Bloomington Progress, Volume 26, Number 35, Bloomington, Monroe County, 19 October 1892 — Page 4
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rf face Aim FiGxnas fc y show it, if you're a health JVa woman. They'll hare a I y beauty of their own, no
raaer wuu your ratines. Periect health, with its clear skin, rosy cheeks, and bright eyes, 13 enougn. to mane any , woman attractive. To tret perfect health, i 'falthfullv Dr. Pierced Fa. vorite Prescription. That resrulates and promotes all the proper functions of wo manhood, improves dices 1 tion, enriches the blood, dispels aches and pains, brings rctresnmK sleep, ana restores health. liesn ana strenetfl. For periodical pains, prolapsus and other displacements, Deartog-oown sations, ami w female complaints " gen erally, tt is so cneetive xnat 11 can oe guaranteed. If it doesnt benefit or pure, roil have vonr money back. Is anything that isn't 'sold iu this way likely to M ... - - n 09 gUUU. ' DR. Kl LMEFfS wT KiDNEY LIVER s W Dissolves CrraYeL Gallstone, brick dust in urine, pains tn nrctlna, atra'uirur after urination, pain in back and hiss. suuoea stoppage 01 waxer who pnaon. Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Skwrp-A carts urinary tr-mbles ana kidney- dilScultic Liver Complaint 5orpkl or enlarged liver, foul breath, biHoi ncs, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout Catarrh Bladder, J inanimation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling. frequent cans, pass otooa,mucus or pus. Gaafa&tee t?"e contenta of Oh Bottlo, IX not bmm fltad.DfiicgistawIU rv-cunU you the prtoa paid. At Druggists, 50c. size, $1.0 Slaw. laraUds Guide to Heatta" frae Con-wltatfoa faes. Da, Kilhkb A Co., BrGHArroir, N. T. -. We pay the printer to give you good advice about health and to lead you to careful living. Our reason is thai Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver oil is so often a part of careful living. m If you would go to your doctor whenever you need his advice, we might save our money. He knows what you need. Let us send you a book on careful living ; free. Scorr BdwmCbeauns, 13a Sooth oh A tiuu, J3e York. Your druggist keeps Scott's Emt brioa el cod-Over etl-Uldragisu everywhere do. f 1. "Why Are You Sick?" "I know precisely hos you feel; it is that tier. vans, irritable feelinfiT 2 i your back troubles you. and when you try to read a little, your Lead wtw Isn't that so 9 I knew it. Ob, bother the doctor I Get a battle of Vegetable Compound, and take it faitatully.as I havedone. I've been through this thing myself, but am never troubled now. Do as i tell you, my friend. Prudent women who best understand their -. . . - 1 .1 auracnis mm 111 tnc Compound a remedy for all their distressing ills. It removes at once those pains, aches, and weaknesses, brightens the spirits, restores d$ gestioa, and invigorates ine system. all DraabU aril it, or H nil, m ton ax run or Mtm run. SSe. Ci sees, 'orrefrcelv m . sit. -r CURES R15ING BREAST "BOTHER'S FRIEMT j&pss ottered child-bearing woman. I have been a ntd'Wife for many years, and in each case ' where ''Matter's Friend" bad been used it has ' accomplished wonders and relieved much nfltsriiig. It Is the best remedy for rising of the breast known, and worth the price lor usat alone. Mxa. M. M. Bacn-EB, Montgomery, Ala. I can tell an expectant motbeis if tbey wfll ace a few bottles of Mother's Friend they will go through the orde&l without any pain and anHwrinc. Mas. Hat Biushaw. Aigosv&le.X.D. tltod Xotker's Frlead before birth at my ebti child, wni never cease its praise. Mas. J. F. Mooaa, Colusa, CaL 8eot by eiprese, charges prepaid, on receipt, at price, 1B per bottle. . BRADF1ELD REOULATOR CO., SoU by an druggists. .ttkia, O, UCKR SB l:HAD StICKZR is wtrroted mitttThe FISH (proof, md wilL keep you dry latlhrtletrtt5nn. The! mew rujiMLL dlh tuutaHpcnecinonf ouvni ccTrstI ni.r saddle. Bewreof tmfrttlcM. ooatl aeomt a the -run Braud" u not on a, iwutrtH .tmkrite Irw. A. J TOwEit, UQUn, MUM, Small. JIaaelM aail OoawUpaMoai. aotOe. Rtoa Ste, Vor sate by dr at "t, tt, m tt r. turn a co.. rioananis, mm ram aft .aL. nieAlHeaaKote Plant, diJ8tniTla e verot in Coaso. We Arrka, fa aam" Sun uura far AKhma. Car flmw -sad or Ho Par- Export OOoa, I'M Bnariwar. Kaw Tors. F r Lajrgs Trial Case, Fiwe by MAU, wSama KOLA IMPOICXUKI CUL, IM Vie St., I, Otdo. UST POLISH TMB WOSLO. m anT nr i)f Rnvrn arli.h Paataa. Knamela. sad Palnta which stain tha hands, injure the Iron, and bom off. The KisingSiinetova Polish is BrilllAat. Odarlesa. Durable, aad tha con sumer pays for no tin or glaaifackage wiut arvexy puxtaac
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CHAPTER XV-Coilthmoil. Tho Colonel mot them at the diningroom door, and Noll, approaching rather cautiously, gave him a half-expectant, half-questioning, glance. Her roars wero quite groundless, howover, for as soon as he had peon Margaret, ond heard that she wa going to leave them so &o n, he had no thought for any one else. "I don't know how we shnll do without you," ho said, bending over her with kindly affection. "Bertie told mo you j were going, and I have boen anticipating my own loneliness. Have you grown tired of us so soon?" Ho took her face between his hands and regarded it with a gentleness in which a varioty of emotions found expression. "You are in a hurry to leave us, Margaret, " he added, sadly. ( "Ah, no," she hastened to answer, as her eyes grew dim and a painful flush overspread her cheeks. ; ine gentleman am not answer ior a 'second, during which his fnce worked with feeling and a tender light filled his eyes. ; "Ton are a brave girl," he said, rather unsteadily, at last; "a true, bravo girl. Heaven will bless you as yon deserve. Don't let that ecouudrel come near me; I might be tempted " "You are so hard on him, Colonel. Don't " "Don't blame him, I suppose. Ah, Margaret, you are like the rest of your sex always ready to defend the man who breaks your heart. Well, well, I'll not be hard, for your sajte, but when I think Never mind; we'll miss you, child every one of us. Don't quite forget your old iriends; you won't find the new ones half so truo." Again Margaret's eyes grew dim, and she found herself incapable ot an answer. Alice, noting her distress, broke in with some light remarks, which Nell took op, notwithstanding her uncle's formidable presence, and discussed volubly. Under this respite Margaret regained her self-possession, and began to speak quite calmly. No further allusion to her going away was made during the meal, though each one seemed quite talkative, ft en particularly airing her opinions freely, and reoelving no reproof for her temerity. But when the time came to say goodby, and Margaret was ready to go, the Colonel, disregarding the hand she held out to him, clasped her in his arms, and tenderly, almost reverently, kissed her brow. "I knew it would be hard," she sobbed, breaking down completely. "I knew j this would be the hardest of iill." i "No, it sha'n't be, Margaret," he said, putting her gently from him. "I do not j wish to pain you, child, even for a mo ment, but I am very deeply moved to see you go from us under such circumstances. Your bravery and devotion will have its reward be suie of that. Bemember me when you need sympathy or advice, for I would not be worthy the same of friend if I could not show my affection in time of adversity as well as prosperity; and I know that not even your own father could be more anxious to help you than I am." For many long days Margaret car ried in ber heart trie memory of his kind words and sympathetic voice As she rode home through (he winter afternoon toward the chain of beautiful hills which shut iu the quiet, peaceful village, her fancy tinged with indesoribable melancholy every surrounding ob ject, and the melancholy lingered long after her eyee had ceased to look upon the scene that had engendered it. CHAPTER XVI. A NEW KRIEND. Margaret, I think I shall bring Wilson to dinner to-night. I met him yes terday and he asked about you. He has heard Bertie lauding you to the skies, and naturally he is anxious to seo the paragon." -JKeauy, mat is too ban oi lsertie. i don't pose as a paragon, Brian, and in deed I don't care to be one. I do want to meet Dr. Wilson, though, and if you will only correct his false impression, I wisn you would oring him this even ing." I ll bring him, but I'll leave you to correct or prove his impressions. I know you'll be equaj to the emergency in eitner case. ) ou should really anfreclate the compliment he puys you. don't believe I ever heard him express a desire to meet any one before. " -xteaiiy; vny, j. reel quite vain. I hope he isn't a cynic." on, no. it is ratner induTerence. I think. He isn't particularly sociable: that is, he doesn't care for vlsitinit. People follow him up, though, like the ; deuce, and he s considered quite a catch in the matrimonial pond. Any number of anglers would be glad to land him. The power of money, you see. Well, I must be off. I sha'n't be home to lunch. Good-by. You won't be lonely? " "No." Every day Brian left Mirgarot with this question, and every day she answered "So," but always after ho ha:l gone she felt she had answered untruthfully. She was lonely very lonely. She found so little to interest her so little to fill the long dull mornings. Brian sometimes came to lvnoh, but as often he did not. Hor afternoons were spent in seeing the sights of New York, shopping, or calling on her few friends, and her eveninas at the theater, when Brian would take her; but more often at home alone when h had some on'gagement which he could no possibly .defer." ; From these engagements he would return late in the night, with the heavy, stumbling steps '.vhioh i.ld their own story, aud which always struck so heavily on Margaret's heart, as she waited sleepless and anxious. This was the record of the ten days she had spent in New York, and she seemed as far away from the reward the Colonel had promised her as when she left Elmwood. Under other circumstances she could have been, not precisely happy, because she was too thoroughly a child of nature not to miss, with an intensity few could understand, tho restful, peaceful influences of her country home. Yet she could have found contentment in this charming littlo apartment, with its comforts and luxuries. Its situation was convenient and delightrul, in the heart of the oity, sur-
rounded by places of interest and many ways, but I have not that fuseiamuaement, and near tho various elubs, ' nation which some people feel for it. where Brian was fond of spending his : I was born in tho country, and all my time. j associations hold the memory of green She was in the center of bustle and fields and bright skies. I think that activity. From her window sho could must aocount for my tastes. I know hear the throbbing pulse of a life that that brick walls and paved streets tiro was never still the ever-sounding . my oyes, and I feel a longing to rest orchestra of a busy city; tho mighty , them on somolhiug tl.at Is not hero.
roar of the elevated trains, with thoir noisy, whizzing echoes; tho sound of : the heavy drays passing over the ; cobblestones; the lighter rumble of : carriages, and the long line of pedestrians, made up an ever moving, ever ! changing panorama of human life, ! hope and ambition, upon which sho gazed with feelings that brought her own loneliness and Isolation more keenly before ber. "How was she to fill the long hours that must pass berore dinner?" she asked herself. "Should she go through the stores and see the beautiful things
tho shop windows displayed so temptingly?" That was not interesting when one had no companions to exchange opinions with. Tho crowds wenrlert her, too. She felt so utterly alono amidst the busy throngs, whero a friendly glance seldom, if cv,r, greeted her. At home it was so different; there she could see a familiar face iu every passer-by. No, she would not go out to-dny, oho decided at lust. She would stay at home and read and try (o emulate the contentment of sp r!t which prompted Koran under all creumslaiicos to sing cheerily ov.r her work. Yet it was a bright day to spend indoors. Tho sun, which always soeme 1 to her prejudiced fancy to shim! through ft yellower, thicker ntmosphuro, lay wnrm and golden on the :ioi!8 to;8 opposite. It tempted her with its eheeriness. But, pshaw! whero was the pleasure in walking sedately over the hurd pavoments? How could that compare with a delightful gallop over the hilln at home? Ah, those glorious rides! Why oouldn't these tall walls crumble away? Why couldn't the nvod streets, this horrid noiso and din by the touoh of some fairy's hand give plaoo to tho familiar hills and ilelds? Not for long; only for one day just one d.iy. How she would use every hour or that day! the would have her usual ride on Mollio's sleek back. They would canter away through tho cool, still morning. She would feel tho invigorating air against hor cheek, and the glad sense of fresh, now Hfo tingling in her veins. She would go to The Cedars and talk with Alice and the Colonel, nd laugh over Neli's lidiculous nonsense, and feel so happy. She would run in to kiss the children as they pressed their little faces against the rectory window, and she would find time for a few minutes with Mr. Mn'.'lin to ask her how her rheumatism w,s, and hear if the old man had lorn out since his sickness. Ah, there was so much she. would do if she could be at home tcday. Nanny oame in to remove the breakfast things, and she asked twice for the orders for luncheon and dinner before Margaret heard hor. "Indeed, I don't know," she said, at last, trying to fix her mind ou these household details. " You and Norah exercise your ingenuity to-day. I'd particularly like a nice dinner, as Mr. Leigh will bring a friend home with him. Men must be fed, you know, evon If the world goes to pieces. It 16 thoir
! falllnc to think more of their dinners than anything else, and wo have to humor it. So you and Norah must do your best." Quite late in tho afternoon Margaret ratner suddenly decided that she could stand the house no longer. So, preparing herself for a walk, she was soon upon the street. When she arrived home it was nearly dinner time, and secretly upbraiding herself for staying out so late, she began to dress as quicsly as possible. "1 should be dreadfully sorry if Dr. Wilson should come and I not ready to receive him," she confided to her reilectlon in tho mirror. "I shouldn't know how to excuse myself. Well, it is rather late, and if they have como I cannot help it." When she entered the parlor five minutes afterwards she found, not Brian, but a tall, fine-looking man who arose at her approach, with an air of chivalry perfectly in acord with the noble face. That face impressed Margaret at once. Not so much with its boauty of foaturo ami expression as with its firmness of character, its strength of intellect, and the ennobling influence which high oudenvor and strong purposes had loft upon it. Instructively ehj felt a quickening of her sympathies and feelings, an indefinite attraction toward this man, whoso very npiearance oompelled her admiration. During her searcoly perceptible pause in the doorway, tho Strang or, with a swift but critical glunco, had tbken in the sweet face and girlish form. Then lis started forward with the half question, half assertion: "Mrs. Leigh? I am not mistaken." She held eut her hand with a smile of welcome. "No, you are not mistaken, " she said, with the easy, gracious manner that iba'.le her personality so winning. "I am Mrs. Loigh, and you are Dr. Wilson, I know. I am very glad to meet you, and doubly glad to welcome you to my home, because I really cannot feel that you are a stranger, but rather an old friend wl on I have heard of and talked of fo often," Her words gratified him very much. "You honor me loo highly," ho answered, pressing the hand she offered him. "To be numbered among your friends Is a prlvilo o I (-steem most deeply. Brian and I have been friends of such long standing that the pleasure I feel of meeting his wife is twofold." "I'm afraid you find his wife very remiss," put In Margaret, Hushing brightly, and seating herself in the chair he placed for her. "She must really ask your pardon for not being at home when you arrived. Her only excuse is a very whimsical disposititn, which took her out so late that she could not get baok at a reasonable time." She is fully excused," rejoined Wilson, meeting her smiling glance -We got here about ten minutes ago, and Brian left me to make himself more presentable, he said. I was admiring some of your curios when you came In, I knew ytiu at once. Bertie's description is so accurate, and I've had the picture of you in my mind." "I think Bertie is inclined to exaggerate sometimes, Doctor. Still I hope you have not found the original very disappointing." "Quite the contrary, Mrs. Leigh. Brian tells me that you have only been In New York a very short time, so I suppose you havo not had sufficient opportunity to see how great and important we are. But you havo visited a great many places or interest, no doubt?" "Yes, quite a number; though very far from all, I am sure. Of course it is a great city, and no doubt a delightful one, and I am ridkuloudy un.ippreoiittivct; but, indoed, I like some lews pretentious places better. It is all noiso j and uproar to me. I o I quite shock j you? I'm incurably devoted to country lifo, you see. I cannot enjoy any other, j I hate nry oiher. Theie, that's dread- i fully childish." ! Hc regarded her face with an intent, ' rather puzzled, glance. j "Yet you have established yourself 1 very delightfully," he sold, as ii uu-j swering an argument in his own mind. ! "I fancy you must intend a long stay." j "Yes, it may be. That, is, I don't i know. I hopo- It dopends on circumstances, I fh'nk." She spoke rather disconnectedly, and, anxious to divert any impression her words might make upor. him she hastened to add: "Don't misunderstand mn, please. I don't wish you to think I uciually die like tho city. I find it interesting in Sometimes I am almost determined to go to Elrnwood just for n day. It isn't lar from lioro, you knew; but, then I ro- j membor that I should have to lenvs after i the day was over, and that' would bo hard. So I think 1 must always put j that thought aside. Brian is so differ- I ont in his tastes; ho likes this busy Ufa. J Ho finds tho country dull, mid lonoiy, and : Elmwood has not the si mo attraction for him that it has for mo. He simply endures it, but I well, I could livo j (hero forover. because It is Immo and Ilovolt." ! The last words were spoken in a. lower j
tone, but Wilson tuulorstood the meaning they hold, and ids next ramark was in a more feeling voin. "We will havo to touch you to love Now York for something moro than its pavod streets and brick walls. Wo Gothumites lire very proud. Wo think that all things good and delightful are to be found In this great noisy city of ours. " Margarot smiled. "You havo many desirable tidvaiitagos, that is certain; but while you are proud of your wealth you should not forget your poverty." "True. And wo have enough of it. The condition of the poor in this city is miserable in the extioine. and perhaps, what is more incredible, tho most opposite conditiuns of prosperity and want exist in such cloe proximity. I was most forcibly impressed with this fact a few daj'S ago. I was pussing along ono of the streets just off from l ilth avenue. There were elegant, mansions all around mo, and handsoui'.iy dressed children playing under the eyes of watchful nurses'. Yet a little furthcron I passed into u scene so different that I could scarcely credit tho testimony oi' my eyts. Within an actual stone's throw of splendor and prosperity, poverty, misery, and sin were running riot. It is terrible to think of it. A physician whoso practice lies amid such scenes is obligod to t;eo so much of tho heartaches of life." "I suppose so," returned Margaret, with a sign. "Suoh an experience wouldn't do for mo at all; so much wealth on one sido and so much want on the other would make mo lose my faith in God. It is dreadful la sny it, 1 know. I havo taken myself to task for even thinking of It, but my sense of justice cannot be reconciled. There is some wiso decree, no doubt-, in what seems so unwise, but Toll me. Don't you cer fool like tilting the world to pieces ant making it over again?" Ho smiled, amused at the question and tho expression which accompanied it. "I have often thought it might bo changed to advantage, but I do not know that I could manage it Buccesaf ully. " l'l DE CONTINUED. )
"Ho Laughs Uct." Etc. Richard CVowder is one of the travelers who Unci a cordial welcome in Chicago at every visit, and he generally brings along the latest and happiest flights of imagination of the boys on the; road, and frequently spins a tale as uniquely humorous as any of tlieui, of his own Invcnticn. Here's his latest: "I once frightened 200 colored people almost to death. They were holding n protracted meeting in a little tumble-down church near Nashville and the exe temeut ran high. I attended will: some other bad boys, misbehaved and was (lied out. 1 determiner! t:i break up the iiieeting. I procured some phosphorus, and the next night, before the crowd assembled, drew skeletons, death's heads and devils all over the walls. I then concealed myself In the loft, armed with a long hollow reed; while my companions, provided with sheets and masks, hie! themselves in the grove in which the church was situated. That night the church was packed, and religious fervor reached its climax. The preacher was picturing the horrors of hell and the hideousness of its master, and the sinners were shivering with apprehension. Two large lamps, hung in the center of the low room, furnished the light, and by the help or" the hollow reed I tlew them botli out. The preacher stopped in the middle of his exhortation. The walls blazed forth with horrors traced in burning, snaky outlines. There was a convulsive gasp, a scream from 200 throats, and a stampede-. The preacher went through a window, and, though a rheumatic, outran all his parishioners. Then my ghostly confederates appeared, uttering dismal groans. Scores of terrified blacks, unable to run, lay down and groaned with an agony of fjar. The joke was too good to keep. My father heard of it. He was a Piesbyterian divine and did not believe in trilling with sacred things. It is said that he laughs best who laughs last, and the colored people cam3 In on the subsequent cachinnat ion." Millionaires. The Sew York Tribune, with great labor, has made a list of the persons in the United States and Territories who arc worth a million dollars and over. Fifty years ago the number of men here worth that sum could be counted on one's fingers, while to-day there are 4,204 of them, and two-thirds of all the wealth of the country is controlled by less than iiO.OOO persons, while the i4,ur0,000 remaining inhabitants control the other third. Illinois is credited with 340 millionaires, Pennsylvania with 399, California with 102, New York City with 1.275, and the State of New York outside the city with 428. From this it appears that the city iTtid State of New York have nearly one-half of all the millionaires of the land. ononslvely Prurtish. There is very little probability thai the play written by an American lady, which the Edglish Examiner of Plays has refused to license, contains anything ei'her "gross or coarse, indecent or indelicate," although the Examiner affirms that it does. The fussy persorage who says what shall and what shall not be played in Great Britain is very arbitrary and has made some huge mistakes in his day. Perhaps this insolent accusation of an American wuman may turn out on -3 of the greatest of them. As for grossness and indelicacy, everybody knows that English audi ences will stand language and allusions which would not he tolerated here. Armurett Expr Cal'H. General Passenger Agent Heaflorcl of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St! Paul, received a letter the other day from Charles Shanafelt, of Lawrence, Kan., describing a contrivance he has invented for the purpose of protecting express cars against train robbers. The apparatus consists of a revolving turret set in the middle of the express car and provided with loopholes through which the guards can operate Winchesters, Gat-ling guns, or any other form of artillery. The turret is supposed to be constructed of armor-plate steel, and is so arranged that a hand of train robbers could be annihilated with one broadside. A vebv old-fashioned but most effectual way to cl.-un a carpel is to rub it thoroughly with a cloth dipped in ono part of oxga 1 anil three parts of water, tuliisj; care not to wet the carpet moro than is iib.-oiutely necessary. Not only wdl this treatment remove stains but it will revive color. Tho oxgall is, howevor, most malodoro'is fttuff, and in order to avoid tho atrocious s mdl it is better, if possible, to carry on the process in tho op- n air. It lakes t least twenty-four hours to get rid of tho smell. Snow mo the man-you honor. I know by that symptom better than any othor whnt kind of a man you am yourself; for you nliow mo what your idea' of manhood is, what kind ot a man you long to bo. To wait loo long for any guest is a rudeness toward those who have arrived punctually.
ERA OF WILDCAT MONEY.
POINTS FROM AN ADDRESS OF H. H.CAMPIN 1879. An Interes lug Memorial of the Cltlisus r Danbury Thu Story of American llunllntr Senator Sherman Recounts Itopubllcc.n Achievement,. Tho Kvlls of Wild iat Money Illustrated by Mr, Cfiiup.. of MitwauUee, lu August, lS'ti. 11. 11- Camp, then cashier ul the First National Bunk at Milwaukee, and now ils president, delivered an address on tho histoiy of Western banking before tho American Bankets' Association at Saratoga, N, Y. There was no political Miriuli -anee connected with the address at that time, but in this campaign, whci . the Democratic patty is seeking W revive the old wildcat banbiiiff system, ii will be profitable to recall some of .Mr. (.'iinii's statements in regard to the disastrous results o:: that sjstem of Hooding the states with irredeemable paper money. The substance, of the address is as lollo.vs: The first era commencing in the different sales at the cliff jrent dates wheacharters were granted by the nevcriil legislatures lor the various kihds of banks and banking institutions; wherebv cither honest men nlavea their canilal "at the service ol co nnicrci: and the development of all interests in i heir several localities, or for schemers and speculators who procured legislation to enable them to establish credit upon an insecure oasis. The Western states 1 shail :-fer to in connection with Ui is era are Ohio, Indiana Illinois, Kentucky. issmiri, Michigan. Wisconsin. Iowa and Minnesota. In some of tnesti states this era was e idcd between 1850 and 1S05; the second era began In 18K, and covers the en tiro history of tree slate bank ing up to 180L Within the dates thus named Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin had .'tootled their own states and had disturbed the finances of the entire We-1 with the issues ot their frse banks, aud it is not improbable that hut for tho collapse in the value of stale stocks upon the security of w hich most uf the notes bad been issued many of ti e oth,e:r slates named would have been involved in a more or less similar evil. The free aankine law of Illinois was very favorable to adventurers and wildcat bulking; tiie bonds of all states paying ti per cent, interest were received at par for ciiculatiim. In July, 18i7, tiiere were lorty five b:uks with a circulation of 5,5;fr.,00l), aid the organization of these institutions went on until 1S01, when si,iXki.uuU of this class of so-called paper money had been pit iu circulation, and then the fatal collapse came. Toe bankers of Chicago and other large towns in the state often met to confer on the diiticuliics of their situation, and similar meetings were held m other state's similarly atlliclsd; resolutions and agreements wtre lorniulE.tod. lists were made out of good, bad, and worse, and so the work we it on until tho disastrous end came. The auditor of the stale sold out .some SH,lKK,000 to 8 15,000.000 of state stock to redeem Si:i.O00.000 of circulation issued by tuese bancs with tue following result: Ktuety-ihrct banks were wound up. The uott-8 ol 5 were redeemed at par; Tin- notes of 3 were redeemed at iroiu 90 to K per cent. Tue uutos oi 9 wore -edecmed at froir. 80 to jjcr cent. The notes of 17 were redeemed at from 70 to St' per cent. Tbe notes of 24 were redeemed at from 6o to v per cent. The notes 01' 37 were redeemed at from 50 to Co per cent. '1 lie notes of I wore redeemed at 49 per cent. The history oi wildcat banking in i isci m Mil is short, lice 1 can stand on tinner ground; for sincti the era of free state banking iu tho Northwest my proicssioual experience aad reminiscences supply me with better material, and 1 fear 1 may go farther into the deta.lsot Wisconsin banking thau will be interesting. In tbe early territorial existence of iseonsin there were a few banks organized, but their existence was ephemeral, ami tne panic of lh37 swept them awuy. Tim territory and tin; Aorthwest had few people and little money. Emigrants from all tliu states aud countries beyond the sea brought incir smaii noarus ti money, wnicn were quickly gathered and sent eastward to purchase the necessaries of civilized life, and there leally seemed a greater want of a local circulating ui'jdium than for money itself. As early ais 1857 conventions of bankers were held in Milwaukee to consider the currency evil, in 1S5S the bankers ol Chicago refused to receive the issues of twenty-seven Wisconsin banks, many of which hud no local habitation but had simply tne name of some winter lumber camping place high up in the tributaries of the Wisconsiu or Chippewa rivers. Milwaukee tad returned the compliment by refusiug n line of Illinois curicncy of i ue same cniiracier. ine representatives ul fifty-seven banks signed an agreement, which was published iu the newspapers, saying of the list of seventy banks named in detail tha'. they believed them secure, and that they would continue to receive and pay out their notes until December 1. 1861, when un act of the legislature would go into effect requiring a better redemntion oi the currency of the state. The largest bunking houses in Milwaukee, with one exception, si.jned the paper As might have been expected, tbe tendency ot tins r urrecey was to the business centers, aud soon the burden became too great for Milwaukee to bear. Oil Saturday, June 22, Hie banks which had agreed to take certain issues until December 1 published a .ard refusiug to receive ten of the number from and alter that date. on the fol owing Monday ninobgafhI'led in i he Manufacturing portion of the city, chiefly C erinans and bcauuiuaviaiis, of pioiiably 1,000 or more persons. They inaicbtd delilierately to the vicinity of two of the .largest banks and begin their work of vandalisir, which only ceased when plato glass w indows were destroyed, mahogany counters and all the furniture, us .well as the books and papers not previously locked in tic vaults, had been thrown into the stre?t and burned. The ollicers oi the several banks were obliged to run for their lives. During this exciting year an incident of the war helped them to close up seveial Wisconsiu banks on a basis more favorable lo note holckre than had been previously expected. When the v ar broke out, to pay tho expenses ol Wisconsin forces m the field nearly $1,000,040 of state bonds were issued. The bonds of Wisconsin were not known and had no market value. Tho governor and state treasurer could get but tin per cent, for them in the New York market, and even Southern state bonds bore a better price. These officers came home and male negotiations with Wisconsin bankers, taking the bonds held for them by the state comptroller, and giving in exchange Wisconsin bonds upon such terms as could best :e met by the oanks. lu W02 at one time there were forty-five banks liquidating of which number: 23 paid their hills at liar in coin. 1 paid t heir 1 Ills at si .er cent. 5 paid their hills between 7s and SO per cent. 4 puld t heir bills between 7o and 75 pot cent. 6 paid their blllls between SO aud 70 per ceut. 4 paid their I: ills between 50 and 60 per cent. 1 vmlil tlieir bills nt -lei.'y per cent. The losses lo the people in the West by corporntely oieanizi'U banks have, in a much larger percentage, fallen upon farmers and country population; and the losses by private oioiKers have been larger to the people in towns- it is eliilicuil to statu proportions. They have been enormous, but the fast increi sing wealth of the West is seen very soon to havemaile wastage good, and the same stories will continue ever to be told about confiding men and scheming bankers. Impoitant Uaanns Why ilia Citlseiia of Danbury Wanted 1'rutecllou. To Tin: Sesate axd HorsK ov UtvKlj.Si:NTATlVi:.S OF TUB l-NITED STATK8 is Coxgkkss A.sskmiu.kh: The memorial of the citrzers or the town of Danbury, Fairfield County, and state of Connecticut, respectfully showeth: That the town of Danbury contains a population of about ll.liOO souls, and that in ihe year ltiltl ibout &00 of this population were actively engaged iu minufact iring establishment;; since that period the number has decreased to less than 200, as will fully appear by the schedule hereunto annexed. lour memorialists find no difficulty In discovering the cause ot this retrograde in their manufacturing pursuits. At the period when the importation of foreign goods was obstructed by the war which existed brtwton this country and Great Britain their manufactories were in a nourishing state: but at thu moment i!io flood-uates of British commerce were opened iipontiiem. Ihoy were overwhelmed with British In bucks, mid from that moment may they date the decline and d;--Etiuction of their manufacturing prosperity. ft is ascertained by a committee appointed by your memorialists that in the year 1818 tin r was inunuiV.ctun'el for exportation within the limits of lhiitlnirv, goods and wares to the amount of nearly 100.(1(1.1, whereas, in tho year iSi'.i the amount manufactured will lie a little more than 1110,0110. The wages id persons employed in ihe various nianufaelories In the year 1S16 may be fairly estimated as S ltiil.(100. while the wage of persons employed in the, ear lsl'.i will not; exceed Sl5.ix). Many of our uianufacloi ies are abandoned and fas! decay ing. and the leiiiuiuder arc in a lanuuishiiig stale. The Auiei'iuuu manufacturer iu tho pur
chase of taw material is met by the British agent and monopolist, and beholds him export tin ui freeof duty. In afow months
he beholds the same British monopolist import tl:c same materials in a manufactured stale, on a payment of nic e nominal duties, and those at a loug credit secured by bonds which not imfreqnently fail to be paid at all a double competition is therefore the consequence In which wo can discover nothing to encourage, but much to dishearten and discourage tho American manufacturer. In our largo towns or cities may be seen hosts ot British agents exempt from most, or all of tho burthens of society enjoying the protection and inuiiiliceiice of our government. This policy, if pursued, must necessarily complete Ihe ruin ot our infant manuiacturing establishments. Vonr memorialists can behold nothing in this picture of their calamity eemal to that which they feel ami endure: some of your utcmorialiils have already fallen victims to the polii. v pm sued by their government, and approaching ruin awaits many others, unless redeemed by the interposition of the aoveriiiiient of their country. f ho interests of the agriculturists are in timately connected with those of the nKiniifactiirers and, so far as our observations extei d. they have been proportior-ate sufferers by the decline of our manufacturing establishments. All classes of citizens nave an ultimate Interest in thur prosperity, it is contidentlv believed by your mem orialists thai the American people can he supplied with an uiliele ol hats of American manufacture at a reasonable price and ot a quality in no degree interior, out superior to i nported hats. If this position be true, where can he the propriety of encouraging ur even permitting the importation of this article. i our memorialists are aware that a prohibition of the importation of certain articles of foreign merchandise would in some degrse affect the revenue of the government, lliey will therefore cheerfully submit to ii ny system of taxation to supply the deficiency and for the support of che goveruuier.it of their country. If the itibjects of the potentates of Asia and Kurope have for ages been profei'led in their manufacturing pursuits, ought not u patriotic and free people to ex-! peet an equal measure of protection from rulers ot their own choice. With these views and consideration;!, your memorialists for themselves and their suffering countrymen, earnestly pray your honorable body to take ther unfortunate and unhappy case into your wise consideration and" to grant tnem relief by prohibiting the importation of Halts and such other article of merchinelise as may appear expedient and increasing the tar fl' of duties on others, or in any other way which vonr honorable body may deem most consistent, with the great interests ot the American people and your memorialists as in duty bound will ever pray.
mm ill in ii : r i Jo g 5 j i o 3 i " " "i P ? ! ! ; T. & : t w S l l w n : : a ?! II I ? ! IXlJJ . . K 9181 II a .S32 uaiuioji jo -oij 2 3 . E - Is uoiujiio. jo ojj iii 3 r;S "I B3B.ll X "iiV. ''-! JO tunomii ATinaj. u. SciS 'A" - i- t--s " ""6181 mwuhMi ;: -.. - ;-,:B jo juuoius jSyiwi g Ii lit 3 t 1 vir-Ss! 9181 niopsm : jVi's epooa jo ourA ' LS53! 5 i ,..,-'.4 am ujopmu Z ' -,-"-5 "POM JO OUBA S i SSjSS
Ej-lniel row 1'anbuq Town Records, PoJ. o rwja Ui, IJMWOj Senator Slirruixn ltecouuu llepublicitn i cMovmnrK. From Senator John Sherman's Article in tho In dependent September 29.f The career of the Republican party was begun, convi'iued, and has not yet endd, as one of unprecedented legislative industry. It has never been anything but a working party devoted to the highest welfare of the nation. It is a distinguishing characteristic of the policies of the itepublican party that while they were undertaken in the heat of tho civil wir they were designed to pro. mote tne pi-emc development oi ine industrial energies and resources of the conn-trj-. One of the first landmark? of Itepublican legislation was the homestead act This law had been pending in Congress for many yjars while the Democratic party was in power. It had been vetoed by two Uemocratic president?. It had been strenuously supported by leading Northern Democrats, but had been opposed bv the South in the interest of slavery. A Itepublican Congress enacted it in Stay,' MS'.!, and converted it into a great national; Klicy. as beneficent as it was progressive,! or creating a prosperous class of imle-i pendent freeholders in the Western reaehesofthe Union. The homestead act, supplemented by Pacific railway legislation, attracted settlers, stimulated immigration and transfeired the center of inil ns trial power from the East to the Wcist. Even in wur time the foundations were laid for that marvelous material prosperity of which the lirst fruits were to be tiie resumption of specie payments and ti:io cancellation during a single generation of two-thirda of the national debt. In like manner the tarilf has ministered to the highest interests of the nation. At the open ing of the war the Democratic party, under the direction of Southern slave owners, was committed to the polioof a revenue tanlf tending in the direction of absolute free trade. The cotton, suga.r, tobacco and rice planters of the South, having what they considered the cheapest of ail labor in their slaves, were tiie natural allies of free trade Knglaod. Ono of the economic curses of slavery wherever it has existed nas been its inevitable effect in developing two or three great agricultural int rests and in preventing the diversifici tion of industries. Southern planting interests rnd eeonon.iu policy blocked national development of industries. The policy of a low- tariff, which had always been Southern rather than North am, was abandoned when the Republican party was confronted with the necessity oi' obtaining an income adequate for meeting the cost of a great war. MASTKIIPIKC ES OK FINANCE. The financial legislation of the Republican parly constitutes a series of landmarks of American progress. The great measures cf the war period were those providing tor the issue and ultimate redemption of the legal-tender greenbacks, and for the establishment of the national bank system. Those were followed, after the war, by the refunding and redemption acts. The general principle upon which this legislation was grounded assumed that public debt was to be regarded always as a temporary burden, to be paid as rapidly as ossible, and that every promise made to creditors must be fully r deemed. Although a debt was contracted so vast In oil line that one year's interest upon it exejceled the financial obligations incurred during ihe war of the revolution, provision wus made for its rapid conversion into securities bearing low rates of interest, mid for the payment of f-.vo-thirds of it during the lifo of a single generation. T ie taxpayers of the penbajrf the civil wur were compelled to do their duty as well as the soldiers were doing theirs in tiie field. Taxation was kept at the highest aggregate which industry would bear, and the burden of the debt was virtually carried by the generation which incurred it. The success of the refunding acts was hugely dependent upon the resumption of specific payments. That whs a supreme act of good faith which established public credit on so high a plane that refunding operations were conducted with extraordinary facility. In consequence of thirty years' experience with 1'epuhhean financial legislation me Aiucnciih people nave me promt distinction of being the only great nation that pays its debts. They have also a currency which was brought by laborious processes to pr.r with gold. They havo also a natiinal batik system which has stci.dilv grow n in popular favor, and under which not a dollar has ever been lost lo u note liolilei. and only tho smallest traction to depositors. TICK I'AKTY OF OB8TIIUCTION. A il these great policies have ocon accomplished without the aid of tho Democratic parvy, The funding act of 1870. by which Hie rates of interest on tho debt were changed by the conversion ot all classes of national securities, was passed without a single Demi. icrat in vote m either House. The resumption act of 1875 was opposed by every Democrat in both Houses. Tin national banking act was denounced a:) unconstitutional by the Democratic party during the war, and its hostility to the system has m t eeased to this day, when the riqieal of tin tax on state bank issues is deliberately proposed in its national platform. That party thirty vears ago defended thesa gtuto issues, 'although, thoy
Kaep Off the Enemy. A foe who lurks in amlms'i is a more danger00a antagonist than one who attack" ns in the open field, auei for whose assaults we are, in a measure, prepares. Tliot dimicerous eiemy to health, malaria, ninnt lie encountered fully armed. Us thrusts are snddm, tmexpected and deadly, and can only be guarded agalugt with certainty by fortifyinit the sy-iteni by a coarse of defensive medb ntlon. The rarest defenso against chills and ferer, bilious remittant, dumb acne, rnd aunc cake Is Hosteller's Stomach Bitters, which l-i als un ercdleaiorof the most obstinate: forms of malaria which resist the action of ord inary spocifics, and the virus of which rcmjlns in the nystent even when the more violont symptoms are finbdued. Constipation, itver complaint, dyseeiisla, and kidney tionblca are always revved by this genial remedy.
All If (tpiH'll in tt Hcooml. A second is tho smallest dU-ision of time In general use, and when wo consider that in one year t here aro about fU,."."S,0(i0 of these periods it would certainly seem as if it was small enough for all practical purposes. But after all a good deal can happen even in a fraction of a second. A light wave, for nstance, passes thronoh a distance of about 183,000 miles In this length of time. A current of electricity has probably an oven greater speed, The earth itself moves in Its orbit at a rate of about twenty miles a second, thus fat exceeding thy! fastest railroad trains ou its si. i face. A tuniug fork of the French standard vibrates 870 times per second to produce tha note A on the the treble staff. Popular Science. A. M. PRIEST, Druggist, Shelby file, Ind.. nays: "Hall's Catarrh Cure give t,9 beat of catisfactlon, Can net plenty of tcdirjionialii. aa ii curci every one who takes it. ' DrcggtBU sell it, 75c. "Coeur d'Abme." Tho moaning of tbe name, which has been so prominently before tho public becauso of tho fearful proceedings of the mine strikers, is, according to a Jesuit father, the heart of an uwl (a saddler's or a shoemaker's awl) conveying the Idea that the Indians to whom the name was applied, had hearts as small and as hard as the point of a steel awl; not susceptible of education or of religious teaching: refusing to have any dealings with other people: were cruel and unkind to all. Davenport Democrat. U'HKN JfATI.'Kli Needs assistance it may be host tc render it promptly, but ono should remember to use oven tho most perfect remedies only when needed. Tho best and most simple nnd gentle remedy is the Hyrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Svrup Co. Miserly. The mau who was so mean that he sat in the back pew in church to save the interest on bis cent while the contributionbox was coming around has at last fouud a rival. This man, it is declared, took his supper a little later each ni;ilil. "Now, why does hu do that?" someone asked, In surprise, who did not know him very well, "Why, so that presently his supper will como after twelve o'clock, and then he'll call it his breakfast and save one meal!" The use of Ely's Cream balm, a sure cure for Catarrh and Cold :n head, is ottended with no pain, iuconvenicn.ro cr dread, which can bo said of no o:her remedy. I feel it my duty to say a fow words in regard to Ely's Cream Balm, ard I do so entirely without solicitation. I h ivo used it half a year, and have found it to be most admirab'e. I have suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since I was a littlo boy and I never hoped for jure, but Cream Balm seems to do even that. Maty of my acquaintances have used it with excellent results. Oscar Ostrum, 4 Warren Avenue. Chicago. 111. Apply Balm into each nostril. It is Quickly Absorbed. Gives Relief at once. I'rico 50 cents at Druggists or by tr ail. ELY BUOTHERS. 56 Warren St.. New York. Willing to IJo Courtooua. Train Conductor AH a'oard! Hurrv up, miss, if you am going by this train. Little (ilrl Just a miiute, till I kiss mamma. Conductor Jump aboard; I'll attend to that Oakland Echoes. Three Bottle or Suomp-lloot ProduM a Positive (Uir. I had inflammation o' :ho bladder and kidneys, with intense pain iu my back and a frequent desire to pass water, which was highly colored and full of sediment. I'hysieiuns pronounced my ease chronlo kidney troubles and statod I wan beyond euro. , Jacob Oswalt, Knightsville, Ind. A Business Young Man. Young Drestbeer fof Chicago) Will you marry me. Miss FosdR-k? Miss Fosdick Really. Mr. D,-estboef, this is too sudden. You must give me time to consider." Young Drestbeef Very well. I'll let you have an option on mo for one wuek. Judge TTavn You AstlmiaT Tin. It. f cimi'MA.vN St. Ps.ul. M'.nn.. will mail a trbi 1 pu' k: .geof ScbitTn ann's Asthma Cure free to any sunorcr. Gives Instant relief la worst cases, and euro' wl.oie others fail. Name this paper ami fond address. Xoalt's tfoke. "Provisions aro running pretty low, pop," said Shorn on the thirt eth day out. "What are wo going tu do about it?" " don't know," said Noah, with a wink at J a phot, "unless we eat ! laro" Brooklyn Life. Fen A C oooii nn SonnTnacA - tbobiat iriediclno by fa' la Hai.e's famous Honey of HoiusBirtlNI! ASH 'IMt. I'IKE's Toothache Drops Cure in one Minute. The Wily Out. Angelina Hamfatte It's no use. Wo can't draw. 1'vo got a divorce, I'vo scratched my rival, I've lostmydiamonds and found them. Now what can I do to make the miserablo people oome. Her Manager Acs a little. The Jeweler's Circular. Foa Indigestion, const ipat: on, siok headache, weak stomach, dlsordeiod liver take lieecoam's I'llls. t or sale oj an arugsisua. Wuksrvbr the devil sues a real good man he sets about makln r a doum hypocrites. FITS.- -All Fltsstorred free lirPr. KUns'l Oei Nerve 1'e.stcH ec. No I'Htu i:it-v lir.it day', urn,. Mar. velous r.ureH. Treatittt and firtitrul bottle tres to mt casts. Send to Ilr Kline. 931 Arch St., fhila, l'a. No man can please God by accident. Bo uust want. to do It, and plan to do it. I SI It C Kit ELY. HEUEt'E that 1 should have ten doud lonff rKoif it hud not been tor Ifood'B Kiiraapm-illa. I had n bad humor that would net yield to r.ny treatnicut, and my stcmueh wat very woe It. I was Christum Temple, hardly able to get aroend when 1 began taking llood'a Barsaptrilla. X began to improve alowty until after 1 bad tal:e& some 10 or 13 bottles. I consider ;d mynelf well once more, initio's SAIiMAI'ARll.l-A did me st much (rood that it seen. an if It must do others good." Mas. Ouaisns A Temple, Bangor, e. HOOD'S PIM M are the best flfir-dmuor Pilisi asslKt dlavHtiou. cure headache. Trs abox. TP A O-rar-irir flaw mm arm retail rcitorciromlvxionicurrHrttnBiHmllon MmmA Im In (hmsJ W U UU UnuK Hmi -i t. Qtot FAT FOLKS REDUCED rVV A Mm. Alios Msnls. Or. a. Mi... wrtu i i Ml I J"M wIaht w330 joucdi. o ItiaML a redaction or 1 Iht." For olrouiuntaddrMs, wl!h6a K.aW.t-'.SMYUKB.MsVUIisr'slaMwtlhuiaa-ilS BICYCL ES lb Ail tliiiltchi-i' rtbneUy tit re, llr-fiM i rati but, iwi 4 nts trip for atftlof Tu P0ViElLftC.tMEt.TC0. 1B-3 Xai tM.ttUdiiM.11,0, ' Illla-ilMtUt- f 'lllltalr n slli'l Wlsllftaa liaml .School, i 'Ii'v-ifl ,A. Ohio. ' j V tiinUsI in l;43 wot.. 'foroitT e? t .J mm 'Hf88 AHO HEAD NOISES CURE1 'b Pk's InvlalbU iUr Cnt.iiM.-., a iai .rakfanL fttiBAMifui h ft) I rwmaa i.if'tlL Sol. mmmm
I
PflRFIFI n
iiot tu.i; IBIafl liwch. UadrrH Bl Hlllm RlfLES iS.Ot'lll iSsU WATCH ESlaWs"a
"August
9? Flower ' ' I have leet: afflicted with bilious' nessand constipation forfifteen years; and first one and then another preparation was suggested to me anel tried, but to too purpose. A friend! recommended August Flower andl words cannot describe the admiration in ttrliich I hold it. It has given, me a new lease of life, wkich before was a burden. Its good quaMes and wonderful merits should be mane known to eveiyone suffering witti dyspepsia and biliousness," Jessis Bakkur, Printer, Humboldt, ICas. AT THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AH0 NEW AND Mr COMPLEXION IS BETTER, to- doctor ay ft acts mntty on the ttimach, IItpp and kldnpya, aui la pleasant laxative, nil drink it made l'rom herbs, and Is prepared foriae at easur a tea It Is called !. LAFiE'S MEDIGME All f, as: u ull U at Ur and 1 per packer. If TO'i ccRflat nt tt, nai v..ur addrcM bra frat amnW. t-.--l ftiaaUr aadlahaa WW i i Itawal, U.. In r4ri tt a, bralthr, laUlaaaaaaay. AiUraia ORAt J 1. WOODWAKU. lib', . t. P From Small Beginning. Most great men are of humble origin. Timothy Ilealy. M. P., tbe leador of the anti-Parnellite wing in the Irish party, is tho son of the Janitor s.t the Lismote Poor-housi!, County Waterford. He has distinguished hinifielf by the bitternesj of his atV tacks upon his enemies. His speeches have led to more riots than those of any other man connected with Irish, politics. lie is evidently no believer in the adage "that molasses catches more flies than vinegar." but afterall mildness is as effectual in politics as in medicine The distinguishing characteristics of the Laxative Gun Drops is their freedom from all deleterious substancis and the gentleness with wh ieh they do their work. They are most effectual in cases of lonsr continued constipatioir. They are absolutely safe, while they will cure any bowel or stomach trouble. Ask your druggist for them; if hi will not orde" them for you write tt us. Tbe small boxes arc 10 cents, tiie large ones S3 cents. Sylvan Rbmedt Co., Peoria, HI. WIFTSjSPECIFIC jpOM renovating thf entire system, elim inating ail Poisons from the Blood, whether of scrofulous or malarial origin, this preparation has no equal. 3aM5aaHaiaia "Fef eighteen mcnihs I had am eating sore ou wry tengue. I was treated hy best tmtai -tttfsuumtf' ' tut o! turned no relief; trie jert eradually grew worse. Jinally took S. S . and vial entiretf cured after using a few bottles!' C Is. JJcLEMORE, Henderson, Tex. fRE AT1SE on Blood and Skin jl diseases mauea iree. 1 fcE &W1PT arscirw Wt Atlanta. Ga. The Wabash R. fi. Go. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. Wa.ll for tha RruiLI Ixw Rita HAKVIiST EXI'IL'KSIONS to be run by tho U'AHAStt KAII.liOAl on Angust. atth, September ifftn, and October 23th, !63i to points West, gonlbweit, and Northwest. Kenwmbfir tie Wabab is vbo Urc.tt ThronRb. I ecllitingr 'lilr t'ur Itoute, ond is the onlv noire ad in thj ttta'ei of i Ohio, ludiani, and Michigan giving t.t patron I Free Seats In these luxurious palace cars. Go 1 West and enjoy a tea week s rest anil roc real foa at a nominal expense. For maps, lim table I Mti f dl particulars, address cnenearest Wubatii ' Aten-. r -nrlte to 1'. chandler. Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent, Walwd. R. B . st. Louis. Mo n y PRINTING ufPICK OUTFITS at reasonable rates and wpon liberal tetriH. WtttTS Km l'miM l.Ai.-. FOltr ll'tlli MS l SI' A1'Ell I'KiOX, Fort Wayne. Ind. IEWIS' 96 LYE I I'an drrad and l erfUB-at. (fi-rx-mtn.' Tho th-otigsst an 1 puree! Lye mate rutfke other I. ye. It being 1Vn nowder aud imi ked tn s, can with removable lid, tbe contents are always roady tor use, wiu niaaa tbe best perfumed Ibird ?oap in 1 miuules trf-'ho..t lo'tinj. It Is lHl be.t for clennsinj wasve-pipea, dlainteetini; sinks, clo els wax-Ill, g bott'es, puiuts. trees, etc. a'KKNA. SILT M'r't CO, Gin. Agts.. Pbila , Pa. w a nif Ana imov trv 9 (he stoiitocli. ?r ond TwjJa, nwrt-J f aAjk (J t W ar. mfe ond cfftlu-U i j f :Y ftAflPH tne he-t incJlrive knows for LUtoua 2 tf'ir jK'f fyjpet. emistli-utf m, Urtairpoia, foatf breath, tadact'it,monJ dprojrfon.f WPifcj:-to infill .lioTOtfr i hod fwmnle-JUiB.i and oil distal .wuetf by fultu off ifoiMi (hair proper rmetitns, Pi rsomt trlwn to 01 nqfincr nrt hnnpfttM hv tiktiiD- iv in after Mflh IM ebb alomiich. lii cr or bowU to t Price, S2 ; samplo. loc 'At DrUKiT or Mnt hj m-mtt 1 l;ir IKS cuksiiCAI, on.. 10 si rutw st- Sew York. . X $40,000,000 Karned by iho Bell Telephone Patent in 1S.1. rout Inventlou may be valuable. You rihould protect ft by pat.-lit. Address tor lull and irit lligent advioe.raS 0 Aar.v, W. W. in I)i.i:V CO soli, ii ore of Patents, Pacific Bldg.. B F St. II W.. WaalUutfton. O.C Mtintion cftf jo. wr. 3? BALOHEAOEONESS A CISEA8E. J0k NO CURE. NO HAIR. .lr HO HAIR, NO PAV. Ak youi- druirgrtrt for Pr. Ponncr's A ti-t.'hronte Cants ait'l i:d"e,. Kemetly. l'llcojticeauauilsi.ue pvrbolUft. r.f'riille..m-iilarM,iia'i-mau a Id KgHlth M-nt traf, u)KMiii.ti'ioii.ii. A,i,nv-s thk Si.neca c'iinr Mbm. ci. .'.r-jt . n,rrsMiiv..Tnliu,i iiks .. PATF.NTSI PENSIONS! fiimd tor In"ntor's fluiilp or Hov. to Obtain PaUi, tii'iid fur J incut of IeiHlon ki 4 ltounty laril Barlows Indico Olvk, Ihe Fanitly Wash Blue, tor sals t Orma t;".7.T..Tr.T7r.."..". '. ,kt5mS When Writing to Advertisers, say ftji saw tho AdvortUuiitent iu this paper. ,mA- ha INkna aa Ik. iifi. pjiHipat use. ani vneapesi.
j Boa! by druiauts or ui by stall,
