Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 March 1882 — Page 4

THE CHIBOE OF THE HEATT BRIGADE. [Balailava, OeL 45, 1854.] bt unit TunrMOJt. L The charge of the gallant Three Hundred, the Hear? Brigade! Down the hill, down the hill, thousands of Boasitos, Thousand* of horsemen drew to the Talley— and Bttid, Bor Scarlett and Scarlett’s Three Hundred were riding by When the points of the Russian lances broke In on the sky; And he called “Left wheel into line!” and they wheeled and obeyed; Then looked at the host that had halted, he knew not why; And he turned half round, and he bade his trumpeter sound “To the charge 1” and he rode on ahead, as he wared his blade To the gallant Three Hundred, whose glory will never die. “ Follow and up the hill I” Up the hill, up the hill, followed the Heavy Brigade. n. The trumpet, the gallop, the charge and the might of the fight! Down the hill, slowly, thousands of Russians Drew to the valley, and halted at last on the height, With a wing pushed out to the left, and a wing to the r'ght. But Scarlett was far on ahead, and he dashed up alone Through the great gray slope of men; And he whirled his saber, he held his own, Dike on Englishman there and then. .... And the three that were nearest him followed with force, Wedged themselves in between horse and horse, Fought for their lives in the narrow gap they had made, Four amid thousand* ; and up the hill, up the hill. Galloped the gallant Three Hundred, the Heavy Brigade 1 111. Fell, like a cannon shot. Burst, like a thunderbolt, Crashed, like a hurricane. Broke through the mass from below, Drove through the midst of the foe, P.unged up and down, to and fro, Rode flashing, blow upon blow, Brave Inniskililns and Greys, Whirling their sabers In circles of light And some of ns, all in amaze, Who were held for awhile from the fight, And were only standing at gaze When the d«k-muffled Russian crowd Folded its wings from the left and the right And rolled them around like a cloud— Oh I mad for the charge and the battle were we When our own good red-coats sank from sight Like drops of blood in a dark-gray f oa; And we turned to each other, muttering all dismayed : “ Lost are the gallant Three Hundred, the Heavy Brigade 1 ” IV. But they rode like victors and lords, Through the forests of lances and swords; In tho heart of the Russian hord<-, They rode, or they stood at bay; Htruck with the sword-hand and slew; Down with the bridle-hand drew The foe from tho saddle, and threw Under foot there in the fray; Raged like a storm, or stood like a rook In the wave of a stormy day; Till suddenly, shock upou shock Htaggered the mass from without; For our men galloped up with a cheer and a shout, And the Russians surged, and wavered, and reeled -Up the hill, up the hill, up tho hill, out of the field, Over the brow and away. V. Glory to each and to all, and the charge that they made! Glory to all the Three Hundred, the Heavy Brigade 1

A FOOLISH MISTAKE.

CHAPTER I. “ Lucy, which of us are you going to give up, Mark Beauclere or me? It must be one of us, dear, and the sooner vou decide the better.” The Bpeaker—a tall, lithe, brownhaired, brown-skinned young fellow of tbree-aud-twenty, with an honest face and a pair of earnest blue eyes—placed himself very deliberately in Lucy Armstrong’s way, as she was strolling under the trees in the shady old garden, with lier liat pulled over her eyes, and a pooket volume of some poet in her hands. It was a scorching July afternoon, and Lucy had quietly slipped away from the half-dozen ladies who were sitting round her Aunt Hester’s tea-table, discussing all the latest news of the parish. Mark Beauclere, an {esthetic young geutieman of 30, with a very fine voice, rather weak sight and a large income, was there too, but, as he generally was to be found at Miss Hester Armstrong’s tea-table,, he counted almost as one of the ladies ; and Lucy was a little tired of them all, and wanted to be alone. She looked as if she were having some very pleasant thoughts, as she sauntered under the trees, and seemed in no way prepared for the sudden interruption. “ Why, George, you quite startled me,” she said, standing still, for George Leslie had placed himself in her way. “ Why didn’t you go in and have some tea?’’ “ Because I wanted to talk to you, Lucy. I’ve been trying to get an opportunity of talking to you for the last week, and I couldn’t. I want to know which of us you are going to give up, Mark or me ?” “ Seeing that I never possessed either of you, it would be rather premature of me to say,” and she glanced up at him from under the shelter of her hat. “Why, George, what’s tho matter?” she asked, laying her hand lightly upon his aim “Are you ill—or—angry? ’ “No, only heart-sick and sorry and disappointed,” and the young fellow looked quite haggard. “I suppose I ought to congratulate you, and then efface myself as speedily as possible; but when a fellow lias cared about somebody all his life, as I have cared about you, it’s not so easy, Lucy. ” “ What’s not easy, George ? I really have not the slightest idea of what you’re talking about,’’Lucy cried, growing very red and confused. “Do tell me exactly what you mean, like a good boy. ” George winced, and turned aside with rather a savage expression. To be called “a good boy” by Lucy under certain circumstauces would be all very well, but in that tolerant, almost patronizing tone, it was too much. “Am I not to congratulate you on your engagement to Mr. Beauclere ?” he said grimly. ’ “Certainly not,” was the very grave reply. “ Then you’ve refused him, Lucy?” with humiliating eagerness. “ I guessed you would.” “ Mr. Beauclere has not done me the honor of asking me.” ‘ * All 1” and George’s face fell perceptibly. “ But you will refuse him, Loo, won’t you?” he continued. “He told me he was going to propose this very day,” in a savage whisper. “ Then perhaps he will inform you es my reply in due course,” and she looked np with a droll twinkle in her bright hazel eyes. “ Now, George, if you’re not coming in to have some tea, let me pass, please.” “But you don’t care about him, Loo, do you?” he whispered, with a very penitent glance. “ Pardon me, Hike Mr. Beauclere very much, indeed. Why shouldn’t I? and I thought, George, you and he were friends. ”

George turned away with an exclamation that sounded like “Confound him,” and Lucy returned to the houee, Berenely smiling under her broadbrimmed hat. The drawing-room was empty, but in a little snuggery beyond, which her aunt called her boudoir, there was a muffled hum of voices, and Lucy smiled more comically than ever as she went upstairs to change her dress for dinner. Both George Leslie and Mr. Mark Beanclere were to dine at “The Nest,” and Lucy, brimful of mischief, resolved to tease George thoroughly before she put him out of his misery. So she donned a fresh jnuslin gown, and fastened a crimson rose in her hair, and then went down and took her seat near the drawing-room window, which commanded the entrance to the front garden, and with a very demure smile awaited the course of events. Presently she was joined by her aunt, looking gravely important, and bristling all over with a secret. Miss Hester was a tail, slender, keen-eyed, thin-lipped lady of as near 40 as possible, with smooth dark hair, regular features, and a stately, hot to say commanding, presence; she had very beautiful white

hands, and she used them a good deal in a majestic way. When dinner was announced it was by a wave of them she signified to her niece that she meant to proceed at once to the dining-room. Lucy followed her with suppressed amusement beaming from every feature of her face. She guessed pretty accurately what her aunt’s secret was, though, till Miss Hester opened the subject, she would not breathe even a hint of it. As the dinner progressed in impressive silence, she found herself wondering why George did not come. Later on, as she sat at the piano in the twilight, and played over her favorite songs, of them, wandering aimlessly from “ Auld Lang Svne ” to the “ Lass of Richmond lull, and then to “Home, Sweet Home,” she little thought who was listening to her on the other side of the lilao tree shaded the drawing-room window. There, in safe obscurity, George Leslie listened, till he heard the piano closed with just the suspicion of a bang, and saw Lucy’s slight white-robed figure cross the room and approach the open window, then he stole away noiselessly with something between a sob and a sigh. There was even a suspicious and humiliating moisture in the poor fellow’s eyes as h© hurried across the fields in the direction of the railway station. “She’s treated me very badly—but, for all that, I hope she may be happy. Heaven bless her!” he said, as he caught a glimpse of “Tho Nest” as the train shrieked past. Then he shrank back into his comer and gave himself up to the bitterest reflection. He found it difficult to realize that he was rejected; yet Beauclere had told him distinctly that he had proposed to Miss Armstrong that afternoon, and had been accepted. There was no further reason for his staying at Westwater; and he was going to ask his uncle, of the firm of Leslie & Longhampton, to send him on a confidential mission to the extreme end of the earth, where they were supposed to do business. George could not be philosophical enough to look at happiness “through another man’s eyes,” so he determined to get completely out of the way of Mark Beauclere; and lie could not even summon up courage to congratulate Lucy or say good-by; but he wrote her a nice little letter, in which a good deal of real feeling was hidden under some stiff, formal phrases, and through it all peeped a very sore, bruised, affronted, but still faithful, love. Lucy laughed at it first, and then cried over it, then wiped her eyes, and WTote an explanatory and affectionate reply; but, alas! George was gone on the confidential mission. His letter said that he was on the eve of starting for China, and bore the Southampton postmark. He said lie might be absent for years, or forever. To poor Lucy, in the first dismay of her discovery that George was really gone, it seemed the same thing.

CHAPTER 11. “My dear Leslie, this is a surprise and a pleasure 1 How are you ? When did you get back ?” and George Leslie found his baud grasped by a portly, comfortable-looking gentleman in goldrimmed glasses and a wideawake hat. “I—l beg your pardon, I don’t—l can’t quite recall you, though I seem to remember your voice,” George stammered. The portly gentleman laughed. ‘‘Well, you’re more changed than I am, i dare say, and yet I knew you in a moment. Is it possible that you have forgotten—” “ Beauclere ? Whv, of course ; liow stupid of me 1” and George’s face grew a very curious brick color as he wrung his old friend’s hand. ‘ ‘ I’ve been away five years, Mark, and it tells on all of us.” ‘‘ I wish it told such a flattering tale od me as it does on you,” Mark said, with a smile. “ Come and dine with me, old fellow—no excuses—it won’t put us out in the least. Mrs. Beauclere is at Brighton with Miss Armstrong, so I’m en garcon. We live at Putney. Jump in—” as a ’bus came up—“ and tell me all about your adventures, aud when you returned.” “ I only landed three days ago, aud I haven’t had any adventures except of the most commonplace kind. The business I went out to manage turned out very well, I made some money, and I’ve come to England to settle down—that’s all. How is Mrs. Beauclere?” “ Quite well, thanks. Have you put on the halter yet, George ?” “No. The Celestial Empire is certainly not the place of all others to tempt a man to matrimony.” “ Lucky fellow ! I wish I had gone there with you.” George was silent—it seemed like treason to echo the wish. It was just like the monster Mark, ever to express it. Of course he made poor Lucy miserable, that was only to be expected. How he ever could have become so supremely dull and commonplace George I couldn’t imagine. When he entered the drawingroom he couldn’t help noticing little evidences of Lucy about; her old-fashioned work-table—a black cat, which he seemed dimly to remember—books, and a drawing or two. His heart beat a little quickly ; and on the whole he was glad that he had not to meet her on the first evening. “Does Miss Armstrong always live with you ? ” he asked presently. “Yes, of course; where else could she live? Indeed, I don’t know iu the least how tho house would get on without her. You see, my wife and I go in for politics and literature, and that sort of thing; and if we hadn’t some one to keep us in order and see to our creature comforts, I’m afraid we’d starve. If eVer you do marry, George, don’t select a clever woman with a taste for logic and metaphysics,” Mark whispered, looking round cautiously. “ It’s simply awful ! ” ‘ ‘ I never fancied Mrs. Beauclere would develop a taste for those snbjects, ” George replied ; and then he smiled a little sadly as he thought of Lucy as a blue-stock-ing, and Aunt Hester, who had always been his special horror, whisking about the house, upsetting the domestic comfort of every one, and waving her hands, in command or disapproval, unceasingly. “ I never could stand it, 1 know,” he said to himself, as Mark went on giving him some details of the establishment, with a sort of rueful good humor. “ A clever wife and an energetic aunt-in-law would be too much for me. ” * And it had evidently proved too much for poor Mark Beauclere. He was no longer slender, sentimental and esthetic ; indeed, his chief idea in life seemed to be thorough enjoyment of such pleasures as remained to him. He enjoyed his dinner, for instance, thoroughly, and grew quite confidential over his coffee after.

“It was very sudden, your going away, George,” he remarked, after a long chat over the old times at Westwater, and the pleasant evenings they used to have at “The Nest.” “Do you know, I thought once that you had rather a fancy for Lucy?” George grew brick-red again, and bent his eyes resolutely on the table. “It would have been a capital thing for you; and I believed she liked you, for she seemed altogether out of sorts when she got your letter. In fact, George, you might have done much worse than to have married Lucy Armstrong.” Still silence and steady contemplation of his glass, on the part of George. “ And, for that matter, you might do worse than marry her still.” George looked up with a sudden angry flash, then he grew quite white. Mark was not chaffing in the least, he felt that; still he could not take it all in at once.

“I believe it’s entirely pn your account she has remained single,” Mark continued, with good-natured garrulity, “in spite of all her aunt's efforts to get her well married.” “Did you say Mrs. Beauclere was staying at Brighton V George presently asked, in a very meek voice; “because! thought of winning down there few afew days. Will you come, Mark?*’ “ No, thank yon,” with a droll shrug. “My wife and Lucy are staying at the Royal; give them my love, and tell them they need not hurry back, as I’m all right. r ’ * * * * * * * “Lucy, dearest, can yon forgive me ? It was all a dreadful mistake from first to last! I thought it was yon Mark wanted to marry; and. when he told me that evening that he had proposed and been accepted, I was frantic. Aunt Hester never once entered my head.” Lucy’s reply was a little unintelligible, but alter a time they managed to understand each other. Mjss Armstrong could not long resist a lover who had been faithful to her for five years, even when he believed her lost to him forever ; and George resolved to marry her out of hand, so that there should be no more misunderstandings. Sometimes Mark Beauclere chaffs them both a little about George’s mistake; but he always boldly asserts that the great mistake was Mark’s after all.

“COOL” BURGESS.

The man of many Laughs. A SAINTLY STUMP SPEECH BY A SAINTLY SINNER. [From the Chicago Time*.] The name of the gentleman heading this article needs no introductory remarks from the writer. Everybody knows who “Cool” Burgess is, and what he is; everybody who is anybody has seen and laughed at hi* grotesque performances, and enjoyed them in such a manner as to never fprget them. “Cool’s” laugh is contagious and hilarious, and, like the cut of his unmentionables, is unlike anything of the kind on or off the boards. "His oratorical powers are certainly unequaled, and, as he says himself without egotism, he “don’tbelievethatmyLordßoscoe, with all his boasted powers as an orator, could deliver my stump speech as I do.” We coincide in the opinion ourselves. Mr. Burgess tells a heap of truth under the guise of burlesque In his roaring and a reusing stump speech. His hit at the navy is a pretty good thing ; when ho straightens himself up and seriously says that “we have as much water as ever, ” and then “hut where, oh! where are our ships?” the laugh that follows is a pretty good indication the point is well taken. Nor is it with water alone that Mr. Burgess deals in his oratory; that gentleman tells some remarkable truths about oil—one Oil in particular, and that is St. Jacobs Oil, the Great Gennan Remedy for rheumatism. We doubt if he receives a more hearty laugh at any time during his performance, and he receives many such—than when he tells every one to use St. Jacobs Oil, the Great German Remedy. Mr. Burgess very earnestly recommends it as the great panacea, and to show his esteem of the Oil produces a bottle from the capacious pocket of his ulster to show that he knows what he is talking about. This part of Mr. Burgess’ performance struck the writer as very laughable, and he called on Mr. Burgess to know how he came to introduce the Oil in his speech. In reply to his interrogatories Mr. Burgess said: “ I look upon the stage, my dear sir, as a means of educating the people, and human nature is such that truth told in the guise of humor will be remembered longer than the plain unvarnished article. Every word I say regarding the wonderful merits of St. Jacobs Oil I mean. lam the greatest admirer of that wonderful medicine there is in the profession, and there is not an actor in the country who will not speak in praise of the Great German Remedy. The bottle which is produced by me on the stage is no ‘ prop bottle,’ but a genuine article, as I never travel without St. Jacobs Oil. It cured me of the rheumatism when I was so bad with that aggravating disease as to have to give up my business. It cured me permanently, too, and I am so thankful for being cured that I praise it continually. It cured my wife, also, of the same disease, and I know a score of performers who have been cured by it. In fact, no performer of good sense travels without that medicine. You know rheumatism is their especial dread; sooner or later it comes to them all, owing to their mode of living and traveling. ”

The New Apportionment.

The Apportionment bill, which is now a law,* gives the next House of Representatives 825 members, against 293 in the present one. Take four decades, and the representation of the different sections of the Union have been, and will be, as follows: States. 80. 1880. 1870. 1860. 186<K New England 6 26 28 27 29 Middle 3 69 87 60 C 3 Southern......: 16 121 106 85 90 Western 10 101 86 66 53 Pacific 8 8 6 5 8 Total 38 325 293 243 238 The table by States is as follows: States. 1880 1870 1860 1850 Alalama 8 8 6 7 Arkansas 5 4 3 2 California 6 4 3 2 Colorado 1 1 Connecticut 4 4 4 4 Delaware 1111 Florida 2 2 11 Georgia 10 9 7 8 Illinois 20 19 14 9 Indiana i 13 13 11 11 lowa 11 9 6 2 Kansas 7 3 1 .... Kentucky 11 10 9 10 Louisiana 6 6 5 4 Maine 4 5 5 6 Maryland 6 6 5 5 Massachusetts 12 11 10 11 Michigan 11 9 6 4 Minnesota 5 3 2 2 Missl-sippl 7 6 5 5 Missouri 14 13 9 7 Nebraska 3 11 .... Nevada.... 1 1 1 1 .... New Hampshire 2 3 3 8 New Jersey 7 7 5 6 New York 34 33 3i 83 North Carolina 9 8 7 8 Ohio 21 20 19 21 OregOD 1111 Pennsylvania 28 27 24 25 Rhode Island 2 2 2 2 South Carolina 7 5 4 ft Tennessee 10 10 8 10 Texas 11 6 4 2 Vermont 2 3 3 3 Virginia 1C 9 8 13 West Virginia 4 3 8 .... Wisconsin 9 6 6 3 Total 325 293 243 238 It will be seen that New York had S 3 members under the census of 1850, on a basis of only 238 total, and now gets but 34 on a total of 325. Ohio makes no gain. Pennsylvania gains 3, Indiana 2, Massachusetts 1, Georgia 2. Counting the two Virginias together the gain is 1. Kentucky gains 1, Alabama 1, North Carolina I,T ennessee nono. Tho great gains are made by the Western States. Thus Illinois advances from 9 members in 1850 to 21 iu 1880, more than doubling. lowa bounds from 2to 11; Wisconsin from 3to 9 ; Michigan from 4to J 1; Kansas from lin 1860 to 7in 1830 ; Minnesota from 2to 5 ; Nebraska from 1 in 1850 to 3 now. The only Southern State which makes a notable bound forward is Texas, and that is a big one—beiDg from 2 in 1850 to 11 in 1880. The table is worth studying and preserving.

Commercial Statistics.

Uncle Nace and Jim Webster got into a dispute on Austin avenue. Uncle Nace is one of the wealthiest colored property owners in Austin, and puts on style accordingly, while Jim Webster is comparatively poor. “I kin sell you out forty times befoah yer kin sell me out one time,” said Nace pompously. “Of course yer kin. Who am gwine ter make me an offer for sich a wuffless, knock-kneed, goggle eyed moke as you is. ” Texas Sift ings. The American Government is at present constructing some iron lighthouses. One of them, which is nearly finished, is at White Rock, Narragansett Bay. It is made of iron, and consists of a pilework foundation in three sections, each about 6ix feet high, with forty piles for each section. The lighthouse, which is erected above the pile work, consists of four sections, and is surmounted with the lantern. The height of the whole construction is about sixty-three feet above the level of the water. Other iron lighthouses are to be constructed at Connecticut and at Border Flatts, Fall Jtiver.

AN UNUSUAL FURORE.

A Reeeat ExcitonM»t tnvwdgatod tiy the Herald and the Benito Had* Public. [From the Cleveland (Ohio) Herald.] A few weeks ago we copied into oar column* from the Rochester (N. X.) Democrat and Chronicle “ A Remarkable Statement,” made by J. B. Henion, M. D., a gentleman who ia well known in this city. In that article Dr. Henion recounted a wonderful experience which befell him, and a few day* thereafter we published from the same paper a second article, giving an account of the “ Excitement in Rochester,’ caused by Dr. Hemon’s statement In the first article Dr. Henion stated that for a number *of years, up to last June, he had been afflicted with what seemed at first a most mysterious trouble. He felt unacoountably tired at frequent intervals; he had dull and indefinite pains in various parts of his body and bead, and was very hungry one day and entirely without appetite the next However, as a physician be thought, and so did his fellowpbysician’, that he was suffering from malaria. But yet he grew worse, and was finally obliged to give up a large and lucrative practice. Still he was not conscious of his danger, nor that a monstrous disease was becoming fixed upon him, although all his organshad become gradually weakened. The,'"symptoms above described continued, accompanied by others of an aggravated nature, and he noticed a peculiar color and odor about the fluids he was passing ; that they were abundant one day and very scanty the next, *nd were covered with froth or filled with brick-dust sediment. But even then he dies not realize his real and alaimmg condition. At last, however, he was brought face to face with the fact that he was a victim of a most terrible disease, and he made heroic efforts for recovery. He traveled extensively and consulted tho best physicians, but they could give him only temporary relief, and that principally in the form of morphine. And so he grew steadily and constantly worse until his life became a torture. His pulse was uncontrollable. He lived wholly by injections, and for six days and nights he had tho hiccoughs constantly, which are considered the sure indications of coming death.

When hope and life were nearly exhausted his pastor, the Rev. Dr. Foote, rector of St Paul’s Church, strongly urged him to try a means which the reverend gontloman had seen used with remarkable results. Ho objected at first, but finally consented, and was conscious of an improved condition the first week. His pains gradually disappeared ; his stomach resumed digestion; Ins heart became regular; ins headaches disappeared ; ho had no more chills and fever, or acidity of tho stomach ; he gained twenty-six pounds in three months, and is a well man to-dav, being entirely cured of a most pronounced case of Bright’s disease. Although conscious of the consequences from his professional brethren, still as a duty to his fellow-men, and according to a vow he made on what he thought was bis dying bed, he published a card detailing his illness and remarkable cure. “Since my recovery," he says, “I have thoroughly reinvestigated the subject of kidney difficulties and Bright’s disease, and I believe more than one half the deaths which occur in America are caused by Bright s disease of the kidneys. It has no distinctive symptoms of its own (indeed it often develops without any pain whatever i i the kidneys or their vicinity), but bus tho symptoms of every other known complaint. Hundreds of people die daily whose burials Rio authorized by a physician’s certificate of ‘Heart Disease,’ ‘Apoplexy,’ ‘Paralysis,’ ‘Spinal Complaint,’ ‘Rheumatism,’ ‘Pneumonia’ and other common complaints, when in realily it was Bright’s disease of the kidneys. Few physicians, and lower people, realize the extent of this disease or its dangerous and insidious nature. It steals into the system like a thief, manifests its presence by the commonest symptoms, and fastens itself upon tho life before the victim is awaro. It is nearly as hereditary as consumption, quite as common and fully ns fatal. Entiro families, inheriting it from their ancestors, have died, and yet none of tho number knew or realized the mysterious power which was removing them. Instead of common symptoms it often shows none whatever, but brings death suddenly and as such is usually supposed to be heart disease.” The second article, entitled “Exoitement in Rochester,” was made up of interviews with Dr. Henion himself, who confirmed all said in his card, and also witn Mr. H. H, Warner. The lattor gentleman did not regard Dr. Heuion’s case as particularly exceptional, because he had known of very many such cures by the same means in all parts of the laud. Kidney diseases, he said, are carrying off tens of thousands every year, while Bright’s disease is increasing 260 per cent, a decade, and yet tho people do not realize it or seek to check it until too late. He related how a New Orleans medical professor, lecturing on this disease, thinking to show his class what healthy fluids were, subjected some of his own to a chemical test, and, although ho had no suspicion of it before, discovered that he, too ; had the dreaded disease, .which proved fatal m less than a year. There was also an interview with the celebrated chemist of the New York State Board of Health, Dr. 8. A. L&ttimore, who said he had analyzed the remedy which cured Dr. Henion, and found that it was “entirely free from any poisonous or deleterious substances.” We have mado these condensations in order that all the material facts may be set before our readers. Since the publication of these two articles, having been besieged- with letters of inquiry, we sent a communication to Dr.Henion and also one to H. H. Warner & Co., asking if any additional proof could be given us as to the validity of the statements published. In answer thereto we have received*the following letters, which add interest to the entire subject and wholly verify every statement hitherto made: Rochester, N. Y., Feb. 2, 1882. Gxntlhhen : Your favor is received. The published statement, over my signature, to which you refer is true in every respect, and I owe my life and present health wholly to the power of Warners Safe Kidney and’Liver Cure. It i 3 not surprising that people should question the statement I made, for my recovery was as great a marvel to myself as to my physicians and friends. * * * J. B. Henion, M. D.

Rochester, N. Y., Jan. 31, 1882, Shis; Acknowledging your favor duly received, we would say : The best proof we can give you that the statements made by Dr. Henion are entirely true, and would not have been published unless strictly so, is the following testimonial from the best citizens of Rochester, and a card published by Rev. Dr. Foote, which you are at liberty to use if yon wish. H. H. Warner & Co.

To Whom it may Concern: In tho Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat and Chronicle of Dec. 81, 1881, there appeared a statement in the form of a card from Dr. J. B. Henion, of this city, recounting his remarkable recovery from Bright’s disease of the kidneys, after several doctors of prominence had given him up, by the use of a preparation manufactured in this city and known as Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. We are personally or by reputation acquainted with Dr. Henion, and we believe ho would publish no statement not literally true. We aro also personally or by reputation well acquainted with H. H. Warner & Co., proprietors of this remedy, whose commercial and personal standing in this community is of the highest order, and we believe that they would not publish any statements which were not literally and strictly true in every particular. C. R. Parsons, Mayor of Rochester. Wm. Purcell, Editor Union and Advertiser. W. D. Bhurat, Surrogate Monroe county. Edward A. Frost, Clerk Monroe couqfcr, E. B Fenner, District Attorney Monroe co. Daniel T. Hunt, Postmaster,'Rochester. J. M. Davy, Ex-Member Congress, Rochester. John S. Morgan, Special Co. Judge, Monroe 00. Hiram Sibley, Capitalist and Seedsman. W. C. Rowley, County Judge, Monroe county. John Van Voorhis, Member of Congress. Charles 35. Fitoh, Editor Democrat and Chronicle and Regent of the University.

To the Editor of the Living Church, Chicago, III: Will you allow the following card, personal to myself, to appear in your widely-circulated paper ? There was published in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle of the 31st of Dec. last a statement made by J. B. Henion, M. D., narrating how he had been cured of Bright’s disease of the kidneys, almost in its last stages, by the use of Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. I was referred to in that statement, as having recommended and urged Dr. Henion to try the remedy, which he did, and was cured. Now, the republ slung of his statement in many of the leading journals of the day has been the cause of an incessant flow of letters to me making many inquiries, but chiefly whether the statement is true or a mere advertising dodge, etc., etc. I beg, therefore, to anticipate any further inquiries, and save time and labor and some postage, by saying that the statement of Dr. Henictn is true, so far as it conoerns myself, and I believe it to be true in all other respects. He is a parishioner of mine, and I visited him in his sickness. I urged him to take the medicine, and would do the same again to any one who was troubled with a disease of tho kidneys and liver. Israel Foote (D. D.), Rector of St. Paul’s Church. Rochester* N. Y., Jan. 28, 1832.

Millions Wasted Upon Barren Rock.

Half a million a month continues to be spent in barren rock in vain search for bonanzas in the numerous mines on the Comstock silver vein, in Nevada, below an average depth of 2,200 feet under the surface of Mt Davidson. The 5,000,000 daily gallons of water is very hot everywhere below 1,600 feet, and, with a single exception, no large body of paying ore has been found below that

level- At this time combined efforts are pushing explorations with fourfold activity and streaks of quarts are met in the dark porphyry, giving hopes. But the stock market is set back by the theory of Expert James Delevan, vis : “ No bonanzas will be found where the water has so high a temperature and all boring is thrown away.” Scientific reasons are given. Two of the mines have reached 3,000 feet in confirmation of this theory and bottom has dropped out of the mining stock market. —San Francisco letter.

GARFIELD ON ROSECRANS.

The Publication of aw 014 Letter from «*• Late President Causes a Sensation. Washington, March 10. Some time daring the last political canvass a paragraph waa published in which it was said that Gen. Garfield had, during the war, preferred charges of a serious character against his old commander, Gen. Bosecrans. Charles A. Dana made the original charge. This brought out a note from Gen. Garfield to Bosecrans, in which he distinctly said that he had never been untrue to his commander in word or thought, “ Dana or any other liar te the contrary.” Mr. Dana, to sustain his original statement, has printed a confidential letter from Gen Garfield addressed to Salmon P. Chase, during the war. Gen. Bosecrans declines at present to say anything about the matter. He is taking steps to ascertain whether or not the letter is genuine. The letter is printed in full below. It is marked “Confidential,” and dated “Headquarters Department of the Cumberland, Nashville, July 27, 1863 : ”

My Dear Governor : I have for a long tirra wanted to write to yon, not only to acknowledge your last kind letter, but also to say some things confidentially on the movements in this department ; but I have refrained hitherto, lest I do injustice to a good man, and say to you things which were better left unsaid. We have now, however, reached a point upon which I feel it proper, and also due to that kind opinion which 1 believe you have had of me, to acquaint you with tiie condition of affairs here. lean not conceal trom you the fact that I tave been greatly tried and dissatisfied with the slow progress that we have made in this department siDco the battle of Stone Biver. I will say in tho outset that it would be in the highest degree unjust to say that the 162 days which elapsed between toe battle of Stone Biver and the next advance of this armv were spent in idleness or trifling. During that period was performed tho enormous and highly important labor which made the Army of the Cumberland what it is, in many respects by far the best the country has ever known. But for many weeks prior to our late movement I could not but feel that there was not that live and earnest determination to fling the great weight of this army into the scale and maki its power felt in crushing the shell of the Rebellion. I have no words to tell you with how restive and unsatisfied a spirit I waited and pleaded for striking a sturdy blow. I could not justly say we were in any proper condition to advance till the early days of May. At that time the strings began to draw sharply upon the rebels, both on the Mississippi and m the E tst. They began to fear for the safety of Vicksburg, and before the middlo of May they began quietly to draw away forces to aid Pemberton. I plead for an advance, but not till June began did Gen. Bosecrans begin seriously to mednato an immediate movement. The army had grown anxious with the exception of its leading Generals, who seemed blind to the advantages of the hour. In the first week of the month a council of war waa called, and, out of eighteen Generals whoso opinion was asked, seventeen were opposed to an advance. I was the only one who urged upon the General the imperative necessity of striking & blow at once, while. Bragg was weaker and we stronger than ever before. I wrote a careful review of the opinions of the Generals, and exhibited the fact, gathered from ample data, that we could throw 65,000 bayonets and sabers against Bragg’s 41,000, allowing the most liberal estimates of his force. This paper was drawn up on the Bth of June. After its presentation, and a full canvassing of the situation, an advance was agreed upon, but it was delayed, through days which seemed months to me. till the 24th, when it was begun and ended with what results you know. The wisdom of the movement was not only vindicated, but the seventeen dissenting Generals were compelled to confess that, if the movement had been made ten days earlier, whiie the weather was propitious, the army of Bragg would, in all human probability, no longer exist, I shall never cease to regret the sad delay which lost us so great an opportunity to iDflict a mortal blow upon the center of the Rebellion. The work of expelling Bragg from Middle Tennessee occupied nine days and ended July 3, leaving his troops in a most disheartened and demoralized condition, while our army, with a loss of less thau 1,000 men, was, in a few days, fuller of potential fight than ever before. On the 18th inst. the bridges were rebuilt, and the cars were in full communication from the Cumberland to tho Tennessee. I have since then urged with all the earnestness I possess a rapid advance, while Bragg’s army was shattered and under cover, and before Johnston and he could effect a junction. Thus far the General has been singularly disinclined to grasp the situation with a strong hand and make the advantage his own. I write this with more sorrow than I can tell you, for I love every bone in his body, and next to my desire to see the Rebellion blasted is my anxiety to see him blessed. But even the breadth of my love is not sufficient to cover this almost fatal delay. My personal relations with Gen. Bosecrans are all that I could desire. Officially, I share his counsels and responsibilities even more than I desire, but I beg you to know that this delay ig against my judgment and my every wish. Pleasant as are my relations here, I would rather command a battalion that would follow and follow and strike and strike than to hang back while such golden moments are passing. But the General and’mysulf behove that I can do more service in my present place than in command of a division, though I am aware that it is a position that prqmxses better in the way of promotion or popular credit. But, if this inaction continues long, I shall ask to be relieved and sent somewhere where I can be part of a working army. But Ido hope that you will soon hoar that t.hig splendid army is at least trying to do its part in the great work. If the War Department has not always been just, it has certainly been very iudulgent to this army. But I fcol that the time has now come when it should allow no plea to keep this army back from the most-vigorous activity. I do hope that no hopes of peace or submissive terms on the part of the rebels will lead the Government to delay the draft and the vigorous prosecution of the war. Timeo Danaos et dona ferente.% Let the nation, now display the majesty of its power and tbe work will be speedily ended. 1 hope you will pardon this lengthy letter ; but I wanted you to know how the case stands, and I was unwilling to have you think me satisfied with the delays here. With kindest regards I am, as ever, your friend, J. A. Garfield. Bon. S. P. Chase.

Alone in the Dark.

Reginald DeMugg stood alone on the steps of the handsome mansion, the door of which had just slammed in his face, and in his ears still rang the last words of the fair being whom he madly loved. They were : “Go, and never let me see your face again. You have no style about yourself.” And as Reginald stood there under the silent stars, he bitterly repented the act that had left him out in the cold in both senses of the phrase. Through the long summer, through the fall, as the winds wafting with them tlie first breath of winter, had kissed the leaves and left them nodding with a thousand golden hues, through the winter thus ftyr, he had been as a witling slave of the proud beauty, Madeliue Stumy, proud in her own womanly beauty, and proud of the position her father’s wealth gave to her. And had she not looked coldly on Reginald, and already had their friends coupled their names, and the preachers who saw them meandering together thought of probable fat marriage fees. And now all was lost, and Reginald might never hope to- see that fair face again, never hope to feel the soft, responsive of those fairy fingers, and as we said, bitterly did he repent, and what had Reginald done ? He had called to take Madeline to a party in the next block and hod not brought a hack ? And Madeline was not that kind of a hairpin, but had to have a hack if a party was only in the next block. And Reginald did not know this. Hence the slamming of the door, and the speech, and the standing, alone under the silent stars. —Evansville Argus. The difference between a hungry man and a glutton is, “one longs to eat, and the other eats too long. ” . Now they speak of Crude Petroleum as a remedy for Consumption; better not try it, but take Dr. Bull’s Cough Byrup—the standard Cough Bemedy of our age. It is agreeable to the taste, never fails to cure, and costs only 25 cents a bottle.

"BEST OF ALL. ”

Du- R. V. Pixbcr, Buffalo, N. I.t Dear Sir— My family ha» used your “Favorite Prescription,” and it has done all that is claimed for ft. It is tbe beet of all preparations for female Anmpieint- I recommend it to all my oustom-

G. S. WATERMAN, Druggist,

era.

Dr. Talmage's Experience With a Beggar.

In Philadelphia a man who had a family of ten children came to me and wanted to borrow fifteen dollars. I said to him: “I will not loan yon fifteen dollars, but I will give you fifteen dollars provided you will open a news-stand and support yourself. I know just where I nan get a position for you on the street for your news-stand, and I will give you the fifteen dollars if you will promise to expend it in the starting of that business.” He said he would take until the next day to think- about it. On the morrow he came to me and thanked me for my kindness, but said that he concluded that it would not be a business worthy of him! “Well,” I said, “now E lease don’t bother me any more, for I ave work. Good morning V’—Sunday Magazine.

THE BILIOUS,

dyspeptic or constipated should address, with two stamps and history of case, for pamphlet, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Prop. Packard, of Bowdoin, vouches for the story that Talleyrand detested Aaron Burr, and that when the latter sent his card requesting an interview the French diplomat said : “I tent him word : * The Minister of Foreign Affairs will B ee Col. Burr at such an hour, but a miniature of Gen. Hamilton always hangs over his mantel.’ CoL Burr did not call.”

“GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY”

for all scrofulous and virulent blood poisons is specific. By druggists. Jim Webstkb and Gabe Snodgrass met on Galveston avenue. Jim was dressed in the height of the style, and upon oross-examination explained that he had just been attending his brother’s wedding. “ Who did he marry ?” asked Gabe. “A ’ooman,” responded Jim. “ Well, I reckon I knowed dat ar, as a matter of course.” “ Dar ain’t no matter of course about it in our family,” replied Jim, “ for when my sister Matildy got married I hope I may be shot if she didn’t marry a man. Hit’s a fact, and I’ll swear to it.” —Galveston News. Despise the man who is willing to trust you. He’s the fellow who gets you into debt.

Not the Way to Do.

In localities where the extraordinary merit of Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla becomes known, it leads the sale of all other remedies, and although, in some instances, certain druggists have been known to recommend some other remedy as a blood purifier or strengthening tonic, by the sale of which they make greater profit, nevertheless it is a fact that intelligent persons will not be thus persuaded, but will insist on the druggists procuring Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, as it far excels all medioines as a blood purifier, strengthening tonic, liver and bowel regulator and kidney cure. A trial will ?rove its merit as a general health renewer. ts principal ingredients are Yellow Dock, Sarsaparilla, Juniper, Iron, Buchu, Celery and Oalisaya bark, and it acts on the blood, liver, bowels, kidneys and nervous system at one and the same time, rebuilding a broken-down constitution as if by magic. Try one bottle.

An Arabian Beauty.

Amena, the daughter of the chief of the Algerian revolt, is the great beauty of the Arab tribes. She appears to be distinguished above all her rivals, not only for her loveliness, but for accomplishments likewise, being a poetess of no mean order, and for her courage in the field, where she takes her place by her father’s side and gallops fearlessly on her Arab courser, as fleet and powerful as his own. The picture is worthy of Horace Yernet, the Frenchmen say, who have pursued the flying host under Bou Amena’s command—the chief with his white bournos flying behind him and the red and purple tassels of his horse gear dancing in the wind, while the dark blue and white striped vail of the girl, with its gold border, flashes in the sun as it floats out beyond the long streaming tail of her flying steed. Mb. George M. Whiting, Middletown, Ohio, writes : “ I was an invalid many years, suffering from general debility, nervous prostration, blood impurities, dyspepsia, painful urination, weak lungs, catarrh of the bladder and extreme physical weakness. Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla has brought me out, and made me a sound, healthful, vigorous man I can never say enough for this wondorful strength and health restoring medicine.”

Tommy was a little rogue, whom his mother had hard work to manage. Their house in the country was raised a few feet from the ground, and Tommy, to escape a well-deserved whipping, ran from his mother and crept under the house. Presently the father came home, and, hearing where the boy had taken refuge, crept under to bring him out. As he approached on his hands and knees, Tommy asked, “Is she after you, too?”

A Well-Known Wit’s Indorsement.

Chicago, 111., May 30, 1881. H. H, Warner & Co. ; Sirs— For severa 1 years I have been a sufferer frrm kidnoy disease, and never knew what it was to be free from pain until I used your Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. 0. H. Harris, “ Carl Pretzel."

A Vermont man who set a trap to catch a mink has already captured seventeen polecats, a coon and his own dog in it, and still persists in his designs upon the mink. Some men don’t know when they’re licked. A foktune awaits Dr. C. R. Sykes, of 169 Madison street, Chicago, if he was not so utterly opposed to advertising his “Sure Cure for Catarrh’’and “ Atmospheric Insufflator,” but he says they need no advertising. A drum manufactory in Massachusetts, established iu 1853, has couverted during that time 30,000 sheep skins into drumheads. Headache, bilious attacks, dizziness, and loss of appetite, are cured by Ridney-Wort. Madame Christine Nilsson’s favorite amusement is shooting.

On Thirty Day** Trial. The Voltaio Belt Co., Marshall, Mioh., will send their Electro-Yoltaio Belts and other Eleotric Applianoes on trial for thirty days to any person afflicted with Nervoos Debility, Lost Vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing eoznnlete restoration of vigor and manhood. Address as above without delay. N. B.—No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed.

One Dose Sufficient.

Coleville, Pa., Dec. 16, 1881. The only cough remedy used in my family is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Several tames in my own experience a bad cough has been cured by one dose before going to bed at night

" Rough ob Rats."

The thing desired found at last Ask druggists for Bough on Bats. It clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, bedbugs. 16a boxes.

For Brick and Tile machinery

Address JAMES F. CL AltK, Morenci, Mich. Evebv Home should contain Eilert’s Extract Of Tar and Wild Cherry. This celebrated remedy will surely cure Colds, Coughs, Croup, Catarrh, Consumption and all Bronchial complaints. Common Colds negleoted, aro the eause of onehalf the deaths. Don’t wait for sickness to come, but this day take home a bottle of Eilert’s Extract of Tar and Wild Cherry, for it may save the life of a loved one, when delay would be death. Sold by all Druggists. Deacon Smith buys Carboline, the deodorized petroleum hair renewer and restorer, and, since its improvement, recommends it to all his friends as the perfection of all hair preparations. This shows that the Deacon is a wise man and knows what is what Pub* ood-livkb oil, from selected livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard & Co., N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians declare it superior to all other oils.

The Cannibals’ Geoff Points.

Since everybody, including Judiut and Nero, have weir apologists, the Feejeo cannibals are now declared not to be so blaok as they are painted. In the fit st place, they had, in the way of flesh, nothing but each other to eat Exoept Dying foxes and rats, there were no fourfooted animals on the islands. The present names of their domestic animals betray a European origin, collie, for dog; pussi, tor oat; ose, for norse ; eeept, for mutton; goti, for goat; and bullarna kow, for beef. The wooden spoons for human broth, and cannibal forks, eighteen inches long, with four or five prongs, are still in existence. A berry, resembling a tomato in shape and oolor, waa the speoial and proper vegetable to be eaten with “long pig." One of the MriwffcMTm lately said he would like to see a woman who would not eat her full share, and declared human flesh was ever so much better than pork “ Long pig” was sometimes made into puddings. When a friendly neighboring tribe visited another, the chief of the latter would make a raid among his enemies, and bring back women enough to make a feast for his visitors. Fifty and eighty people were served at some of these feasts. Formerly, when one sneezed, they said, “May you club somebody." Now they say, “Bless you,” or “May you live long 1” Chieftains were distinguished by the number of persons they had eaten. Before he was converted to Christianity, one of these had devoured forty-three of his fellows. Shaving on Sunday has been decided in Toronto to be against the law. Uncle Sam’s Condition Powder prevents disease, purifies the blood, improves the appetite, gives a smooth and glossy coat of hair and keeps the animal in good oondition. It oures Distemper, Coughs, Colds, Fevers and most of the diseases to which Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Hogs and Poultry are subject, and should be used by every one owning or having the care of stock. Sold by all Druggists. The man with tho broadest smile is he who uses Frazer Axle Grease. Follow his example. Save your horses and bo happy.

Baltimore, Md.

William J .Coughlin,of Somerville, Mum., say*: In the tall of 1876 I waa taken with bleeding of the lunge, followed by a eevere oough. I loat my appetite and fleeh, and was confined to my bed. In 1877 I waa admitted to the boepital. The doctors said I bad a hole in my lung at big as a half dollar. At one time a roport went around that I waa dead. I gars np hope, but a friend told me of Ds. William Hall’s Balsam tor thi Lungs. I got a bottle, when, to mj surprise, I commenced to feel bettec, and to-day I foal better than for three yean past. I write this hoping ovary one afflicted with dieeased lunge will Dr. William Hall’s Balsam, dnd be oonvlnoed thet consumption cam be cubed. I esn positively say it has done more good than all tb» other medi. etnas I have taken since my slokneea.

NEW YORK. Breves $ 9 25 @l2 25 Hogs .•... 645 r«a 6 80 Cotton ll#@ 12& Flour —Buperflne 365 @ 4 35 Wheat—No. 2 Spring 1 29 @ 1 3D No. 2 Red 131 @ 1 33 Corn—Ungraded 68 @ 72 Oats—Mixed Western 60 @ 61 Pork—Mess. ;..16 25 @l7 60 Lard 10#@ m# CHICAGO. Beeves—Choice Graded fitters 6 15 @ 6 80 Cows and Heifers 325 @ 4 75 Medium to Fair 6 35 @ 5 65 Hogs 4 75 @ 7 60 Flour—Fancy White Winter Ex... 7 00 @ 7 25 Good to Choice Spring Ex. 625 @ 7 00 Wheat-No. 2 Spring 1 28 @ 1 29 No. 3 Spring 1 06 @ 1 07 Corn—No. 2 61 @ 62 Oats—No. 2 43 @ 44 Rye—No. 2 82 @ 84 Barley—No. 2 99 @ 1 00 Butter—Choice Creamery 37 @ 41 Eggs—Fresh 18 @ 19 Pork—Mess 16 60 @l6 75 Lard 10# @ 10# MILWAUKEE. Wheat—No. 2 1 25 @1 26 Corn—No. 2 61 @ 62 Oats—No. 2 41 @ 42 Rye—No. 1 85 @ 86 Barley—No. 2 (... 86 @ 87 Pork—Mess 16 25 @l6 60 Lard 10# @ 10# ST. LOUIS. Wheat—No. 2Red.. 1 1 22 @ 1 23 Corn —Mixed 00 @ 61 Oats—No. 2 47 @ 49 Rye 82 @ 83 Pork —Mess 16 50 @l6 76 Lard 10#@ 10# CINCINNATI. Wheat 1 27 @ 1 28 Corn 64 @ 65 0at5..... 46 @ 47 Ryk 90 @ 91 Pork—Mess 17 25 @l7 50 Lard 10 @ 10# TOLEDO. Wheat—No. 2 Red 125 @126 Corn 65 @ 66 Oats 45 @ 46 DETROIT. Flour—Choice 6 26 @ 9 00 Wheat—No. 1 White 1 23 @ 1 24 Corn—Mixed 62 @ 63 Oats—Mixed 48 @ 45 Barley (per cental) 2 00 @ 2 20 Pork—Mess 17 25 @l7 50 INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat—No. 2 Red 1 24 @ 1 26 Corn—No. 2 61 @ 63 Oats 44 @ 47 EAST LIBERTY, PA. Cattle —Best 6 50 @ 6 00 Fair 4 00 @ 4 50 Common 3 50 @ 4 00 Hogs 6 25 @ 7 85 Sheep 4 25 @ 640

DPBULL’S COM SYRUP

W WUHOEB OOHPODKD Of PURE COD LIVER L OIL AND LIME. J To Consumptive*.—Many have been happy to give their testimony In furor of the use of “ WiQmr’i Pure Ood-Liver Oil and Lime." Experience has proved It to be a valuable remedy for Consumption, Asthma, Diphtheria, and all diseaaos of the Throat and Lungs. Manufactured only by A. B. WcLBOB, Chemist, Boston. Bold by ail druggists. OTA A WIU. *ll a day st hems easily made. Costly ffa outfit free. Address Thus A Co., Augusta, 1U A BOOK on the proper treatment of the Throat and Lungs,by R.Hnnter.M.D..loS State St.. Chicago, free BCQ a week In your own town. Terns and *1 outfit 900 free. Address H. Hallxtt k Co., Portland,Me. VMllin M CII If you want to learn Telegraphy In s I UUHu men few months, and be oertafn of s sit. nation, address VALENTINE BROS, Janesville, Wls A MONTH—AGENTS WANTED—®O best selling articles in the world; I sample/rrs. WIV&fJ Addrees Jay Bronson. Detroit. Mich. I Klin PIQCO WARci,aim»,pf.»sions LhKU URoCO, and PATENTS. For prosecution before Ooncre-s or the Departments, sddrees W. O. LAKGAN, Claim Agent, 616 F St., Washington, D.O. THRESHERSiSS tree. THE AULT MAN A TAYLOR 00.. Msnsii-.1d.0i llinrp IMPROVED HOOT ItKKK. U G !5w F Nh 25c. package makes 5 gallons of a donitlllsV 1 clous, wholesome, sparsling TemperI I ance beverage. Ask your drugsAt, or sent by mail for 25c. C. E. HIRES, 48 N Del*. Aue., Phllada. Wj prs fsrmd i ■■ for ssrvies* sad expenses. Busins.i honorable, p«r- ---■ I tnanent, and easily operated. TVrite ua. B LOAN A JUoO-SM George Burnt, Cincinnati,Ohio. R FREE TO r. A. M. BoretlM Colored Eofrevta*, A showing the Ancient hlmeonlc Matter, recently dleSe/XjTcovered In Egypt. Large new Illustrated catalogue of yt JT Muonic books and good*, wiib bottom price; aUo, \ nertlcrrlan of the highly locratlre employment offered / V Ajr A M . • REDOING A CO., Meeonlo aehtleh.ee and MaatuScturara. 11l Broadway. Mow YocS.

M. A. ATHERLY.

A combination of IV*m mMS —J - II tojrUlr of Iron, I'rruvian MMM MMM M mMM Mil Harkand Phosphorueia KwS] a palatable form. The MMJ Jr m Mr Mmf M PB BSbil \only preparation of iron MW,M M^^MM M MM mamm MWRH I that U ' u * ”" t blnrkm the terth, *« rliarrlnietir of ' \other iron prrpa ra Hone. GENTLEMENi I have used D*. Harter's Iron Tome in my practice. and in an experience of ** twenty-five years in medicine, have never found anything to give the results that Dr. Harter's IrOW Tonic does. In many cases of Nervous Prostration, Female Diseases. Dyspepsia, end an Impoverished condition of the blood, this peerless remedy, has In my hands, made some wonderful cunt. onrmoet eminent naturalhecUthfultoneto J ' the dif/retire oryont and m g nervoiie*l/*t«m, making Poeoere and Impotence.,

RESCUED FROM DEATH.

THE MARKETS.

======== A Good Family Remedy. STRICTLY PURR. Harmless to titoa Host DeUeats, ‘ ohSHm and been cared; he thinks «U so afflicted should give » * DUirnn*, Dgntfat, of Olnrfnaatl.wag thought ts thlt^KrSsSVrinmehi* P Wa°i.Graham A Oo Wholesale Druggists,Zensevilla. Ohio, writes us of the ours of £}»Ui es JVreemsi* e well-known oitlaen, who bee bean afflicted with BRORohitis In Its worst form for twelve years. The Long Balsam oured hlin.ee others, of BroRMUTM. /ri. AS ALSO Consumption, Goughs, Golds, Asthma, Ctoup, All Diseases of the Throat, Lupamt Pulmonary Organs. O. 8. Martin, Druggist, at Oskly. Xy-, Writes that the It to harmless to the most deltoete child ! It contains no Opium la any tonal As an EIPECTOEANTIt has No EpL •OLD «Y ALL MKDICINK MALMS. jßt^2onte i^a«riaa. < te ■nftD RELIABLE lIVTOHMATIOV 1 ’ V/Hi shout Western farm lands, safe Bper-oent mortgage Loans,or sound municipal iwmntlso.wnts THOMAS H. PARSONS A CO@* Worthington. Minn. CONSUMPTION! I have a positive re«Sjinlov.tbo above disease; bi Its use thousands of case, oftnu wos»tklnd and of long standing have been oared. Indeed, so strong Is my fslth In Its effioacy that I will send TWlf B&TTLEB IHER, together with a VALUABLE TREATISE on this (these# to any sufferer. Give Ki press and r. O. address. DR. T. A BLOUUM, 181 Pearl St. New York. Besides the largest and most oomp’ete general stock of FRUIT and ORNAMENTAL TREKS. ROSES, etc.. In the U. 8., we offer many Choice Novelties New Abridged Catalogue mailed /Vee to all who epply. Address EI.I.WANGER «V BAKU V, Mount Hope Nurseries, Rochester, N. Y. TOWfllEhSr e? j jwn lowa R. R. Und Co. LirtiVU Cedar Rapids. lowa. inmiiriM! JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LINIMENT positively prevent this terrible disease, and wiU port* lively cure nine caaea out of ten. Lifomiatlon thM will save many lives, sent free by maU.Don t detoya moment. Prevention is bettor than cure. 1, B.JOHWbon k 00.. Boa ton. Mass., formerly Bangor, Malnto . . I in.iilm- I*lll- "i'l"' 1 " Blood, and will completely change the blood In the entire system in three monthe. Any pereon who will toko one pilleach night from 1 to IJweeks may be restored to sound health, if such a thing bn. possible. Sold everywhere or sent by mall for 8 letter stamps. J. 8. JOH NISON & 00., Boston, Dinah., formerly ltangor. Die. _____

usf NfiNrinn ■ f nr ri si (Ilf rps-M V* MF’ft. CO .PHI LA

T\'“ AGENTS WANTED FOR THE Pictorial if HISTOBYa/^WORLD! Embracing full and authontlo aooounU of ovsry nation of anoisnt and modern time*, and Including a hlatory of ths rise and fall of tbs Greek and Roma* Emplrss, ths middle sees, the ornssdsa, the feudal jy* tern, tbe reformation, the discovery and settlement el oontainsfl’ri°iln* o hlstorloalengravln*t, and is the ■lost oompl«t« History of toe World e?er publleh#4. Send fnr specimen pesos and extra terms to Agents. Address National Publisrwo Co.. Chlosgo, m. “JUST LET ME BHOW YOU” ■■ . IS. -I DK. FOOTE’S i.A r HAND-BOOK OF HEALTH HINTS and READY RECIPES. /SsKjj Worth «2«. Cost Bsoi By tbe author of MsSsa "Plais Hom* Tals” Aim "ManwAa ftSaiAl Common Slum. _ _ 1 ‘)Q PAGES of Advlc* about Dally Plf iMtS IZo Habits, and Keel pea for Cum of ft'. L *-®m Common Ailments; a vaiuablo Book of £ Kcfcrencc for every family. Only 35 eta. !r-Nls*rvA The Hand-t>ook contains chapter* on HyC YK\uLU gicne for all seasons, Common Nense on K. ■ Common Ills, Hygienic Curative Measures, Iffia, J Knacks Worth Knowing, Hint* on llathlng, pSK 3V on Nursing the Sick, on Emergencies, torrfßjbSA. gethcr with some of the Private Formulw KSPfei of Hr. Foots, and other physicians of hlch rgßM*,d ' repute, and for preparing food for Invalid* *4-AGKNTB WANTED. mmm Murray Hill Book Publishing Co., 1W iflsgiM- ll 130 East 38te Brsurr. Raw Toa* Cit» The Best Field EMIGRANTS. AN IMMENSE AREA OF RAILKOA* AND GOVERNMENT LANDS, OF OREAV FERTILITY. WITHIN EASY REACH OF PERMANENT MARKET. AT IXTEEML LY LOW PRICKS, Is saw sAref far male hi RAHTKRN OREGON and EASTERN WASHINGTON TERRITORY. These lands ferns nnrt es th* grsat GRAIN ktlF^vafaS GRAIN AT PORTLAND. OREGON. COMMAND* A PRICE EQUAL TO THAT OBTAINED IN CHICAGO. The early eotnpletion of'the Berthem Ptoeifie H. M. ie note aeenred. and yuarantoeo to tetUere eheagp and quick transportation and food markets both Moot and WooA The opening of this note oeerltmd Uno to the raeUle, together with the construction of <A« notteork of TOO miles of railroad by the O. ML d If. Co. in the valleys of the groat Columbia astd Uo principal tributaries, renders oortain • rapid increase in the value of the lands note open to purchase and pro mnptisn, There is every indication of an onormono movement of population to the Colombia Miser region m the immediate /brtwra. LANDS SHOW aa AVERAGE YIELD of 40 BUSHELS OF WHEAT PER ACRE. Ne (failure of Crept error kaawa. RAILROAD LANDS offered at the aalfarm rata af11.60 as Aura. CLIMATE MILD AND HEALTHY. Far pamwMat and map#, duaerlptfva as ss;.TiJa srxiafes.. , mj A. X. STOKE*, Gaa*l Eastern Paea’r Agent. AF Clark St., Ohlaaga. Ilk TRUTH /S*\ d JZluien kmbm.4 « er* wisi-IIjUaKJU, ss^sssssssWff q N.P. No- 11 WHIiN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, » » nlease nay yau saw the afverllsemeS In thin paper.