Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1880 — Page 6

6

TWlil. BE ALL. THK SAME IN A IIUNDBEp TEAR8."

IThe following exqUlte Doem Is by an tynioa writer iu the Dublin THegraph (IHM.), aud U reproduced la thete columns la compliance with a npecial request. Twill be all the Mime In a hundred years! What a spell-word to con J are npuraUcs and Oh, how oft do I muse m Id the thoughtless and gay On the marvelous truth that these-word convey t And cau It be so? Must the valiant and free Have their tenure of life on tbia frail decree? And the trophies they've reared and the glories they've won Only catles of frostwork, confronting the ma! And must all that'ti as joyons and brilliant to view A a midsummer' dream, be as perlahlog too? Then have pity, ye proud ones be gentle, ye great O, remember how mercy bet-emetu your For the rust that conumeth the sword of the brae I mating the chain of the manacl'd Klave, And the conqueror' frown and the victim's tears Will be alt the aame In a hundred years! Twill be 11 the same In a hundred years! What a hdwII-word to couj ure up and niniles and tears! How dark are your fortunes, ye sous cf the soil, Whose heirloom Is sorrow, whose birthilght is toll. Wtenvy not those who have lory worth sola. By the sweat of the poor and the blood of the bold; For 'tis coming, however they may flaunt In their pride. The day when they'll moulder to dust by your iJe. Death nuiteth the children of toil and of sloth. And he democrat reptiles carouse upou both ; Kor Time as he speeds on his viewless wings DWeuamels and withers all earthly things; And the Rnlgnt's whit plume, and the hep herd's crook And the minstrel's pipe and tha scholar's book. And the emperor's crown, and his fossa cs' spears Will be Just alike In a hundred years! Twill be all the same In a hundred years! O, most magical fountain of smiles and tears! To think that our hopes, like the fluweis ot June Which ye love so mncb shonld be lot so soon ! Then what meaneth tne chase after phantom Joys? Or the breaking of human hearts for toys? Or the veteran's pride in his crafty whero.es? j Or the p;Msion of youth for its darling dreams? I Or the almiii'4 at fends tbat we never can span? j or the dead y aversion of man for nan? Whai avaiieth it 11? O, ye sages hay, Or the ujiier's Joy in his brilliant clay? Or the lover's zeal for his matchless prize The enchanting mall with the starry eyes? Or the revet Wh conflict of hopes and ''far. If 'tis all the name In a hundred yearn? 'Ah ! 'tis not the same in a hundred years. How clear soever the cafe now appears; For know ye not thiit beyond the grave Far, far beyond, where the cedars wave On the Hy nan mountains, or where the stars Come alii terlng forth in their golden cars. There bloometn a land of perennial bhs. Where we smile to think of the te:tnt in tals? And the pilgrim reaching that radiant shore Has the thought of death in his heart no more, Hut layeth his stad and sandals down For the vector's palm, and the monarch's crown. And the mother meets in that tranquil sphere The delightful child she. has wept for here; And the warrior's sword that protects the right Is bejeweled with stars of undying light ; And we quaff of the same lmruort.il cup While the orphan smiles, and the slave looks np! So b- glad, ray heart, and forget thy fear. For 'us not the same in a hundred years!" CONCERNING WOMEN. All the ladies at Washington agree that Mrs. Hayes mak;s a better president than Air. Hayes and that site ought to Lave n sec und term. A ladies' mining agency, as well as broker, ha? been established in New York. It is forming a company of women to buy and work Colorado mines. No ls than 200 young ladies in IJostoa are cultivating the acquaintance of the violin bow, and nearly as many "Washington mi-see an? practicing the banjo. The Mississippi House of Representatives hn pased a bill securing to married wo men the right to dispose of their separate erratet without the consent and independently of the wishes of their huibands. Philadelphia had a rare sensation thother day. It was nothing more nor leßs than a woin:m who "was very ladylike and conversed intelligently." ''It was alterward discovered that ahe had escaped from Kirkbride's insane asylum." The Queen's speech in Parliament is never a column in length, while the prasioent's message generally fills ah entire paga of a daily paper. And yet the imprc-sior. has got abroad that women are th greatest j talkers. The newspapers should support a ; woman for the presidem-y. NorrL-town j Herald. I Miss. Charlotte A. Scott, of Girton College, Cambridge, daughter of Ilev. Principal Scott, of Lancashire Independent College, has obtained the position of "tqual to the eighth wrangler in the tnathmatical tripoat Cambridge. The highest plve hitherto won by any lady has been among the senior optimes i. e., second cla-a. Miss Scott's achievement is the most remarkable on record in the annals of female education in England. There are now four lecture-rooms (and probably a fifth will be aided Yin the University of Pennsylvania to which girl.- are admitted. The lectures of Provost Stille on modern history a"re given on Mondays, "Wednesdays and Thursdays. "The Living Questions in Speculation, Evolution," etc,, are discussed by vice-Provost Krauth. Professor Barker lectures, and Professor McKlroy also lectures. By the provision of the Bloomfield Moore trust, all women who are teachers or preparing themselves to teach are admitted free. Educated Women. Educated women have a wide sphere. There is, indeed, some discussion as to its exact bounds. Some doubt, for instance, whether they have a legitimate function in the pulpit. Ourown view is that character and ability are God's chart of duty. But whatever may be decided in regard to the pulpit, there is one field where educated women are in demand. That is the home. The educated woman is the best wife, the best mother, the best housekeeper, the best economist. The "coming men" could afford to pay all the expenses of a full training for their future wives merely for the greater good they would receive lrom them. In these days we pity the ignorant motbor. Six year of hard study ar well invested, if for nothing more than to be able to answer a thousand questions which curious youngsters will be asking in a few years. Pleasantries Concerning the Fair 8e. Leap year hasn't panned out worth a cent tor old maids. Men are such bashful creatures, you know. -X society or the encouragement of young men desiring to marry" u organizing among the young ladies at Koundout, N. Y. A Boston clerk befriended a young lady named Bass, on several occasions. She died recently, leaving him $-30,000. Alway be good to the girls. A girl who sued for breach of promise found all her love letters confronting her in court, and rather than have the jury know

that she spelled it "rnairy' for marry, "hart'" for teart and "hapie'' for happy, she withdrew the suit. Young men, save your love letters. "Woman's rights may be a reality in the future, but she can never become a juror on a murder case. She would Know too much about it. Gowanda Enterprise. A sentimental cook says: "It does not follow that two persons are fit to marry because both are good. Milk is good and mustard is gocd, but they are not good for each other." A school teacher at Hays City, Kan., froze her toes while walking a distance of 40 reds, but of course she had a young man with her and they were about X minutes on the trip. It is announced that women are to be employed to take the census in some localities. Why not? If women can't find out things, who can? They're taking men's senses away all the time. A woman with a red petticoat was mistaken for a danger signal by a the engineer of a railroad train but hold, perhaps he wasn't mistaken attcr all. New Haven IJegister. No it might have been his wife. Oil City Derrick. I wish I were you about two hours" she said with great tenderness. "And why, my dear?" he asked with considerable interest. "IUcuu.se," she said, toying affectionately with his watch chain, "because then I would buv my wife a new bonnet."

1'rench Thought Concernlug Women. I Forney's Progrma. Prudery is the Hypocrisy of modesty, Flattery des-troys more womea than love. Sarrusin: "Wrinkles are the tomb of love." Voltaire: ''Tu be suspicious is to invite treachery," Victor Hugo: "Lile is a flower, of which love is the honey." At 15, the dnnce is a pleasure; at 25, a pretext; at 40, a fatigue. Balzac: "A woman who laughs at her husband loves him no more." Bussy ltabutin: "It is a terrible affair to be obliged to love by contract.' Wo take women for what they arc not, and we leave them :or what they are. Alf-ed de M usset: "Take of love as a sober man takes wine; do not get drunk." Champfort: "The law of Moses condemned the unfaithful woman to death; among the Egyptians they cut offher nose; the Romans cut off her head; to-day in France, when a woman is found out they laugh at her husband." "You do not marry?" "No." "Why?" liecHiise it would make me angry." " Why would you be angry?" Because I would be jealous." "Why would you be jealous?" "Because I would have reason." ""Why would vou have reason?' "Because I was married." Everybody knows that Dumas has a wife of rare intelligence, and that he is the happiest of men, surrounded by the most charming family. This suggested to some one to ask him: "How is it that you, who have been so well treated by marriage, thought ot speaking on the question of divorce?" Ah," replied Dumas, "a physiciantan not take care of others, if he is sick himself." KKLIGIOVS NOT KS. The Presbyterians are making a special effort to endow Hamilton College. It already lias $-63 1,000. The Baptist Weeklythinks there is too much of a disposition, even among Baptists, to perpetrate jokes on the rite of baptism. The pope's health is causing anxiety. He suffers from fits of shivering and great prostration, but persists in his usual occupations. The Jewish .Messenger evidently intends to convey a gentle hint to somebody in the following sentence: Just as free religion generali means freedom from religion, so enlightened Judaism often is made to mean Judaism lightened of everything Jewish." The bibhops of the Methodist Episcopal Church are all more than ."0 years old. Bishop Scott is 7K; Bishop Peck, 09; Bishop Simpson, 09; Bishop Bowman, 03; Bishop Harris. (:; Bishop Foster, WJ; Bishop "Wiley, Bi.-hop Merrill, and Uishop An-tr-ws, each o years ot age. The Jewish Messenger asks; ""What Jew. ish firm will follow the Messrs. Ridley and give their Jewish employes what we can not expect from a Christian, but what we have a right to demand from a Jew the entire Sabbath? Have we grown so degenerate that we allow the Christian to distance us in the display of the Jewish spirit?"i The Christain at Work says: "Church membership is a union to the brotherhood The house of God is not a mere lyceum; and connection with the church is not attendance on a pleasant lectureship. In the highest and noblest sense of the words, the church ought to be a Mutual Improvement society, in which every member ought to strive after the f piritual advancement of all the rest, and each should use the means which he deems best adopted for drawing out the love and activity of his brethren. The Methodist says there is one great inconvenience of generosity which sensible jeople ought to do something to remove. If a business man makes a liberal donation he is straightway set upon by everybody for other gifts. This is the most ingenious pro c(s for curing men of generosity that could be devised; the punUhment for a noble act is so severe that the average man will not reE eat it. After such an experience, with 100 egging applications per day, he will naturally seek to save his time and feelings by getting it understood that he is not a liberal person The Evangelist says one element which entere largely into a criminal career, at its beginning at any rate, is the spirit of adventure which is strong in young men who have vigor and courage,and address. "These natural passions, which might be splendidly utilized, prove a curse by misdirection. There is a good deal of ruffian as well as rowdy in the yet only half-civilized young man of the period, and he should be dealt with accordingly. 'Before we can solve the problem of crime, some new ways must be devised for enlisting these dangerous elements of human nature on the side of truth, humanity and virtue. It is easy to say that more courage f.nd chivalry are required in the daily discharge of duty and bearing of the cross than in any lawless escapade; but the untrained and inconsecrated young man does not see how Christianity appeal to all that U manliest and most daring in his heart, and calls on him to make risks and sacrifices, and to show a heroism that wild life and criminal courses know nothing of. Until young men are made to see and feel that religion is a robust and manly thing, which appeals to their courage and gives the widest scope to their love of adventure and the latent chivalry of their souls, one of the reinforcing causes of crime will remain unchecked."

GREAT GRANT.

dear your throats, oh ! mnnea, let ns slog The great events that marked our passing year. The one that fills the thoughts of men, even now, Is Gram'h return. When first he went abroad To wander, like Ulysses, o'er the earth, lie was a simple citizen, 'Us true, A soldier of renown ex-president; And yet be oould walk unmolested on. Almost unnoticed by the crowd of men ; Indeed, his presidential terras had brought 8uch public shame, in the way of fraud and theft. Upon our country, that our citizens Looked coldly on hlra, and his friends, W ho bad llttad him to power, all strength had lost. And gave their places to their opponents. Put dow by kings anointed, be a king Returns, and lo! the noisy world Is wild To do him honor for that kings and queen The Kastern despots, and the God's anointed Of tbe Western world, have deigned to notice blin. And we are fllleu with pride. Was ever man So honored as this man? Let us make haste To kiss his hands, or consecrate his name By nnctlon otherwise. What may we dot Why, make a king of him who was by kings Anointed when abroad this we call Republic it is played out. Wewantamau A strong Oosarlan man to govern ns Kor Life. (?) Hurrah for Grant. George Washington Is nowhere; He never supped with kings and queens. Rut stood a chance of being hanged by them. Thank Heaven the noise Is not the wagon, nor The clouds the sky. The quiet oxen dream While Insects till the air. The people live With patriotic love and reverence at Tbelr honest hearts for all tbe mighty past And mightier dead. To them the Republic Htaudson such tirra foundations that these things. These snobs and flunkies, all so noisy now, Will leave a little stain upon tne stones. To show what once they were. West Liberty Republican. CURRENCY. Sin? may iIivk in 11 k, or drew in satin, Slay know the laogcagt, tireek and Latin, May know fine art, and love and nigh But fb ain't no good if she can't inakf pi. A deer park One that costs more than it is worth. High heals The charges of fashionable physicians. One sealskin sack is very good in a house where girls are all of nearly one size. Why is a glass of fresh lager like a mad dog? Because it froths at the mouth. A query for naturalists: Are tho Michiganders any relation to the Portuguese, and if so, how much? The experienced never speak of Chicago girl's feet by that name. They mention them respectfully as Chicago's great terminal facilities. A Maine man, who didn't care two shakes of a lamb's tail about the newspapers, rode I t miles through a fierce snow-storm to get a copy of a weekly that spoke of him as a "prominent citizen." A city broker visiting a country lady and wishing to increase her knowledge of affairs asked her if she knew what "watering stock" meant; to which she replied: "Of course I do; it is giving the cows drink." A druggist 'sent his Irish porter inU a darkened cellar. Soon after, hearing a noise, he went to the opening and called out "Patrick, keep your eyes skinned!" "Och! divil an eye," roared Pat, ' but it's tue nose that's skint intirely.'' "Have a piece of cold lamb?" asked the hostess, and he took a piece. Good glory! lambl Why, this is 10 years old and strong enough to buck a man right cut of his chair." Then the wag on the other side of the table calmly remarked: "They call it lamb because it's in its second childhood." It was proposed to erect a monument in the village square to the Father of his Country, and old 'Squire Iliggins was called upon for a liberal donation. "I can't give anything this time," he said, "but you may know that I always carry Washington in my heart." "Well," answered the man with the subscription paper, "all I can say is you've got the Father of his Country in a verv tight place." RELIGIOUS NOT KS. There will be upward of SO colored delegates in the Methodist general conference. Possibly one of them may be elec ted bishop. The total preaching power of the English Methodist churches amount to 3,000 readier, the great majority of whom are tymen. The Mississippi Methodist conference (Northern), reports 23,029 members, 3,202 probationers, 412 local preachers, and 2tl'. churches. The JJaptist Missionary Union has received thus far in the present financial year $78,358. It needs $1 00,009 between now and April 1,to meet iU liabilities. The pastor ot a colored Baptist church in Nashville, Tenn., Kev. N.O. Merrv, received into his church last year 287 members, a net gain of T2Z, and the church raised $1,482. The American Uible Society will make great preparation for the semi-millennial celebration of WicklitTs translation of the Bible into English. It will be held on the second of December next. Dr. Storrs, of Brooklyn will deliver tho oration. "Who was K.ekiel?" asked the Sundayschoolteacher of an intelligent looking little girl in one of our city churches. The answer was: "Kzeknl was one of the minor prophets, and the so of Daniel Webster." This answer was accepted without controversy. The superintendent of tho north-western department of the Sunday-school Union states that his. missionaries report for the year past 409 new schools organized, w ith 1,-iöO teachers and 12,610 scholars; 5,706 other Sunday-schools visited and aided, having 6,756 teachers and 52,045 scholars; 3,047 Bibles and Testaments distributed; 6,145 families visited; 2,000 sermons and addresses delivered. Parable or the Prodigal Sort. Canon Farrar. Never certainly i:i human language was so much such a world of love and wisdom and tenderness, compressed into such few immortal words. Every line, every touch of the picture is full of beautiful eternal significance. The poor boy's presumptuous claim for all that life could give him, the leaving of the old home, the journey to a far country, the brief spasm of "enjoyment" there, the mighty famine in that land, the fremature exhaustion of all that could make ife noble and endurable, the abysmal degradation and unutterable misery that followed, the coming to himself and recollection of all that he had left behind, the return in heart-broken penitence tud deep humility, the father's far-off sight of him, and the gush of compassion and tenderness oyer this poor returning prdigal, the ringing joy of the whole household over him who had been loved and lost, and had now come home, the uniust jealously and mean complaint of the elder brother, and then that close of the parable In a strain of music 'Son, thou art ever w.Uh me, and all that I have is thine. It was meet that we Bhould make merry, and be glad: for this

my brother was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found' all this i indeed a divine epitome of the wandering of man and the love of God such as no ear of man has everjieard elsewhere. Put Inthe one scale all that' Confucius, or Sakya. Mouni, or Zoroaster, or Socrates ever wrote or said and they wrote and said many beautiful and holy words and put in the other the Parable of the Prodigal Son alone with all that this single parable means, and can any candid spirit doubt which, scale would outweigh the other in eternal preciousness, in divine adaption to the wants of man. Tom I'aine's Religion. lavid .Sainglu the Chicago Alliance (I uxfct.l Paine evidently held just about the religious opinions held by Jefferson and the leading French and American public men of the day, but PaineV was an open-hearted, outspoken nature, and if he had views about kings and queens, and liberty, and masonry, and Christianity, he must tell them to th world. lie had no power uf concealment It stands true that he was just as eager to overthrow a religion as he was to overthrow a king. Tliat be toiled honestly at all forms of destruction is hardly to be denied. He was sincere, but often in the wrong. The public mind must come very slowly up to new views upon some details of its religions, and hence Bi.hor Colenso, a man of piety and of goodness, has gone beyond Paine in attacking the literalism of the Old Testament, and even Professor Smith, the Scotch Presbyterian, hai said some things about the Old Testament ages which Thomas Paine would have been glad to know in his day. Paine's remark "that the book of Ruth is only tbe silly account of a country girl who wished to marry her couisin,' is a brief and rather pleasant commentary compared with the commentary of modern times that Kuth and all the rest of the world of men and women came from protoplasm, and without a Heaven or a od. Dyeing Kjes. "A learned German doctor," says a Paris paper, "has discovered a means "of dyeinsr the eyes of animals in general, atdof man in particular, any color that he pleases. He is accompanied on his travels of propagation by a dog with a rose-colored eye, a cat with an orange-red eye, and a monkey with a chrome-yellow eye. But the most curious specimens ot his art are a negro with one eye black and the other blue, and a negress, with one eye gold-colored, and the other silver-white. The doctor says the process of ocular transformation, so far from iniuring the sight strengthens and improves k." 1 The Way it Is. While 10 men watch for chances, one man makes chances; while 10 men wait for something to turn up, one man turns up something. So while 10 men fail, one succeeds, and is called a man of luck, the favorite of fortune. There is no luck like pluck, and fortune most favors those who are most indifferent to fortune.

Covuuz. "Brown's Bronchial Troches" will allay irritation which indues coaehing, piying oftentimes immediate relief io Bronchitis, Icflnenzi, Hoarsened, and CoDsamptive and Asthmatic Complaints. lO'STETTEfiV p t CELEBRATED r STOMACH mir The Bitten Invariably remedy yellownesn cf the complexion and white of the eyes, paint In the rltght Ride and under the rlsrht shoulderblaue. furred tongue, high colored urine, nausea, vertigo, dfgepsla, conntipauon, heaviness ot the head, mental despondency, and every other manifestation or accompaniment ot a disordered condlt on of tbe liver. Tbe stomach, bowel and kidneys also experience their regulating and tonic influence. For aale by all Druggists and dealers gen erally. AYER'S CATHARTIC PILLS, For ail the purposes of a Family Physic, Cl'RISU CoMtlveness, Janndiee, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Dysentery, Foul Htomach and Breath, Headache, KryKlpelaa, Itleii, Rbeu ma tlKin, Eruptions and Hkln Dlsea.sea.BlilousneHU, Liver Complaint, Dropsy, Tetter, minors ana rail huienak . d ralgia, tu a dinner pill and: purifying the blood, are the mostcongeuial purgative yet perfected Their e fleets abundantly show how much they excel ail otber pills. They are aafe and pleasant to take, but powerful to cure. They purge out the foul humors of the btood, they stimulate tbe s'.ugglHh or disordered organs Into action, and tbey impart health and tone to the whole being. They cure nat only the every day complaints of everybody, but formidable and dangerous diseases. Most skillful physicians, most eminent clergymen and our beat citizens, send certificates of cures performed, and of great benefits derived from these pills. They are tbe Batest and best physic for children, because mild as well as eneetoal. Being sugar coated, they are easy to take, and being purely vegetable, they are entirely harmless. Prepared by DB. J. 0. AYER & 00., Lowell, Mass., Practical and Analytical Chemists. Bold by ill druggists and dealers in medicine TAKE SlW, SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR, PURELY VEGETABLE. Do you want to purify the system? Do you want to get rVl of bliionsnesa? Do yoa want something to strengthen you? Do you want a goort aopetite? Do you want to get lid of nervousness? D you want good igest ion? IK you want to sleep well? Do you want to htklld up your constitution t Do you want a brltik, vigorous feeling? If you ao, TAKE SIMONS' LIVER REGULATOR, AN EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC for Constipation, Headache, Pain In tbe Shoulders, Dismlneas, Boar Btomarb, Bad; Taateln the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, pain In the region of tbe Kidneys. Despondency, Gloom and forcbodln.ga of evil, all of hlch are the offspring of a klseased Liver. j. ii. zeiiji a co Price, Pliiladelpnia, Pa. BOLD BY ALL DBUÜUI3TS. (2)

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No. 1 will euro any c::so n: foui days, or Iocs. No. 2 will care the L'losi Obaiinaic Ccivc, no manor of how loner standi nv. No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copaiba or Oil of Sandalwood, thai aro certain io produce ay pepsia by destroying the coatings of the stomach. No Syringes or Asirinpeni Injections io

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TF.r s lRO!f iwio na uone wonuen nere. a who had been doctored nearly to death foe CT - end years, baa beeu eared of Itiiity aii

brmi rmttrmton or ine use 01 xn. IBJIBiai m- Mir. narvr : IIAKTIR'9 IBOM TONIC, which fA la I I I . (1 I I IX-Mr. Jiwf Brown of raised her from her bfd. T 1 I T 111 lorcoaBty. has requested where ahe bad beeriT i V A If fJc to tenler yoa bis p-ateful iTlnir for many C t 4 I IJacknowlelpnieuta fa the great bene njOuths.' VTtA ainll'ISlv V fltahis wife ro-fiJ fron, tbe ose of your I! " I II LJ nj v,ilRO! Tom:. He telta us that, after having paid Sslji If.U.tlll JJ iihree or four hundred UollarsduoUrs' Mils, two bottlf Tr f fi i 1 111 I 'of yr Ikon TOBlC did her more good tbaa all other medI lllllalF l " -1 WTclnes she ever used. he waa troubled with Dmmgrmtnt of Ot II I J I I I l 0 Wnmh, .-., from whicli she is niuh reilevr-i. I I " TjJ MANUFACTURED BT I 'THE DR. HA n TER IVTEDXCIPIE CO., mi" No. 213 NOBIS MAIN. STREET. ST. ITJIS.

The City Railway, Chicago works 4,760 Horses. Bead: We use exclusively Whliliera Iilnliuent. It will pay all owners of horses to call or write. M. IV. SQORES, Snpt. C, C. It. Co. The Express Company works 370 Horses. Bead: I liaTe leen nslu IJnliuent on Ibe horses ofilie American and U. 8. Kre Companies table for 24 sears. I neyer met aay that had one tenth the merit or Whlttier't Liniment. Oor stables are open ; call and see lor yourselves. H. MXIC-UT Snpt.Ex. Co. Bead what Graves & Lomis, the largest breeders of Horses in the State of Illinois, have to say: For thirty years we bare tteen nalnaT II klada of Iltttnint manniaetared for tioraP, Md, of oll tb llnlnais Wblttler stand mt tbm bead r.t ib Hat lor tMmtb,roard nl,Thrnah, Sivralaia, Called Spot and wore ot any kind. It will l all noraemen Mtlstortlon. CRAVKJi dc IrOMlS. Tbero Is aio remedy mm eartlt tlxot qaala Whlttler Llatlment tor KaMatlim and PI loa. It will bave the sane effect pemtne tinman. Herefnla, 8e1d lld( Catarrb, Pimple or Bieten on Fare or Body, Old Soros or FreeA Cots, (Sold by Sil Drug, i gists, or by DR. S. WUITTIXK, sot WasblnKton SU v

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Thl i T r niaks -t:tJ.r.!pf " PJtrr the yar roaad. Com, nsn:;-i-j e an I Ihr fe-ii ure tit ( WmMry an lied I Ratter. maLln:-. Jul;, Xm a t cn I Winter Butter maa equal to the U I in: i r-fc.ur:. I:irr ae. imUvt 6 jr mt. IainTe UmlÜj at lea t 23 er ceaU Reduce labor of rtorning oae. hair. Trevett. Ilullrr bemuiin- ramiJ. Improves auarkft ralne S to 5 cents a , ott.i 1. CuiranU-e.l frt from all iirjarioas intrei.;. nt . ;2vr. a tii-e CoMen felor the jrar rtvaiwl. 25 n utS urr.h all! rt.wt in inrn-a.se r procart and :arLi ! .t!uc. (aa job make a better iarestatentt Beware or iii.i.ai:ou Genuine soM only In boxes with tradem:irk ;f d:in -in.-iM, tov"ther with words Gilt-Edok r.rTTKii Majiku" )!'inied on each package. Ponder sold by Crwtr. anti Coneral S'.nrv-keejrs. Atk your dealer lor t.tirlxxik 'IIin: ( Jhtitcr-MaLers," or send stamp to tu for it. Swmil size, -i V,., at 25 cents; Large size, txi ft, f 1.0U. Great tavin.? 1-v tnirin tbe larcer size.

BUTTER IMPROVEMENT CO, Prop'rs, Jh fitr Sliktr " JitgmttrtL BCFFAIX), N. Y. CaDcine Plaster, 0 I Terrible IHnea. It frarful effwt corrnptlor running down the throat, x-ak eye, Wfnem, loss of voice, loan of nmell, diairutina; lors, niwal deformiti, and finally ronsuraiHiim. From firxi to laxt it U errr aggnW. Ordinary treatment am worse than nselmw. If eelectnd whil develop into qntck ronnnnitlon. The mmt thorough, u Dr. 3VT "W. CASE'S

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a . ... BO comvlicaiions. BY ALL DRUGGISTS or and Sure Cure. iauy r wii II I I 1 I f fill III rJ. - I I I I I II