Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 2 April 1870 — Page 2

THE JR/E^rrETW.

CIRCULATION

Indiana and

polls, Bloomington

a

Western Railway. 7

Train* arrive at and larre Crmrford^ville dstlr follows .!* MtAVK StytNi a ...... 7-JOa.m. Miiwl 12-.10r.11,

ARRIVE:

Kxprets

11:in M. 5:30 p. M.

TiOlltarilto, \0W Albany & Clnc.lfifO

1

Rail Road. OOIJ.'i NORTH

Accommodation. Etprw, OOJNfl ROCTTf Erpr»»s. Accommodation,'

7~—: rr

...!»ao ft.m. .. .730 p. m.

.. f". 3-2 a. m. ....5 40 p. m.

Fridays Deoarta Tuesdays A days

S a

"rllA

8

BATES FOB ADVERTISING: Koch square, (9 linos or less) fir.-t insertion legal and transient matter 8 1 30 Koch additional insertion, of each squnre fot fix weeks or loss 1 00 One column—threo months ............ XS.00 —six months rto 00 —ono year .100 00 Half oolumn—throo month SO 00 six month "J7 50 —one year .. .' .- GO 00 Keurth col.—three monthii .' Is! 3 0 —six months lia 00

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Each subsequent insertion, per lino

CIRCULATION

Lootil business notiaes per linn. 1st insiTiioii io the system of worlds now existing in space consisting of the following,

2000

Job Printing Promptly and Meat!)' Kxemtcd.

From the Kveninif I'ost.

Becent Hpeculallons oil I lie Karfli's Origin. Th6 Edinburgh Rcviftr for January

has an an interesting article upon

•'Geological Theory in Hritaiu, which

sums up the results of recent inquiry

and speculation among scientific men

in this great field. Nothing shows

better the great change vihich has

takeo place in the tendencies of scien­

tific, study of late years than the new

geoto'gicul theories now discussed. A

generation ago, it was the aecoptcd

jiractico of cach branch of science to

pursue its own course in isolation to

devote its strength to filling up its own

outline, rather than to connecting that

outline with other branches and so,

by uu ever minuter division of labor,

to cut itself off more aud more from

the current of thought among intel

ligent men iu general, and to fall into the hands of traiued but often narrow

specialists. Now all this is changed,

and the natural sciences arc linking

themselves together more closely every

day. Astronomy, geology, natural

history, mineralogy, physical optics,

chemistry, and electricity approach the

solution of the same questions hand

in hand and the' most influential

theorists iu each of theso branches arc

men whose researches extend, more or

less, into them all.

Tho reviewer divides all theories as

to the course of gelogienl changes into

three classes—those which assume

forces formerly at work, entirely ilis

tinot in kind, or at least -in degree,

from any now known those which as

sumc that tho forces of nature arc

strictly uniform, and that the past

cbaQges iu the earth have been pro­

duced by causes now at work and

those which assume a definite progress

toward some goal, (.'atastraphism is,

according to Professor Huxley, th

The notion of sudden "catastrophes" at remote periods, by which mountain chains were upheaved or seas opened, ia now generally abandond. Sir Charles Lysll has succeeded in miking the doctrine generally accepted that geo-

million years and others have thought planets.'"

moon

rocks. But all these arguments are indefinite and unsatisfactory. Thai which seems most susceptible of one day: furnishing a precise argument is the

a a

tion of th- earth but are l.v no ««.«|

L)iiLY—Going South A. M. agreed as to its degree, or even its 11.1- nothing la the .rgument oe.ore North 'M. tm-e uud the reviewer sems to us tu sliow that this is an exeep'ioii to THORKTOWN.br Hack ftirlvcs M.naayrf.nn:l .. .. .. i. ... t-.r..« t!..t life

0

eerta

•E, by hack, orrivcs Monaa7«. In- ocfin \Vedncfdays and Fridays-..-4S H. COntUUllt) 01 tlx. Ottan, departs Tuesdays. Thurrdny?. of the moou and some other and Saturday? 8.', A. U. *wtown, tj carrier arrives Tuesdays, the problem luay lia\t

Thursdays and Saturdays....|SJ M. however thi-, may be. departs samo days at 11'. M. INDIANAPOLIS .|by carrier arrives Wednea- shows thai oue huuurei

*.7 i\ M. attach entirely tu much weight to it. starry universe at lar»e tint

0

nti'l thing like the extent claimed by Si

ALAMO, by fiack arrives Tuesday depVr"bSm« days m." p". M. Wiliiam Thompson if it dot,, W*TKKT0ws.6y hack arrives Tuesdays A

11 how lonji it has existed to

Satarday:.. OS'A.M. departs same days at 12M. tins extent, for "the form, size, anu RocEViLLE,.by hack, arrives. .Monday. .. .. tin- OCP.hi the distance shown to exist between the earth aud ienients I all her sister spheres, suggest that the ive varied. But, entire ereatiou may be one, not only

iby carrier arrives Wed nea- shows thai oue huuJred liiiliions of control its masses, but al=o iu th.. eon epS?t

same dayVat.i V.)!". J^rs afford probably room enough for slant and universal production of be 1 all known ticological facts. [oubtless hngs capable of enjoying its hounties a far lou cr period in probable, and no and delighting in the intelligence ii THE REVIEW astronomical or physical presumption expresses. 1 here is nothiu'j to show

has yet been raised against it. The new geology, then, inherits from the old school the right to assume all the time it needs, it accepts from tho "uuiformitarians" their rigid adherence to the doctrine of the permanence of law, and claims no force not to be found now at work in nature, but it extends its inductions into new fields of thought aud discovery. Tt finds

among other forms of matter: First—There is the sun, clearly proved to be a "great fiery globe surrounded by an atmosphere of intensly heated gasos and vapors, that arc continually rising or fall, like our clouds, according to their change of temperature.'' Flames of burning hydiogen flare out seventy ov ninety thousand miles beyond the dazzling atmosphere of light. This "photosphere" itself has already been proved, by spectrum analysis, to contain thirteen elements familiar to us on the earth, besides some that are doubtful. In other words, the sun is made of the same materials as the earth, but on fire.

Secoud—The stars, so far as they can be examined, yield similar results. Nine of our elements have been detected in Aldcbaran, including three metals not yet. observed iu the sun, T-be nebuhe.tre made up, some of re mote solid stars, but some chiefly of such well-known gases as hydrogen and nitrogen. I short, the starry heavens are made up of matter similar to that

of tho earth.

Third—The planets generally re-

Fourth—Meteorites frequently fall to the earth out of space. They are but small planets, turned out of their course by its attraction and they bring to it nothing new. Twenty seven of the elements have been found in these wandering bodies: combined just as they often tfo in our rocks, and supposed, with the strongest reason, to be specimens of what the earth contains in its hidden depths.

Other facts might be quoted, in ad dition to those furnished by the reviewer, aud bearing on the same eon'usion. Me might have poiuted to

doctrine of a past era in geological in- speculations upon the auroral streamcrs. Hut these are enough to justify inference: ,s-:v .y?"?-:-.

quiry uniformitariaiiism, that of the

present while to the third, or evolu­

tionism, he assigns the high honor of

being that of the future. The evolu­

tionists of the present day arc few iu

number, but eminent iu reputation

Dr. Tyndall, .Mr. erbert Spencer,

•Tin* inevetiahit' coiu-hision .lerive.l iVi.tn the study of the- heavenly bodies—of sun, cart I and stars, meteorites, am! nebula —is that the immeasurable space is full of inatter of tlie same kind, aggregated in diil'ercut fashion": sometimes, being caseous, at other times solid, sometimes in a state of I the most intense heat, at other limes cooled

Professor Huxley, alii Sir W lllialll .sufficiently to admit of the presence of life. Thompson may be quoted as the most

win may also be considered to belong to this school, lis founder was the great Emanuel Kant, whose work iu physical science is only now beointiini to bo duly recoguized.

1

prominent leaders ill Knglaud. 1 ho Whether the geseous condition of matter doctrine of the origin of species is in preceded in any particular case the solid deed merely evolutionism applied

0

logical fact5 are to be explained by other hand, the earth, too, has its de. forces now at work that the same tiny, "the time will arrive when, like power which now raises the const of a meteorite, it will become cold to its Scandinavia at the rate of a few inches very core, and when life will cease to in a century, and depresses that of to found upou it, on account of the parts of New Jersey about as fast, if] low temperature.'' The process may it has time enough to work in, will be delayed by collisions with other bodies for the immense force with which they move is turned into heat by impact, and the stoppage of the motiou of the earth itself, by falling in

suffieo to make continents of all the oceans and to submerge every conti nent that the earthquakes and eruptions which have built up some moun taina and islands in our own time need nothing but more time to build innumerable others. But according to the most enterprising speculators in thi? field, the la»t word on the earth's history is not to be spoken by geology alone, and the changes which are re corded in the rocks under our obscr•ation are not the limits of our inquiries.

Indeed, the other sciences sometimes attempt to contradict the conclusions of geology. Mr. Darwin thinks that tbo washing away of the rocks from the rains of the famous "Wealden" •traU in the southeastern part of Engltnd wers formed could sot have

earth ami Mais, or lastly. Cold.

i, I barren, and lifeless, as in the meteorites,

we cannot tell. solar as our eirth con-

.. ... cerncl. the onlv idea that we can grasp ot biology, and so far Mr. liarles D.ir

0 1

i/

W a

-U

the sun, and that it has lieeu gradually cooling from that time down to the present dav. This realization of the steady change is- a fitn.laiueiUiil doctrine of evolutionism.

taken place in lesa than three hundred inevitably fail inio their respective gambling quarrels, and he was looked

million years ago that no lite could be pr« exist on it* surface, while even the thu? lost? Whither is to go the for?e loweht of the Wealden strata arc full that uow animates tod revives the uni of fossils. He savs the sun is losing verse around us? Assuredly the task

as the geologists claim while* the for the contrary, maybe pictured as fear I earth itself must have been one rani- more varied and glorious .than any in

ten mass at anything like the remote the present. oil to which they refer to these After the close of what he tenn*

a

it more reasonable to assume ten tiroes The reviewer refuses to look beyond at the risk of hfe. that period as nesessary. But Sir this melancholy conclusion, and will One night while playing cards in Co

the evolution of the s-ystem, and after its final catastrophe, the boundless space will still contain a!! of matter and all of force that are in it now and if these have sufficed for the or ionization of our present cosmos, they may euifice for another. There

Mr. Huxley in substance and in the laws which

It. is still open to the dreamer to amuse his leisure, or to the believer to comfort his faith by peopling myriads of worlds with nobler beings than ourselves and to even imagine that the inevitable wreck of our little earth aud narrow sky will be watched by

Tho Administration iiiid the Kii^iji or HaHey Vork.

The head of the Administration, Gran is to competent and avaricious in tiie last degree. His first appointment of Secretary of the Treasury to miard the imtne use revenue in-

the iccent researches of Professor terests of the Government, was that of Tyndall into couietary matter to the spectroscopic revelations concerning the identity of the Xodical Light, with the sun's "corona and to recent

In short, the earth was once a molten ball, a source of light, like the sun. It has cooled oil", and is cooling still. The sun too is cooling its vast, size makes the process slower, but the result i» inevitable, aud will one day In ISM I there lived in Monroe be what the er.rth is now. On the county. Mississippi, a plauter named

to the sun. would furnish as much heat as is radiated from the sun iu ninety five years. It is absolutely certain that all planetary matter is inevitably gravitatiug toward the sun, which will be the common bourne of our system. 'As surely,'eloquently writes Sir William Thompson, 'as the weights of a clock run down to their lowest position, from which they can never rise again, unless fresh energy is communicated to them from some sourcc not yet exhausted, so surely must planet after planet creep in, age by age toward the sun, not one cau #3-

P°°

that the particular astronomical epoch in which we live is an exception to the general history of the universe, or the country is poor—can afford the that this earth and those who inhabit it are the highest achievement of the formative skill which built the whole.

The flight of Bailey the Collector of

Tuterual Revenue in the Thirty-seeo'nd

District in Xi ork. is a tie

faulter to the (ioverntiienl in huge but

as yet an unknown amount, throw- :i

little light it|ion the rotieuiiuss and

corruption of this Administration,

lie was originally appointed to olliee

by Mr. l/mc"in, ami through Repub­

lican influence was retained by iVesi

dent .Johnson. fie was reappointed

by (iraut, who transferred him to the

most important collection district, iu

the country. While there he has

made himself conspicuous.

zealous of all the overumeiit officials

1 1 1

semble the earth in form, in solidity, in atmosphere, in their general relation to the sun and his system. Most of them are veiled, some of them very thickly, with clouds, but wbeu their faces can be seen, they show still more striking resemblances to the earth. .Mar s, for insttinee, is whitened in every one of his long winters, over all the polar regions, by heavy falls of snow, which melts sway agaiu in .summer.

.. ..

pretended exposures ol fraud and

evasions of the revenue, lie has been constantly a public prosecutor, aud has elaimcd for himself an immense amount of private virtue. Bur at last the hypocrite was unmasked by his elForts to convict .Judge Fulleriou stud .Martin It. Cook, who turned the tables upon him, eliciting sir.-h a state of facts as to leave him no recourse but flight. It was but an accident that developed his rascality. But for these prosecutions lie doubtless would have been continued i:i office for au indefinate time, and succeeded in swind-

the heaviest importer of foreign good in the country. His other cabinet ap pointmcuts bad no celebrity except as donors to him of large .and valuable presents. His present head of the Treasury. Mr. Houtwell, is a ueedy and necessitous Yankee, whose princi pal motive in takiug the office was un- I where, doubtedly to make "a large pile" out of its emoluments. The nearest relatives of the President have been im plicated in the most rascally opera tions of the gold ring, aud with them his Sub Treasurer,Geueral Hutterfield. late a member of his military slat! Yea, more than that, the President himself has been suspected upon 110 slight grounds or flimsy basis. All over the country ihe most uublushing nepotism has characterized the ap pointmeuis. Relatives aud friends of the family have beeu everywhere ap poiuted. With such surrouudiugs. uu der such auspices and with such heads what will the subordinates do but imitate. so far as they cau. the conduct a

A IJcmarUable Prisoner.

Wooley#«fHe was a half breed, at least

there was a stood deal of Cherokee

Indian iu him. lie owned about two ,-cie

sole occupation, the plantation

managed by an ov Hu hid the

sole virtue of possessing a sort of In­

dian veneration for the saeredness of

his word. He would not execute a

uote for acv purchase whate\er, and

held all men in sovereign contempt

who violated their pledged word. He

had no compunction in killing a mau

in what lie deemed a jus-t ijuarrel:

his word was his bond. This was his

well-known character, and he could

have got credit for thousands on bis

word easier than other men could have

WEEKLY REVIEW—CRAWF0RD8VILLK, INDIANA, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1870.

Wn*liam*Thomp«on"inslts that this is not regard tin's history-as a never lumbus, a quarrei a'ros'e about the the Pwadical party its ascendency in the Funding bill when it gets ^j (jKhAl llftMfcjMhiS contrary to known principles of physi- ending cycle of change, or as a kind came. His opponent was a koown Indiana, and now th same mean? are to the House. He certainly cannot crI «ci nce He says that the sun and of phoenix life." To him, the aggre- desperado, and he gave the lie to employed even in the primary elec- support it without crossing himself en.1 le -1_ t!: .1' 11.„ I *•.-» ^r oTmn lliA im nu (inn thst nii'f tft eiia Die O DC UC tir^tr nn ropnrd *0 Mi 1 f. 4

1 "actio" 'on the tide" wave of the gatif.n aud final chilling of the entire Wooiey statement about the game, tions of that party to enable one fac tirely on th« record. sy 1 11:..j i.t _•. Ant ei'mitUonAiiiutp (inn frt uAt m#1 va*1 it tuc Here unothcf CCtl lU i)f thi? :iCt.

Wooiey was arretted arrested be eauise he did not care that it sliGuid be otherwise. Woolev had carried his

its heat bv radiation so fast that, at of sueh speculations is not ended. «n- k.ll.ng so !ar that the judge felt bound men who have never before made any the present rate of emission, it could til that force is traced into new rela- to commit htm order to avow! the advance, to negroes Ireate. h..n aerive 'd not have illuminated the earth so long tions. which, since no reason ,s shown imputation of being affected e.ther by with even human, we are oldUuop-

Sc-e here, Jim," said he, "you know and this humiliation disgusted even me: you know never break my word, the darkies themselves, who could ap Now I nit to Ji) on? and have asocial preciate iliat it was not prompted by is name with the boys. Yon CJ:I just -my regard for them, but only by the to leave me the key, and when it gets bed most selfish considerations. The Had the fime I will come, lock myself iu, aud ical correspondent of the t'nmnrrcial it will be all riuht." is betrayed into eoudemning these

limited to oue or few of the heavenly I'tii-' argument was enforced by in a thiugs as "disgusting trick* of elei. bodies, or even that mind, in some of, Serial considerations and night alter tioneering, that eveu the "coloied its conscious forms, is confined to one uight Wooiey used to come out and eitizeus 'should themselves rebuke, sta^e iu the meat cycle of their ero enjoy his nocturnal liberty. The court 3. Sambo was not -reticent lution. Hither, the strong analo-ry sitting soon, he aot the case put off, corruptible" in the exercise and L'lviou' bail in the sum of 810.000, "new honors." The same cor res poo was released deut who thus characterizes the first ?. At the uext term of court, Wooiey exercises of suffrage by the ucgru. was put upon trial: the jury returned I contradicts his own assertions in the a verdict of guilty, and the judge sen tenced hi in to oue year iu the penitentiary at .Jackson. The papers were duly in ide out. aud the sherifl pro posed to start with him Jo: Jacksou, but Wooiey demurred.

You know, sheriff," said he, "'hat

trip—aud I'll just let my buy Ctesar drive me down to Jackson, and save all expense, dot the papers?'

The sheriff produced them, aud. ere he was aware, Wooiey seized them aud put them into his pocket.

All right." said he: "f shall be off to-morrow morning."' The sheriff knew lie had a desperate customer to deal with, but wlieu he

them from without, as one scene of a reflected that Wooiey never broke his larger drama in whieh mauy tragedies are included but who is "ood.

.such Mid

word, and had, besides, over .9100,000 I worth of property be could move, he made a vir'ue of a necessity, aud left things to take their turu.

True to his word Wooiey left for Jacksou aud in due time arrived. Puttiuir up at the Mansion House he sallied out. visited all the gambling hells with which that town even then abounded, and the next morning drove up to the penitentiary. Knferiu war.I room, he inquired I ••Where shali I find ti Warden am ilie nu'i." saiil Colonel Dick-

S II. "Well. I've brought )ou a prisoner."' '•Where is he?" inquired the war den. "Here. I am the mau," and Wooiey handed over the sheriff's mittimus.

The wardeu was amazed. Had lie a lunatic to 'deal with, or had the mau killed the sheriff and theu come to

the most ^fy him He could not tell: but lie determined quickly to keep the man that had offered himself. "Now."' said Wooiey, thrnnuli tliis pl««o

ling the Government out of still larger just for the name of the thing, and we power, entailing all the evil-: that a sums. Ilis case, there is but little will live jollily together, till the year doubt, is that of huudreds of others, who, when this Administration goes out of office, will be found iu a similar lis.

is up. ^The wardeu saw lie had a character to de.il with, and concluded that a mau who would go into a prison on his own accord, would not run away and acquiesced. Wooiey stayed his year ae cordingly: nominal clerk or companion by day and a gambler in Jackson by night. He kept the ward room supplied witji Havunas. a ml a sly nook in the office always contained the best of liquors. His year -up, he left un regretting but regretted for at heart he was a good fellow, and made the warden a good companion.

Such was justice iu Mississippi forty years ago but such an incident as this could have hardly occurred else

K'-om the .State Sentinel.

following expression:

it: uuuii iiii.nj rjirtutiii 111 1111* 1'' „»*,,„ 1 ..,,,11

toimty—The DIsgustiiigTrlrks of'Rad-

ical KlctCioneeriiii I he [udiatiapnlis correspondent of tiie lucinnati 'uniiii Had ical

inclined to question the statements of

their party opponents. The witness

thus details some of the scenes of

Saturday:

I "The tifteenih aineftdm.-'nt. although not. formally ratified hy President (Irani, was duly recognized hy the Republicans in counoil 011 the 22.1 of February, who then and'j there invited the colored citizens to partici-

a

election. In the meantime cur

eves have been opened to thn singular spec-

ot-

hundred slave.-, and bad all the worst button-hohd thtm on Mrett comer.- ,imt in th ... ii- i-i uttni'/ril their SimJii/ •c/too!-'. juni/fr habits of the old tunc pl.iutci drink- j?iriny ?oci/ti*. It is rather iug. gambliii'j aiid horse racing. amusing to witness the dignity with which, 1 1 i_ these overtures are received. The new honors 1 hese pursuits alternated, formed his

eliciting their .suffrage. .V™ hact

has proved himself reticent and incorruptil)h. Xo doubt the candidates who have held themselves more aloof from the disgusting tricks of electioneering will receive the largest vote."

This cauditl expression eoutaius

some facts of general interest.

i« an aumi^icu

1. That the Radical leaders iutro-

dueed illegal roters to decide a party

eoote«t.

making them virtually the

hcIance of powe

and thus overriding *old'

the choice of thjMfc who were

entUIeJ t0

ever ia oniy

cape its fiery end. Io like uiauuer g°' hundreds. At the time we speak which the Radicals have carried the from the payment of those bonds in the satellite! of the planeta must of he bad killed several persons in elections in this locality, and the State greenbacks instead of gold, but it does

stuffing and illegal voting have been Upon this grouod we expect Mr. Butthe agencies in the hands of unscrup- who has been one of the ehanapiulous Radical leader? that have given

were employed to ubt.iiii the of the 'colored citizen*' not yst invested with the right of suffrage. W hite

of his desperadoism or wealth, ed so low as to button hole them on Accordingly to jail went Wooiey. street corners, attend their Sunday The jailor was a weak man—weak iu schools, prayer meetings and sewiug courage aud weak to resist the iuflti- societies. All this a Krtdical admit-*, enee of a douceur. After bearing his but he does not tell all. These Uadi confinement for a day or two Wooiey cal candidates invited negroes to drink seut fur the jailor. with them socially at public saloons.

tobacco and tigars corrupted many of them. Tn fact, never before at a primary or regular g'eetion was corrup tious more unblushing and on a cheap er scale. Colonel French, one of the candidates for the Senatorial nomination, tried to buy the votes of the tie groes with his uusaleble biography of •Senator Morton. The new voters voted often, thus demonstrating their aptitude to imitate and adopt, the vices of tlu* white Radicals—quick to leiru evil. Some of the Radical candidates, and one who was successful, were free to sav that, the eiecTioii was a huge the farce, and admired that ihe negr*i»'^

I re ii ii ii it ii Radical legal Vote". wh- i!e i-i.M!.e I hifingle ticket iu good I'.u.h.

Here are some of liie fruits of the first exercise of negro stiHVage in In

diana, and although it was exhibited

corrupt rule brings upou the country, and under which the people are now suffering.

Wild Spurts in Florida.

0 0

the par

means

.* i,

or iu

of his

"There is no repressiujr iho liroaii smiles that irradiats their i'.'U'J.-' a.- tlu\\ come av,:iy i'min the polls. One. evid-nil.v a plantation ihirkew deposited iiis volt*, and oliMnnjr t]i• i-.irinT of ill.* lious-*. jrave vent to his deii Jill i:i a ilniililc- sliiliHc, shooting -Brcss .le Lord!' Some of them, pity 'tis, 'tis true, had added lo'tlie'intoxication of the hour. :i more harmful liCtveragi'. n«l west! IIIII.UStakablv drunk." ti

at a Radical primary election, aud I

ind swindle au election in a contest between party friends, it only illustrates what he will be ready and willing to do

let's go when the contest takes place between llOW It political uppoueuis, anil lie i.- arrayed

looks." and through they went. A* they returned to the guard-room, Wooiey had talked so pleasantly that the warden felt reassured aud said joeos1ey •'Now, Mr. Wooiey, what branch of the business do you think you would cal attempt to cheapen and corrupt like best? suffrage, aud by an overwhelming ma'•To tel! the truth, colonel,'' said jority at the October election would Wooiey. "I uever did a day's work in place the seal nf condemnation upon my life, and don't think I'd like any the demagogues and party tricksters of* your cussed trade.- I'll tell you I who have step by step corrupted the how we cau Gx it, I'll clerk for you, ballot-box to continue their hold upon

A Maine mail describes au encoun­

ter with a catamount iu Florida. He

writes I rem .lasptr, Hamilton county:

went to a pond oue mile and a

half from home, and caught, a fine

mess of fish. As 1 was leaving for

home, heard something walking on the leaves behind me. I turned aud

1

saw a large catamount within seven feel of inc. and before I could get fairly ou my feet (for I was sitting I dowuj he sprang on top of my head and cut a large gash in my under lip with his teeth, and scratched uiy eye with his claw, so that, I could not .-ce.

I ixot my knife from my pocket, and

urol,l^d

«f t,i/ i'?e, discloses some ma'.teis eon- 1 yo of my head and

uected with the Kidical primary elec- bit 111c on the neck. I put my head tion, held in this city ou Saturday last uuder water and he let go of me. I 1 i* .• .n., beld my head under water as Ion:.' as that are deserving of notice, especially I

as they come through a Radical source

aud which fact will give them credence

with many iuteuse partizaus who are one of them so I

,p

1 soon found he was getting the be-t of the fight, and' I jumped into the pond, lie then let sro uf my lip aud caught 111c 011 the betid. I turned over on my

could and live, expecting when 1 rose lie would attack me again, but he was cone. I washed my eyes aud got

large stick, and started for home without molestation. Men started with guns and dogs, and killed liiiu within a quarter of a mile of where we had the fight. Thus, I had the great consolation of seeing my enemy dead.'

Tin- I'liiKliit- Kill.

The measure known a.s the Fuudiuu'

Hill, which baa already passed th*

Federal Senate, has the uumi.sUkiible

marks of the bondholder uu it.

uil hn .. ii It make: it payable in -'old. are worn with the ease of a old garment, and i|» being Sambo, who was alwiivs acute and faithful, j* The law whieh authorise the issue of the five-twenty bonds provided for

their payment in the liiwful money of

the I'tiiied State.-, whieh was saeh

money as was current in the ordinary

and 10 tUe

lognlly

to be

Jetermine it. ThU how

Pa,J

,D

Thi:i wiil sl,ut off

use every effort to get meut to guarautee the these bonds? Ah. General, tli.it a it a is

likewise, for many years. Ballot-bo* not prrwnt un/ barrier to Repudiation. E. J. BINlFOBD ft lJRO.'S COL. E. J. BINFOBD it BBO.'S COL.

(he greenback payments, to op- -,,,

SEC. 4. Awf Vt it furtkrr tnart'td, T&fttL'the3E9Ei

l."»n'I.t Vint th• iinihu! in-'om- tUrrtnn.

:niLUor-

ii-'-l by this aot. sh.il! br-txe'iipt fro:n iiU t-ix ition by or under intionil. SMIp. municipal. anil loral :iu:!ivrity.

The little farm of the farmer, tins home of tiie mechanic, and the in-

on these bonds, but the aristocrat who barters iu the sweat and blood of the people is exempt from taxatiou by this ciHSs-legislatiou.

This Funding bill put? off the pav merit of twelve hundred millions of the debt for forty ycar.s—handing it

of legacy which was creutcd to perpetuate the domination of a plundering

mob, and to create a c!titraii/.ed power—a rump oligarchy. bile it does not propose the taxpayers of the pieseut day shall pay the prineipal of those bonds, it does not propose lo relieve them from the continued burden of the interest, which goes to the bondholder regularly semi-aunually. aud iroe- to him io i:o!d, such money as the laboring man never sees, and su'h uiiiue) :ts circulates ouly with eupital ists, for whom is is earned b\ their slaves, the taxpaycis f"-

The real intent of the bili is to perpetuate the houds.—to make them a coutinua! source of income to t!ie holder- of them, and rer.iiu liieni us couI :iti.iI -ii tckles upon tii. working men. Tiiere is tio re ison iiope it will be defeated iu ihe Mouse. There are Uu miuy bondholders who have seats there, aud hence there is but one

Sambo had his price and itwasoltun .. dirt cheap. Oue electioneer informs 'P he members of I undress who vote us that he bought the \otesof six ol a a a them for ten cents apiece. Whisky., -present generation paying ine debt-.

a a a

The people will soon speak on this same subject, and they will repudiate

au3 idea of any one paying it- More than all, they will not be so cowardly as to hand do\yn to thi/ir children a burden of this description, to cripple and weaken their energies.

fin: Lafayette correspondent ui tho

the Cincinnati (hnnnfurnishes

the following item of ptrty gossip:

(lencral Lew Wallace is making

st re II ii" el] or is io get to Congress

from I hi.-. .'is:i iet Tiie lleneral, in

eotiii.'-ti with a little ijermati Colo-

ii a a I ii ii a th.

i.el i!-. tiniwn ttii'oii^o.rir the Mate as (loner.il Sturm., are inleie-te.l lirge'y in the forty or fifty millions of Mexi eau bonds held by the Mexican ring,

a I

exclusively upon one side. If the voters of Indiana could only have witnessed the disgusting scenes that were exhibited at the Radical primary election in this city on Saturday last they would be satisfied with the Radi- ehevalier were iu

fcptidiatiou of which by

1 1

there should be jnor even among virtuously wratcful in that intensive thieves, corruption was the rule, and epistle of his published all over the honesty the exception. If hambo can ciiunt.ry some months ago. The (lenbe thus readily taught to double vote believe, claims that, his share of b.in-Js were obtained for his valuable services iu Mexico, or rather, were given to him by the grateful people, of that model republic as a slight te.-ti-

the dougl.t General waxed so

monial. The four or live bushels that the General is said to own are quoted at, declining rates, and it is said that under those bonds can be found the rat in the meal tub. For what more natural than that, if the two edged ongress, lit would the Governpayment, of

Two of our most euterpri-iug young

business men, Mr. Clayton Ijildcr-i

brand, bile of the linn of C. G. French

Si Co.. a ml Mr. Sam. Goldsberry, recently iu the employ of McLene llenon. arc about to retire from our midst to engage in the watch and jewelry business iu Craw ford-villc, /The gentlemen have our best wishes for the success of their enterprise, and we trust that the citi/.ens of Athens No. I '1 will bestow upon them the liberal patronage, that they as skillful and I a is S 1 1 S. ,//•/.

1 Hi lludical Cincinnati tlr.rite

a in in

Radical Congressmen

"After having failed to discipline the members who sold appointments to the military and naval academies, il will be small business if the House shall, as is reported, demand that the cadets shall be dismissed The cadets are innocent parties. This will look as if the members wanted the idiance to sell the places again."

1

could see, took a

BALSAM.

J- I 'I .1

O I

Spit I'll Worllihvss Nostrums.-..:

Use that which is Good!

TRY .FIRST

ALLEYS LL'.Vfi UAI.SWl,

As an E\{»w*.toran1 il liiis 110 Kijiuil 1 I the l.ciicfil of those wh., a r-nftlifre.l with 1 eotisuinp'lve teadoncie.-. we make the fo!lowinir e.xtrael from a letter from t'.-v. Ciuirie,

A. liouiidy, tho city Missionary, of I'o-ami UOSTO.V. Maiiaehusotts. Kehurary is. i-tl i. MKssits. p. DAVIS A So: —Ok.ITS The packnse of "Allen Lun? Hal-am" you sent me to u-u Hnion? the u/Hiutcl poor in my city ini-i..n-i arv work.,ha proved very ai-ecptaljle and use-

It in to a am a it

It perpetuates the rt^:ttl debt 111- remarkable etfect in every inHt..ncc. One woman h:n heer. restored from what her tllliy. pyjieian pronounced eonsumption, after 'everal +month?' iickne.--- wiih e-.iigh, ure»: p»in in the iunzsand prostration, »n that »he i«ahle now to do hou^e work and assist in the support of her family, and witheare continued u^e of thejtal«am she expects entire re tioration.

Anoter person a yoisns woman to whom 1 ?ave one bottle, has received ?reat benefit. that her cough, which is nf m..ntbs standinz is zesting better* and she has purchased a second bottle, and has ever indication of a speedy care,

A young man wbo was raisin? blood, and quiet weak and sick, has by the use of two bottles

eommereial- trausaetions of the day. been much Ituproved. and is nble to do little at

Bv tbii Funding bill these five-twenty A younjf man to whom 1 reeemmended a trial of it, who hits had bud cough and much pain bonds are drawn in. and their places in his lun«s for month? pa^tjand unable to get ood rest and "sleep, has commenced ,iakin"

,an8un».e,

°f.the ,aCt'

f.

=0,d'

uu'

adopting the tactics by ^"-paying "»"se9 might have had

relief lhe

supplied Willi the UeW ten forty bonds, Snd'n-oyu.ins.hefua'rthbnitl-e withgreot r,cn Laboratory No. 4*, Bullitt Street, ohicb draw Sre per eent. interest in -r ll»l ,b, bly It seems to ine.) to be able to resume his worka^in. Very respectfully,

and gratefully yours, CHAH. A. KOl'LiKV, City Missionary.

J. N. HAKHIS A. t'O,. Sole Proprietors. Cincinnati: Ohio. JCPSold by all Drugeiits.cUI

Sold Br

K. J. Binford Bro.. T. W. Fry Co Kroul.Moffetti Boe, Orfcwfordn ille. Jeel5'6?m3

E

4

t» r* rp nrtirm ir'i

Hurler'S--"*

SUMACH BirrERi

10 It

Oi-bilily, Wt'iikni't* ln•ligcalion, or Djapriwin, Wnni of iirllon oftbr l/irrr or Di. orifrrri! Mtoiu.irh.

Tnere ure no liitlcr.* can i^itnparc with ttio-*c* in removing ""mplivint^. Fur ?:ile or fan h--h:i.l :it an.v slrui il.ire in tho I'niied Stair*. .l \Mr S RIDUDLK ,v P().. 1'ropriot irJ, i,.-ni£\iile. Ky.

ioJiis. Kuddle .t Co., I.imWvillu. Kv.: Centleineii: 1 his is to certify that I have hei-n for rour* sufiVrer and tried all (he lonifi.i 1 have heard

down to the uext ireneration a.» a sort I or ?een .-idvertised. with littlo i.r n.i riliir Irons any of them. I heard Hurley'^ Hitler- hichly .fpjiken of.nnd tried a Imttle ith little faiih in rt. lielure I oomnienpod. nnd tf my surprise and

1 Hushed one bottle, 1 felt great

tloa! bettor and tirinly beleivc that one or *\v« oecaion? it \vns the moans of snvinir nnii proi»n£ii]3 my lite. I eou^ciontiously rccomtuen•itvl them to all iiifterers n- the be-f kiiuuu. ami u!vi?e the»n ahrayi to a-k t«»r Dr.

Hurley's a:M no otlier. Vou ean uj«e this «LS y.m think proper, it' it will benefit oilier^. 1

i'i»nrs trnlv

JOHN W. 1)1\0\. r, 10. 1-n»n.

1

]ceenib

MOTH Hits TAIiK NO rU'E.

1)R. FSKAJBROOK'3

Infant Soothing Syrup.

-e ill the t'u!urt- xiil.v*SK A lKt U)K 'S. .1 oiii l.inntioii quite up with the udwinceinciit «.t the :i2e. l'leasant lo tnUi*. h:irrile.s in it? a.-tion, eliiuient and reliaM'e in all en.^es. In\ :i!II:ihic i•) I th" followingdi-•' i-cs:

SI AIM Kit COMI'l.AIXT. IliUKt!! I.AItlTlKS OF TIIK ilOWKI.S, liKSTIVKNI-iSS* |. TKKTniMJ. S:t\

tiives health t» child joi.l!ie-i t„ (ti.* mother.

TO ISVIU.k. :i INW.—MESSIW J.VMES liriini.K ,t("o.—(lent Ieinen W h«ve lor some time hern u.-ini v^iir Or SKAHttOOKS INFANT SOOTH I N( 's Kl' 1». and have sjiven it a fair trial. For euriin e.die. retnovins pain, |iiie!inir re.^tIesoit-.-:-. and r-*-leivintr ^i.-lc stoiinieh, wr iia\*e fotni.l it iiiore el.ieaeious tl.an all other renie.liei ,\ve have ever used. It in ver.v pk*:cant to tire ta«lc. while niost remedies forc.die, Ae., aro very nauseous. Another ^rent merit that will eoinmen.l itself to all parents is the entire absence of the stupifyinij effects on the thoehild, so comiimn in the use of I)ewee' Mixture and other prep.iiiiti.iiH we ha\e used for similar disousos. U'e unot cordial I y"i.ei.oiiiiii(nil it to all parents, .1. \V.|I)A VIS.'Sheriflf .letlers-.n eo.

Hurley's Ague Tonic.

I'KKI'M' I'M 1-1::!

Hurry's Sursa pari I la j.

nil lOIMDI. OI-' I'li AMI.

A ol t!»«* If nhiin.i iu***,)' Dchilit. Blinciiii'i u(' 1 In*

rHtfiilai'iliri, Fitldhi. uiiMiiii

1 SMclimi'iJiou ctlijiia 4•»':! Wr«». fsi{a, or Rfil,

I ., n, *•.:•'Jjunsviu.K. April t. I-V). it mnl I l»eliev! it (he nw.-f won, l-rfuI

Irf«irc* th» puhlii*. Nothing nrnirr IIi Immvi'Ii* flouh.1 JimIik'C rm t» -:iy \vitli"iit priml ol lln 1 Hlrmw.n iiipI kind- rhonfor«, I I willingly iiiul pn^itiwly on hi*.

My il:iutfhlT Inn allli 'iwith kiu *1 a a in in to I I *mp!oyeii the prinoip il phy.-iciaiH o( tlie city ind thoy foiilil n»t i.'urtj ln?r. I mivi? hur your Sur.^anarillu not vp^ctini: it won hi tlu In? iiiik-Ii L'notl, triir to itiv irr(Mt -ht: r:«pi«Uy i^ot ll. :m«l thnuk (i.»(! »ntiun- •*•. Ihs'l heen tukiny tiny nK- li'-ino would not ijive thi.-» 1 «'«t{ificiitr: hut your S:)iM-p »rill:». thu only 1 r«'!iieiy *iiip!oyMl, ilouht o} it uic.lii( nusilitie-. antl thut :L :ih»u»- Miro»l h?r. (sU'imn!.) KK KKVNULhS. I Any p'*r on rf^uirinn th^ truth and hr»rn?ty 1 u{ tin* vtMirni'-nf. v. ill tm«l moat my rer-hlciK't*, 1 «'urhcr Ninth Mini Walnut -treet.J, Ijoui^vilh*, l\y.

HURLEY'S

POPSIIAH

A (hi' i.'Jlllj 'i •pu'i'iti t«if thlllM-he-'i hihI niiri p.&latahlo tormr»» v«? t.#chihlr''n. it i' n-: 'rpri-iny that it fart taking the phi«*" i»f alt prop.ir.il.ioiiH for VV.,rm-»—It ht«iiu S 1* iin-l.tny **}«11 *1 will mku if.

DR. JOHN BULL'S

tillE.tr REMEDIES.

DR. JOHN BULL,

WORM

I'.I.K.

Iht oiil.v reine.i t.ir ('liilI :i. and Kever. tli.it is i.r eau l.e Hurley's Aijue T.nin. I'tiiw-.-.-amis ouivd hy usinilt irhohai remedies without hcticlit.

.1 i'. -i ..f Ami.jt i«.ii up .n is ave heen llioutried tin- il-nal

NKVV AI.IIANV. I\t.. M.i) I-'.is,

Messrs .1 iimes Kuddle .t im..—(tents I was atllieted with nuue for months, perhaps for a year or more. llt'Kl.KVS AnfU Tosie was recommended to nr.: by a friend. I not a In.tile inmediatcly an,I commenced taking it according to directions and have not heen troubled with a chill since. am satisfied that if it be taken according to directions it will cure any ease of ai^ue and checrfnlly rec.iiiitn *11,1 il I., till -iifl'-nn^ with tliis disease.

V. 11 I'S Trul v. VINCK.YI' KIKK.

PURIFY YOTJH BLOOD. I

-f'-.iii

I'os oi in-. i. A|riM. 1 -I.

Dr T!i.,m:i- A. IIurl.'y. I.oui-villc, Ky. Ilea: Sir:—I line r••'.rnmunli-iI join "\tjnlabli* Worm Candy." and cordinlly eiidorh^ tlie a--ertion tiiai it i- themo-t etleetiVfl.-,ife and plea III' -ill .-ilie I ti:iv ever u-isd. ur in.-di-fine- are all I he :»•. in .tt t..\7n,—('an you fur nisli join h.vtriift of .Sursaparilla by lh: sptlliih f] it j,, :it what price.

Verv trii'y y..ur frieml.

Jg,IH6S Rticlcll©

1

F. I'. Ill I'll ,\|. I),

DR. SEABROOK'S

I

and Ciilasnvii.

Th« i'loi/mt omhination all ttie ToVk* prupertie-i of JVruviau l(:trk an«l Ir»»n. it is a to ii ad either -'eparuteJ) or in ith«*r preparutron*, of the-e valitahle ruclicine*. It taken iu nil o: .=e.- when trcntle tonic inipre ^i«»n i.« r*4* quir'.il hi tor oonvaL—cenco from fkvkhs or debit itatini: Jisea-e.". or in lh»»-e litre-.^in^ ir*i»iilari Lie." peculiar female/. No (!iiale ^houhi without it if liable to •'uuh ili«ea4C» lor n»»ihii'iscnn well lake it plnoo

&

COi,

PKO I'll MOTORS.

I^ouisvillc, K.,v.

All the above if..ud.* for sale by

E. J. BINFORD & BKO.

A a

.eMi,

Jit*

A I It A I O

THE

GrbL-i/'J

S O N I S

-."f 'J: J. KHt TilK CCRKOK

ACiTK AXD FEVKR.

.'.'I OK ini.i.s and PKVKK.' I

i^tlK proprietor ..f thi.-i celebrftlfd medicicc jn-tl elniin.-" fur it. .anpprioriir over all remlie ever ffercd to the pnblir for tho safo. certain speed* and permanent cur* of Artie and Fever. »r Thill* nn.l Fever, whether of short orlone -•t:«n.iiiiii. lie refer* to the entire West ond S vi a on I H**crtinn. that in no case whntcrer will it fail to i^uro. if the directions aro strictly followed and irried out. In ?rent ninny cn.'os ft sinitlo .l'.^c ha# been sntlicient tor a euro. »nd whole families have been cured by a ?inelo bottle, witb a perfect restoration of penerul health. It is. however, prudent, nnd in every caso moro certain to cure, it its use i- I'oiilinuoil in ^oialler do»e» for a week or two after tho disease has been eheekod. mure especially in difficult and long: standiniicase?. ually. this medicine will not require any aid to k«ep tlie bowolii in ttood order, -hould the itiont. however, requiron catbnrtie medicine after hnvintr taken threo or four doSdi of tho Tonic, ii single do*e of Hull's ejotablo Fumily I'ills will ho sufTicient.

III JOHN Hl"l,I/S I'riie-ipHlOffioe: ,\o. 4« ririh, CrMiflltMl, I.OCHVILI.K, KV.

E. Binford & Bro., Agents.

lU'LL'S

DESTROYER.

To ill N' I' niled Wide

States and Headers.

II A re.'.'i

World

i'.I many testimonials from prnmy alinan&cs

1. f.'sssioiial and medieal men

and various publications tmvc shown, all of whieh arc genuine. The following from n.highly educated popular physician in (lenrnin, is cor'ainl.v one of the nsor snnsihlo communication! 1 have ever ree.ehcd. Dr. Clement knows eaactlv what he speaks of, and hi testimony doser.os to he written in letters of (fold, llcur what the I loetor s.iys of Hull's Worm IJeslroyer

I I I.I. WOW, \V' A I.KRK (lOI'STV, II\.» I

1

1 .IIIDC 'ill. IStiO, I

1W. .Ions llrt.t.—Dear Sir: 1 liavo rcccntly -jiven your worm dest-oyer sevoral trials nnd find it wonderfully ellieaeious. It has not failed,in simjle Instaneo to have the wished for oflcot. am dolna a pretty larae country practice, and liav-- daily use for some article of that kind. 1 am Ii C" to eonfesj (tint I know of no remedy reiniiueiiiled by the ablest authors that i« so corniin and spec |y in it-.-fleets. On the contrary ht arc uncertain in I lie cMrcine. My ohjnel ir. writing'Vi,'.i tii--'-t,, tin.I ..ui upon what lernii can L'ct tbj mediciii lircet'y from you. If 1 can L'.-t it •,11 easy t.-nn*. I -h ill use it yreat deal ol it. lam. a t\arc that the u-" it such articles is contrary I,,tlie tea'hinu'- and practice of ivgrohl iuh,.f Ihe rc^u!..!

1

line of M. D.V. hut enn

see no just cause or nood cn»o in discarding a remedy which we know to he etlleienl, simply because tuny l.o inuoraul. of lt« combination. For my part, I shall make il. a rule to 'is nil nnd any means to alleviate suffering humanity whioh I may he able to command—not hosltntinK because some one nioro ingenious than myself may have l»ariied its effects lirst and sccurred tho Hole ri«nt to secure that knowledge. However, nui by no means an advocatu or mipportor of tha thousands of worthless nostrums that Hood lht country, that purport to cure all manner of dipease to which human ilush is heir, l'leiwo reply soon and inform me of your best tertUJ,

I am sir. most rospeotl'iilly. jr i.ii's i\ CIjKMK.NT, u. .• E. J. Binford & Bro., Agents.

I S

S A S A A I A

A i'oi..I i-e.isoil lor the Captains Faith.

lf.*ii,l tin* I' if.min'*= l.fticr an.I tlir l.^tfc-r I'r.mi lii^ iti.-i!.'•!••

I lieiil..ii ll:irni.rU-,. M..,, April Im. I."Ml. I'll, .lulls' Hi i.i. Ufa Sir. Kuwini tin- ofli-.':n-y ..1 .v.'iir ,-aiap:irilla, mi.l flio h.'llinK iui4 l.*iirli :i! ijiialitii'- it p.I

J«nit .vim thf fi.l-

|..n 111!/statnmfiil i.t'my i-an.r: I was wi.iinilfl all.ml t«rn yisiif u«(). »».* taken |ii i-i.ii.'r anil I'.inliiif.l for yixti-i'n tnontlii). Uoms iiinvcil nl'tiII. my \r»iinN have not h.-nltil y. !. I Inivi* .J:it up II iniMUi'rit siliuo I WB.S WIIIIIMIIVI. I urn -iliot tlirmiirli the hip«. Myi n(•nil iicaltli i- iinp.iiri-il. arid I neeil yoiDOthini tu n.JHivt n.'iliirf. I liav" iii'.ri: fuitili in y»ur S»r.-iii-parilln tlian in iinylliinu fl f. I wiyh ibat that i- itfiiiiitif. I'l -a-i- xi)if-J mi* hull it ilozen hott!.---. :ui.| ..l,!i-i*.

I'u'-r.l'. I'. JOHNSON.

St. Louis. Mo.

I'. S. "I'lli- I'i.I|..i i..a n.i- urittun April So, IMI",. Iiy Mr' .li-niiie .1 r.Iin11. mothi-r of Cnptain J..!III-".m.

Iht. Jons ill I.I. |i.:ar Sir ,M hii'biiml. I)i*v ('. S. JOIiii-'O

II

wa-Mi -killo.l -urKfon urnl physt-^

flan in funtral N.-w \'..rk. trhoro he died, l«ay irirr th« IIIiovb I'. ,!'.hi.*in" to my care. 'At iliirt.-fn v.- irJ nl 11^0 In: had a clironif diarrhc* nml y,-r..tiil«, ti,rv,lii,-h 1 Kavi your Sar^npftrillft It .aii-ed to .i. I havi* lor ten years rfcoomincnflcd it i. iniii.y in New \..ik, Ohio, ftnd luwft. for -Miofula, l«v.-r Piirei, mid ifncrnl iU*hility. H«r-|i:-t siic ..*ss hm littfiidcd it. Thu Clire^ «ir«ctpd in "oiiic rn-i" of s.-rotnla and fever Porei wertt ii'ino't iniriif II I it •*. I uni very anxious for my -on in auuin liav.: r.-'-oiir-c-to your Sarsapurilliv. II/- i.-i fearful c*-ttiii» spurious article, herice hi-, r.lin^ to you for it. |{i-i wouniU were ter-, ril.li' hti' I t.flievi: lie will recover. Itf^pectfully."

N N I O N S O N

E. J. Uinford& Bro., Agents,

HTLI, ri

CEDROTST BITTERS

a if a.

w-i Ai'kaitMiM heartl from. A

Kiftifrisiini.iiiy of Mcdieal Men

St. .ley l'..,nt White Ark., May ii. i-M. I Hi .Ions I(ci.[.-l)oar Sir. l,a«t February I was in l-ouisville purehasins drucs, aud eot sume of your ar-aparilln ucd Cedron liitteri.

My son-in-lair who was with me in the iitore lias been down with'the rbeutmatisui for soma time, Cominenoed on the Hitters and soon found hisseneral health improved.

Dr. (Siit. who has been iu bad health, tried

v* them, and he aWo imoroved. Dr. Coffee, who ha* heou ia had health for

riven you great I think I can »«U

popularity in this settlement. a great qumtit^f of your medicines "this fifl.'es" peeittlly your Cedron Bit'.or* and Sarsaparilla Ship ine via Memphii. oare of Kicker* Neely. &

Ren^ctfiUlj,^

For Sale by

be O a I l* E- J. Binford Sc Bro t"

JiB

,CrawfordBville, Ind,