilaea, summer rosorta. picturesque localities, aiul huntinpf ond flalb1 Krofia of Iowa and Mtnneaota. It is also the most deaxable rout ttb rich wheat fleldsond pastoral leds of inteivor Lntoia. .
Btlll another uiwciur ajlcic,, via oouocii v.i ..ivto TEra3 Sii2r, wi.r. Haim. rtinhmond. canolnnat . Irir tatianolla, nnd LafayiittB.afia,
rMimn Tunfitf Knnaaa dltv. Mlnnoanolls and Su Pv.il ami iutei-medlate
iil
a, Richmond, canotnnati, in rilfc-o- HAInnimnolia and SU 1
'ariSSHTSaS and Fnldsra. obtainabla. as
Wrifcata. at .dl nrlnoloal Ticket Offices in tha Ucited Statea and Canada,- or
nointa.
weU ae
by nddresalng;
R. R. CABLE, President and licncral Manaqor, Chloaoo.
IS. ST. JOHN, General Tic et an-l Fc Anent, CMcasa,
MUSTANG
Survival of ie fittest.
I fahilt midigiri that has huudI
MIUIQK8 DBElNfl ii IKAB8I
HEUtMIUlIllEI!.
I A BAXJkt VOiX EVEBV OFl
MAX AN1 KIKABTI
KiJ.mBS' AOLKY, wctlsa lama O, K. B-Jt,
w muc, ,nro. dm a
tn h a wco f, hU wiflssrina from NeurtllU'aaft freftU
"I.!
fctl..-V.
yoar InijiKlW lyr AlBWHHrc. warn, am iy -" do do i try Ml K-iiilne bvt order at oaoo Iron oa. WoVW
em! .texrirt- , paia on recoiEnosvnoo. ujuev
IL0fi:0RQS CO., 11S Wall St,
iwTark,
AoSiliml. Renable and
Is
The Oldest ft Best Linimentl
I EVER MADE IN AMEBIOA.
SALES LARGER THAN EVER
I The Mexican Mustung T.lniment hasl been known for more than I hiriy-flvel
ayvavia na 1 110 w.iou ui nil i.tniui'-iits, jt'ia Man and Beast. Its sales to-duv nrel
I larger than evr. It cures when ulll others full, and penetrates skin, tendon! and muscle, to the very bona. Soldi
I everywhere.
DKEIUtr
hiroef
quick cuien. Trial ntottatva). VNWaaatloit and Books by BfaiirREtV Addrw Dr. WARD A CO.. a.OMsiara, Mo
TTSI
iDEmUTATl D ME tl
1 Vol are allowed o fret trial tf thirtb ttaytof I ha - use t Br. V re's C lobrated Voltaic Bi-U v-tth Eleetrw 8iiKieiiBor.v Vppliaucea. :or tha speedy leltel u per, man nt eivn of ytrvmm PtlMUv. fMPUft'Wl r.ilir, I anil all kin. ivd tr u lei. A so tor ir.ury otter lift, eafe" On: eh'te ivuhn-athin te Ucd'.I aud Vil0t ' Ritatanteed. No riak ia uKiirred, VUustnt'etl nam- ' r.,.i. i.. .... ....... a..-il...t 1.. -.1.1. wt. ..a
Vol.lAlC Ulil.T ti.. Mll.aUaUl. jlTleliltitia.
FAC't:, IIAMDS, 1'EET, end nil ta-,r ,m -ti maa, lac iwlma yataA Ih-valu4n,rit, i,0irlliif-.u Halt, W,dt Marta,
bioi, rt, aioio, i r-aie nai new, A.-ce,
a-;
Dr. JOHN H. WnOtlHUa V.
'A.l'eartil.allua),A.t, EuVd Hla, ewd lautaralaa,
k. i'.. r w .Mu. ait ae. '
Vt lmn V'r.tmir to AdvcrUnora, n
you saw the AaverttUBmoot in Mtls
