Daily News, Volume 2, Number 97, Franklin, Johnson County, 11 December 1880 — Page 2

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DAILYTsEWS

*. p. BBATJCnAMP. san«r aa* f»|Wteto# Pnbllcatlon OOke, oonwsr Fifik t*d Mala Street* -as- "1 Sawrad at the Po»t Offle* at T*rr- IIuU. tudi«K*,

UMCtDKl-CllMWnllUtf,

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11. 1800.

THE latest ADVICE* from Hawaii GIVE in formation of one of the most %\tcB«fre*nd Rrand eruption« of Jam* from Mauna JUoa known In modem times. The new crup tion broke out at about

ACYCLOWE-

It is usally supposed that summer is the time for cychjoes. Joplbi, Jlissouri, had one, howeVbr Ttt4 week afid It 'traveled oyer the Gouutrjr upr^|i|^tiel|/ taring down houses and barns, and acting in all respects like the traditional Illinois ze-

phyf.

KAItEOiDTROITWUWl

It is stated in momentary circles that many of the western railroads will not declare any dividend# until after the adjournment of the legislatures in their states. They appear to lie afraid that there will be inquiry into the methods which they have adopted during the last few months, and iiodoto legislation looking towards checking their abritrary|and many Umes lawlesi pro^cding* the actlou of Jerre Black, in drafting a law designed to give the government some supervision rover them, and not allow then to be, as they hav» been heretofore, a law desigtied to give the government some supervision over them, and not allow them to be, at they-hate heretofore, a law unto themselves, has given some of the roada a lively apprehension of trouble in the near future, and they are waking up about it,

The

nm

Sr.

Son

1

7

Made of Metal. ".V

In »rewnt article in the Xmtt.-iim, OentHrf, by Mr. J. Norman Ixckver. tiio writer very strongly objtH-la to pn Iw».

t*« discovTry or oxygen in t|i§ «t«i, lxv^cyer «ftys jife K5* adiikmjfefiilly over the whole grouttd and finds: Fi»*t, that the photograph on whkli Mr. Dm* per ba«e« the dEsoovery i» .not on©

etent to settl* snch

Sfil

5ii|ipdrt«nt

th* Mm

o'clock p. *. on

Friday, No*. 5, about sJx'raile* north of the summit crater of Mokuaweoweo on Mauna Loa, and flowed down to the ele rated plateau lying betweeh Mauna Loa and Kea, sending out two br»uches--one from near its source toward the old crater of Kilauea and another branch further down,.tending' toward the east.

IT Is understood that the information received from Supervisor Butterfleld, of Vermont, now engaged in verifying the census return? in South Carolina, show* that the census taken laft Jtine and recanvassed in September was correct While Mr. Butter field 'is not supposed to know what the returns were last June*— and ho vu directed to^act independently of all knowledge of the reported results— the officials here have received enough to authorize the statement that the census, as taken under, the supervisors last June in South Carolina* was carefully and honestly done. rinnuw-

..A

THE BERNHARDT

Sara Bernhardt h$M» gone to Boston, where her reception has not been what was hoped.:, The Boston people are hot apt to take tip Whit a novelty on account of the dictum of any other city under the sun, ahd they received Sara but coldly.

STROXO A^OUICMT.

THKRK is now going on a lively fight, in Indiana, over the next senatorshlp. Judge Gre*ham has formally withdrawn. This leaves the fight between Harrison and New. In alt fairness the office ought to be conceded to Harrison. He took the Republican noinination|for governor, after Orth had been forced oft the track, and made the race against "Blue Jeans" Williams under every possible discouragement True, he wa# defeated, but at the time it looked aa if no man could be elected.—

Ptoria Journal.

THE P&B&IDENT'S MESSAGE. There is a variety of opinions about the President's Message. In glancing over our exchanges there a general opinion over the ^country that the leafage a rather t^eak document Wliat he did Say he said at wearisome length. The South is mad a* his broad insinuations about their elections down there. A portion of the West is disgusted atrthe position hc took on the silver question, and the prgseut officeholders are furious at his weak argument in favor of the civil service reform. He took stroug ground against polygomy on the theory, it is supposed, that the Mormons, having no friends,4t is &afe to abuw thetai lllThey aeim t6 ^tifat rtn it. however, and from reports, are flourishing more than at any time in their history. w.'bbj

«nci»*

ie*x»«d. that he does not find the coincidence Wtween bright «d«r line« and oxjrgvn Hne« In the part of tlie apeetium with which he is most fiuuiliar i,' Uiirtl. th«t cmnparing Dr. Draper'* photogmmi with the fine phot«gmpfi of the apwtrum ol^aincH) hy Mr. itethertorrid hi "faite to find tnie brkht lever eoincMent with

nn*In th* «m whatever anv litH of oxygvn whatever." jar. Lockyermms op th« evkknoe a* to the «un'« composition in th«* wtmis "So far as our knpwlodg* |fO«*,

v,

whatever Mr. I

«h« m&li fcfcif# «»M#^f jheUd, aiid on account Is strangely diRVrent

In

tvtm

this aocoui.it the cmsl of our earth, in which the are

large nunantv

»t|) JO tepp

TO

Jdtaeiimmroi

«iq miua ot|A ®a!°r

1UAP

•uodsaixoa tt 10 Xit|Mf^0^ Wort and take it faithfully^ It will dean »ia wii| oi *Atl|W* the ^nlceway of sand, icrayel or sine* and purify the wtiole system. Drttggfsts W ptr» •lUdUiS^if jo uwq ai() o) •^^ilowiooo 0|

t*v» nl' fctfllUe*, t« Utrloit

Gove nor iJi

oue O'ikmvU, i-i" Aiu.urj, from Umrlta** town, ami & gemtftumnwba rt*mt»lly visited th# Mu'tft Urn* ft-lln hut story: "Uenttetnen," *altl th# wtmltm, 1 want tu ltr)ti|£ hiforojroq one of the MI out IVNITTTKABITIKIMMW havti in prison. We call him Hhe man ho never wnlloa,1 and I wish before* he eotum

in

Mao's Age.

Few men die of age. Almost nil die of disappointment, pmsion, mental or bodily toil, or accident. The {Missions kill men sometimes, very suddenly The common expression choked with passion, haa little exaggeration in it, for even though no suddenly fatal, strong passions shorten life. Strong-bodied men often die young—weak men live longer than the strong, for the strong use their strength and the weak have none to use. The Tatter take care of themselves, the former do not. As it is with the body, so it is with the mind and temper. The strong are apt to break, or, like the candle, to turn, the weak to burn out. The inferior animals which live, in general, regular and temperate lives, live generally their subscribed term of years. Tho horse lives twenty-fivq years the ox fifteen or twenty the lion twenty the dog ten or twelve the rabbit eight the guinea-pig six or seven years. These number all bear a similar proportion to the time the animal takes to grow to its full size. But mnn, of all the animals, Is the one that seldom eomes tip to the average. He ought to live a hundred' vears, according to this physiological law, for five times twenty arc one hundred but instead of that he scarcely reaches, on an average, four times his growing period the cat six times and Hie rabbit even eight times the strindsml of measurement. The reason is obvious —man is not only the most irregular and the most intemperate, but most laborious and hard worked or all animals. He is the most irritable of animals and there is reason to believe, though he cannot tell what ni:imals secretly feel, that more than any other animal man cherishes wrath to keep it warm and consumes himself with the fire of his own secret reflections.

What Flnste* Will Do.

A farmer in Wisconsin who has used Brypfluui in hie farming operations for a long time, gives his experience to the Farmers11 Club of theNew.York Institute, and here is apart of what he says:

I have lived here twenty years and used plaster,? about seventyJlvo pounds totheacrv- I make at least one-third more clover to the acre than can be got without plaster. You can see the dinerenqe in the growth as far as you can see the clover. One application will do for two years. Our laud i* burr oak openings was new when I came here, and not considered gool for gntss, but splendid wheat land. There is iiosjmd some call it clay.' I, raise clover, keep 800 sheep, four cows nnd eight hordes and colts, all oiv a farm of 200 acres. I have about sixty acres under tlie plow, and twenty-five of timber make all the manure I can, and think my laud richer than when I bought it, I can raise more grass thau when it was new, and more com on a clover sod wn.cn I pmved plaster on the clover than when it was new. Perhaps it will ruin it in time, but as long as I can raise big crops of corn and clover, and feed to stock and bogs, I think I will ri&k it. I-ast year I raised 441 bushels of wheat on nineteen acres, ami

tioQ

bushels of wheat and oats

mixed, on twenty-three acres. The latter will clean out about one-half wheat, which will sell at No. 2, is a few small oats will he left in it. On sixteen acnis of ctoverspd I luwl l/»00 bushels of corn, of the yeilow Dent variety stalks left on tlie field. Yon will think this ia poor farmlng. Sut we think it will not pay to cut them, because there is so much to lrnndle farm little feed.

la S73 Kurope onderwent a vWtation of gra^hopjKers far wc.rse than that experienced in the Slats*. They are r«f«md to in H[«niab and German airhiVe®, and are de^-ribed as having hidden the win atul devoured crops on 100 weres in liww. After devastating France thc were auppoeed to haye p«giahil in the Atlantic.

A gentleman, while ptckinf htmseff Hp from beliind a hot*e, was askeil li question, "What Is the matter with yon! when the reply was, *Ttl he darned If I didrrt think w*a strncfc by lightning," Iwit immediately after the ones-

tionerhad meandered, yon mtchi have

him

I."

mrm wmm

to t«u

you hi* story. Ho ise^ma to 1*« a man of mom thpn ordinary ability, one of th# better class Of substantial, frusta I Irish sitisens, who own#d a small platM in a manufacturing viUsg^, where he reaided with his ferotly of grown tip sons and daughters, all permnnently employed ami in comfortablednmmatancm The old man had a tine garden on which he bestowed hlaJeisutti hours. in apart of which wiis a nn© lot of cabbages, It seeuia that the boys in the neighborhood had a habit of trespassing on the old man's wmleii, until he had determined 'of getting ri«1 of them by firing his gun to frighten them away One night hearing some one in his garden, he took down hia gun, and, Retting behind the hedge, fiml into the garden, aa lie claims, without aim, or seeing anyone to aim at, but the, report of the* gun alarmed th® neighbor*, who. on rosh ing into the garden, found tlie lifeioM body of a young girl shot through the heart. The old man, when torn what lie had done wua struck dumb. He was arrested and sentenced to imprison meat for life. He haa now been hero for ten vean*. and his face haa become aa marble tnere is no hope nothing but the remembrance of that dreadfti night. In Ireland they have a aupereti tion among the young girls that who* ever on Hallowe'en shall place a cabbage over the door will marry the first young man that enters the door afterward^ And this, it was proved, waa the errand t)f tiie young girl in tjUe old man's garden. But instead of a wedding she foun 1 a grave."

nm

Hfw»y A 11 anile# played "A Child of the State* In Philadelphia this wwk, "Tbe Comet*." are Ijeing polished In JSvatutville, and will stiirt out on a iecoud tour,

A ttt'W company in "Alhidin and Ills Wonderful Lamp" Is '*lRe4 *»f"by the eastern press, 'j

Klralfy's Spectarular Combination is playing to crowded houses in PUUadeb phis this week.

Uus Williams l* travt^ling through the eastorn cities, and is meeting large audiences every here.

The receipts of the four week's*engage ment of Mile. Bernhardt in New York were 98,043, or an average of $0,188 50 per night "Unele Tom's Cabin" is being played by several different companies In the United States, One day last week it was played In New York, Philadelphia^ Chicago and Indianapolis,

JIILIIWIIIHIH qBaaB*a»MBaa»BB«gi LITKHARY

Col. John Hay's new life of Abraham Lincoln of which much has been said,will not appear for a year or two.

In 1889 the first eoSnplcte translation of the Bible! In English appeared It was sold in 1888 for fl.TSO'per copy.

i'ellows,

fo rfodkj the animal

with a |4tchfork handle. i:

nt«ktWaf,

The kidneys are natni#*# sluice way to wash oat the debris of our constantly ch*nging bodice If they do not work property the tronhle is eyerywhtre. Then be wise and a# aeon as yon s*« signs of disorder jfet a package of KWIney-

«11 ft both tkttvid and dry, and it {«t^oal* ly *flkieat eiUMf way.—/wiiymrfwit.

1

The Loudon

tfe

fifr'

Timet

paid 15,000 for the

privilege of publishing chapters of "Endiiuion1' before its appearance In full. Mr. Tennyson's new votunK, entitled "Ballads and Other Poems,/' consists mostly of reprints of pieces' that have alr^dy appeared in magazines,

Ralph Waldo Emerson has.ln lecturing, but one gesture. When he utters some impressive sentence he makes a grasping gesture,* as though seizing some imaginary object in front of him.

Mr. M. Laird Simons, who wrote tho continuation of tho Duyckincks' "Oyclo-

Philadelphia,

iedia of American Literature," died in Nov. 17. He had nearly ready for publication, at the, time of hfs death, a "History of the World," in several volumes.

Mr. W. G. Marshall's new English work, "Through America," contains .a full ac count of Mormon life as witnessed by hi to during his visits to Salt Lake City in'18118 and 1879 The work is embellished by nearly one hundred wood-cuts illustrative of scenes in the Utah country, aqdin the famous Yosemite Valley, the Giant Trees, etc.

The Decerhber number of St. Nicholas contains a story of child-life id''Athens, during the reign of Pericles, when the city was at the height of its .power, with seven illustrations by Albert Brennan. Among the subjects represented in those pictures area foot-race of Spartan girls,, the colossal statue of Pal lag with Victory, and a portico showing Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian column?.

Wolves and Coyotes.

The coyote is much smaller than his gray brother. The latter is nearly' as large as a Newfoundland dog, the former about twice the size of a cat. The corote fancies a camp fire, and sits on a lillock within sight of Us place, barking for hours. The gray wolf bays the moon like a dog. Granam says he has seen them sitting on the highest rocks raizing at the brightorb with their heads thrown back uttering unearthly howls. The wolf scorns' the coyote. When ihc lai^c wolves drag down an old bnflalo buli the coyotes huddle in the vicinity, licking their chops and barking, as though begging a share of the prev. Should these venture too near the,big fellows utter ominous growls, and the coyotes slink away, tails between their legs and heads turned over their shoulders. The covote quickly determines the status of a hunter. If he timis him killing woly^»= he keeps at a respectful distance but if he is only hunting bears, antelope or bnflalo, the little fellow becomes quite social. While, a bear hiuiter was butchering game coyotes patiently watched his operation, and a gray Wolf loped hungrily on an onter circle. The trapier threw apiece of meat to the

wbfr ran off and were waylaid

by the big wolf. They 'dropped the meat and returned, biit seemed to leitrn nothing by experience, ior they fed ihe robber gs long as the hunter chin ked' them the meat-

Many coyotes pick lip their supplies the prairie-dog colonies. If one is lurking the streefs and sees a dog away from his hole, he steals njvon him with the

.ntmcxst

secrecy, striving to cut off

his retreat. An old dog, however, is rarely caught napping. Some of the fraternity are sure to espy the wolf, ana a warning bark sends the dog into his hole, with a tantalizing shake of the tail. The coyote despondently peers into the hole, takes away the dirt with a paw, and 8nifi»«t the lost meal. He geta his eve on another dog, and crawls toward the hole like a cat upon the moose. The warning bark is again heard, and a second meal disappears. Infuriated by bit disappointment, the wolf frequently turns upon the little sentry, and for a few seconds makes the sand fly from the entrance of his residence. Worn out by hi$ futile efforts, he flattens himself upon the sand behind the hole, and, motionless as a statue, watches it for hours. If tlie dtt pops oat his head he is gone. The wolf springs upon him, the jaws come together like the snap of a trap, and the helpless little canine fe turned into a succulent supper. One Meier, a well known buffalo hunter, was riding across ft dog town some years ago, when ho saw what h% supposed to be dead coyote stretched out at one of the boles. He dlssiwunted and lifted ft by the tail, intending to take the body to camp and skin it, Tl»« coyote made a snap at hll leg, wriggled from his grasp and sped oyer tlie prairie niore surprbed titan the trapper. He *s* in a sound deep when caught Bot the coyote's gnratest hiiff^^ ra ln the Rpriftg of the y«ar, when th&r feUen Umnsfives at the expense Of the inexperience young dogs caught wandering tiros* botue. Whole families enjoying the cool evening hreeie on the nxMtntaittS above their borrows are brken unawart^ aDd the tender young snapped op before Sheibr parents out fM them n&der tbi groond.

It ha* been dec^dod by a csoort ia Pwthshim &uu if «,«•» mvtrfviag tho legal kinship £T ftjlaitives, that a brother Is nwirer of tti

w6m

S*Arit In (he

It Is an imerosting sight to toko a seat on the ton of a street car at an early hour In Che morning and witness the cleaning proceas that overy thlnf? is tin pitrgoing, The honsekiwpera bring out all their rubbish jfsnd pile It op in the street, OHO pile for every four or five houses. It Is no aootmr enintied than the rag-pickers, who awarui tho streota with their bags and buckets and baudcarts, pontic© upon it and gather tip all the fragments of paper.rags, or meUtl to lie found in the piles, They are so numerous that there is a scramble on oyeiy strict, and they move from pile to pile as if their lives depended on their anlivity. They seem to take away onethird of Wife rubbish. Servants are everywhere to be seen with broom and bucket in hand dtaning off tlie fronts. The streets are being sprinkled with hose, and an army of men and women villi birch brooms are sweeping the Hlreets. On tho boulevards horse brush tng machines are in motion, and the garbage carts aro removing the plies thrown out by the housekeepers. Water is turned on in all the gutters, and women with brooms are engaged washing them down. Men with hose are watering, all the roots, of all tho hun Hreils of thousands of triers on the boulevards, ahd taking up the gratings so ss to loosen the earth around them. All, ar nearly all, this w6rk is being done by the city authorities, and by nino o'clock the city is as clean as broom and brush and water 6wn make

ft.

vv-f How lie Caught tlie Thief.»? m» The peculiar teuijjwraraont of the native troops in British India, and the most efficacious method of dealing with them are strikingly illustrated by a story told of a veteran English officer, who is still living. Shortly after he had assumed command of the—th Native Bengal infantry, a complaint was brought to linn of A theft which had just been committed in the barracks, to the perpetrator of which there was uot the slightest clew. The next morning, on parade, the colonel passed along the iine% giving to erich man, in turn, a thin strip of bamboo ahd when all were supplied, he said, with solemn emphasis: "My men, there is a thief among us, and Brahma has revealed to me how I am to detect hi in. Come forward, one by one, and give me your bamboo chins and the guilty hum let him do what ne may, will have the longest piece." The soldiers, not a, little startled at this mysterious threat, obeyed without a word but before the first dozen filed past, the colonel suddenly seized one of them by the throat, and shouted, "You are the man!" Tiie Hindoo fell on his knees, and whined out a confession of the theft, while his terrified comrades salaamed to the ground before the dreaded "Sahib" to wlioin Brahma had given such terrible power. When they had dispersed, the senior major, who had been looking on in silent amazement came up ana said, "I wish vou would teach me that trick.colime]

J'

"It. is a very simple on£,

niy dear fellow," answered the colonel, with a sihile. "You see, these bits of bamboo were all exactly the sarne length, to begin, wifli but the thief fearing to get the longest piece, bit off the end of his, just a8 I expected^ be .^uld, and that is how I knew him/*

One Experience from Many,

4

**I had be^n sick and miserable so long And had caused my husband so much trouble and expense, no one seemed'to know what ailed mc, that I was completely disheartened stid discouraged. In this frame of mind I got a* bottle of Hop Bitjters and used them unknown to my family. I soon began to improve and gained so fast that my husband and family thought it strange and unnatural, but when I told them what had helped me, they said "Hurrah for Hup Bitters long may they prosper, for they have made mother well and us happy."—The Mother.

Home Journal.

*,4, Businees dircclotn..

CAI,. THOMAS.

OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, 629 Main street, Terre Haute.

^llioriiciis ai CatD,

& McLEAN & SELDOMIliDGE,

t'f

3

7-**7

*r

ff

rf.M ii --Attorneys at I^aw, •liXi Main Street. Term Haute, Irtd.

l)ATia. B. Nptarj. DAVIS A DAVIS, Attorneys at Law, 22^ South Sixth Street, over Posicfflce,

Terre Haute, Iud.

p[)ijQuianQ.

'.i„ Dr. A. Drake,. t.«

VETERINARY SURGEON,

OrrrcK:—24 north Third street, (Cartco'a Stables,) itESlDKXCK:—634 Korth Fifth. Treat*

trerj

dfteaac knows to hone .or cattle

it moderate co#t. Ha* m«t with l*rg* practice and aniforw »«m.

^lA.X,:L OPLDBIEtS

^Pb»«« HTU

v*ib'

kgi /v i*t K*.

:^m

-t

f'

titug"

Clothes, Cftssimeres,

Tweeds, FlttaeWT1"

Jeans, Blankets,

Stocking Yarns,

than in

Carding and Spinning.

-,

L. KtJgSNER,

Palacejl Music

m$w'

1?

213 OHIO STREET.

TKliRK HAUTE,

Oldftst moalc bona* ta

W«WTB

wtfaeat WaatlMa, 3M., aur

latftluuk

4

Alw»jr» (he larg««t atoek oa h«nd kept tbia elty. PtMKM fcnd organ* rasUHl ao tbe rail will p*y for th«m.

National House Saloon.

If our hat Ue flneatllqnorakcptonaAie. Among other brand*, la aoroe nix-year old wbfakv from Mclintftr hCO_, «nd obi from tfa# c«l*brat«i 8. Iffptoy It Co4 »axidf»ct«r«r» CrOm tfo Cc||r %09k biftrl^Kjr.lill m«4e fnm HFTTID NFADA ceur, MM)I. Tl»e» ttitSrc TFTOCK

DAILY NEWS

Possesses many advantages as a daily

newspaper over all other competitors cir­

culated in the City af Terre Hante.—THB

NEWS is

a modern ntvsspaper

viz. a cheap, spicy paper which furnish­

es

all the newt

especially devotedstoicity, township and

county laff^ir^l Md the miscellaneous

literary selections are culled j»ith great

care, and with a conscientious regard for

the instruction and morals of the com-

munity. The sound and healthful in /. .,•/{?•• iiifit fluence of a hearty laugh is recognized by -'Si "r THB NEWS corps, aad n« effort ts ipared

to lay before our patrons the latest and $ choicest productions of the Twains and

Burdettes of the land.

The city department of the NKWS is

well looked after. Each day. it contains

a complete record of the events occuring

in our midst Sensationalism in statement

and matter is studiotssly excluded, andmr

patrons are able to relyTupdni

ftantial accaracy of each and every item.

The NKWSiscirenlated more largely and Mr in forte towaa than any other daily paper

&

iu

in western Indiana. The DAILY KIWI IS

one tbonaand within the last thirty days. »„-ur

v?E

if/ A

**j"

and has now a t*mi

jM*

Argajid Base Hei

Of

of

raarkrt

tM infte* (raAst In-the

Tie People's Paper. svir*xi

'OF THE PEOPLE, FOB TUB

PEOPLE, BT

#10 ttl

THE PEOPLE.

$

T^e Terre Hftue

X3ST THE LEA:-

of

Always was, and always wim'lj

II

tr *.'

tl

in the full

sense of ^be term. It belongs to that

class of papers which is flourishing most

signally* in the East and West, and filling

the especial want of the people of to-day

in the most reliable form.

Many of our people cannot afford to take

the costly city papers, while others And

neither the time nor the inclination to

peruse theirlengthy and indistinct columns

printed INLWQJ THB NEWS pres­

ents in compact shape the telegraphic and

general news, which is spread out inter­

minably in the metropolian journals.

Its editorial columns, while dealing large

ly with National and State politics are

E.L.PROBST. I3 YONRTH

atreet, btt. Main and

ire N.

£Ur

prising daily west of Iadlaaapolis. The

circulation

of

J.

bout M0. The Marwt aaa he orderd

throogh thelHiwahoxet N dived from

thaKswioAos^ fifth and Main

OH,,

WM. DREUSICKnig

CARPENTER AND BDIL1

MaDufactorar D^eoaicke'i '.

Patent Refrigerators

Cor. 9!aU

Mad

SycaJnore 8t«.,

TERRE HAUTE

INoyour

TO S6000 A YEAR, or |S to f» aj hi own locality. No risk, men do aa well AD men. Many. more than the amount ftatod all one can fail to mcke money Any one can do the work. Yon

make from 50 ccnt to $3 an hour by devoting evenings and wpare time to the bnalnc**. It nothlnR to try the bn«inc»i. Nothing Ifka money making ever ottered before. Btt* pleanant and »trlctly honorable. Header, if want to know all about tbe be«t paring bn«' before the pnblfc, send it* your adarcas ant will send y»n full particularo and private tt$ free., ^mpl«« worth $5 »1ko free} yon can make ap fo\ir mind, for yourself.-

Adtf

GKORGk 8TINTON'A 00.. Portland Jjj»

Morton Post, No.

DKTAKTMBKT OF 1KDUHA 1 TERRE HAUlj: Headquartera SS^ Sonth "JTk

Regular meetings first and1 tl Thursday evenings, eachmo* tarlteadlng ltoom open evening.

Comrades visiting th*

city

always bo made welcome, W. E. McLEAN, Com'd JAr*tT**tKoa, AdJ't.

Oao. PI.AWSTT. P. i. M. Ol at Headanartcrs

ISOO hw

OVER A LION OF' Pror. tiailnctt

FRENCiq

t.i

Have ftlrej-g, Wen sold In t.l3 country and France-, efery of which has en perfect faction, and performed cn|

Hme

ii!#(f accbrtllogl dlrmiotis.

We now say to the afflicted, and doubtijiu o* that we wltl pay the above'rewafd for *jtlngle fer

if

That tho pad fails to cure. This Great RemJ will positively and permanently curt Lamb! Lamer back. Sciatica. Gravel, niabetei», Droj Brieht.'s Disease of tbe Kidneys, Inc«ntinue and^Retention of the Urine., lnflnmatfen of Kidney's Catarrh of tbe Bladder, High Ooloi tJrtne, Pain tn the Back. Side or Loins, Nem Weakness, and In fact all disorders of the Bla4 and Urinary Organs Whether contrnclcd by vate disease or.othcfwlse,

If yon are suffering from Fema»

Weakness, Lenoscorrhea, or any disease

of

tl®

Kidneys, Bladder, or L'rlbary Organs, TfOU CAN BK Ct KROI Witbooi swallowing aanaeona medicines, by strn* ly wearing 1 LID PROF. G^UIIMETE'S MK

FRENCH KIMEY PAJT*.

WIIICU CURES BY ABSORPTION. Ask your druggist for Prof. GnUnettc's

me 0f

On

freoM

Kidney Pad, and ttkc no other If be ham not rot« •end B.00 and yon will receive tlie

Pad bf

retn«

mall." TXtTIMOinALS raOM THE PEOPLE. Judge Buchanan. Lawyer, Toledo. O., says: "One of Prof. GnllmeUe's French Kidney Pa cared

Lumbago in tkree weeks' time. MS

cas* kad txen given op by the beat To«tonV trf cartible. lunag all tms time I »uSert't nntc^* agony aofl iarge sams of money.

George Vetter, J. P.. Toletle, 0„ says: "1 suffered for three years with Sciatica a Kidney Disease, and often bad to go about cratches, I was entirely and permanently cat* after wearing Prof. Gnilmette's French Kidri Pad four week*."

Scott. Sylranla. O., writes:

'M have been a great anfferer for IS years wit Brfgbt% JHaeMe of tl»# Kidneys. For w»ks at tlm« was tnsabfe to

fet

ant of

"bed

took barrels

auriictea. batttey gave me »aiy temporary rellaf.l I wore two af rrof. Gui!»eU«'» Kidney Pa4a aix waekc, and 1 nqw kflow I am entirely corad. lira, fielien Toledo. O., say*: "For year* I have Wan conftm-d, a great part the ihae to tqr bed witli Locorm* and femi weaknesa. 1 wore one of Gttflmette's Kldn Pads and was cored in one taanth."

H. B. Greea. Wbalaaale Grocer. Flndlay. O.j wrtMi

1M

w.

a-

••I wore one of the first oaes we had aad I ra»| cetred mkt bene*, from tkaa aaytkiaf rn ssed. Ia fact tbe Fad* gi*e better general mt! faction than any Kld&cy remedy we ever sold."

Say* Shoemaker. XmuoKtata. Hannibal, Mo. "W# are working op a lFrel asd arc bearing of good

*r,._

Ifvely t^ade (a roar Fads, I reaalta from toem eretyl

Pnf, Chifl»etle% French Liver Fi wm iwatitofr *»ver aad Agae, Dumb! Agas. Agae Cake. nfHloa* Ferer. Jaundica. Oysp^Mda, aad all dtaaaaeaof OM I4v«r. Stomacb aad Bood. Swdtor Prof. GntlmeUa'a Traatiaa oa tbe Kidney* aad Ltrer, fraa malL

'mafl.<p></p>Pri«ft»tara«fl. Sesd for Prof. Gnll'

Address .KfppirABc*., Tdada,Okia.