Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 31, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1883 — Page 4

1'HE INDIRA STATE SENTINEL WEDNESDAY. AstlL 23, 1883. 4

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25.

0? alESCIUPTIOS, I poll HfrJal for IOavlly, ;day ud WeefcJy Editions. DAILY. PdTW4 by carrier, per woel. VsQy, lnclnling Suaday, per week. )i2y. rar annua, ty nail vsCtT. per ticnn, by mail, including 8nntoy, Vy mall 12 oo Jl7, dalhoied ty carrier, per attnttn 13 0 auy, aiive-o by carrier, per wthim, ln-elaat-ig Sandai " 00 fatly to gewyJtcIcrs. per copy.......""- - ECU EAT. taaCs-j dittos A oUitity-iotii colaxana. XI CO ttinclav Sct'-' cI. bj carrier 2 50 ro cw3 2e?!-:-. 3.Sc per copy. WftltT. Mkh. v?r '::.r3 - - tl 05 Tho pc a,Te s-jljccr'-rfocs v-r iU ü prepaid fcy the p-t'chci. Hew'iMüitsircr?lle thros oeiit? per enpy rfiiiaea ot uthe-r t,ta.-res prepaid. aTx.vc.-t. f,. f-otiu-cli CfctifcT tt the Posto25ce Oca telrgnphic eolumns recurd this taorning terrible and unparalleled calamtv. A ci cone swept through portions of several Southern States early yesterday xmorning. lis fury secmea to have Bpent itaelf in Mississippi. Uere the damage end iestruetion to life and property are simply Indescribable. Towns and villages seem to have been wrecked or totally destroy d. Over one b andre i lives were lost, end probably two hundred persons badly wennded. The town of Beauregard was absolutely ansaihllated swept oat of existence, with twenty-three killed and ninety wounded. JLt Wea-son thirteen wero killed, Eix'y wounJed, and twenty-seven bouses destroyed. There are but meager details of the terrb'.e affair. For further information t?e direct attention to She accounts in cur regular telegraphic cslunin. Whzksver prohibition was made the issue in th? lto Kani.is municipal elections it was defeated. Tee Tptib'ican party is initbted to th colored vot s for their majrili;s s'nri the War and havo given theai nothing in retarn. A Jrui coroprsed entirely of clergymen, is to be etnpar.cIUd to try a liquor case at Grand Uipi-.lt. Mich. The defendant in the casa will cuarly have thj bneiU of clergy. P. IL G. Grsjiiam may not ba President, ku- it is g;TTilly conceded that he has stepped to tho front as tha biggest boss of the g o. r. p. ia Indiana, and that Ser.ator Harrison is lot only a Lieutenstit. Tee Atlistv Cosstitction 21VC3 this eason&bla c-lvlce to f.irmers: Now tha". the green jr? ihlah enous;fi to tlcile 'he legs of the birds a".? make the cv.t'.e anetsc.it i-tout time for tho sons of men to lrop j.oiiüc-i. fi is Sujjseste-d tha: the exclusion of Americia cattle, cn the absurd charge that they may ci:ry wiih thfm various diseases, would b jiyt'ange exhiWitioa for England to ma'co of hr boasted fre9 trade doctrines. Doessyii co'-.filent that he will be ell right f ,r the cxatpaigi of 1S34 Perhaps Hon. Jc'nn G. Sit: can iiiform the people of Indtanaif it is prob ib'e the distinguished Star lijuta Stalwart will again mnac thingi ii In 'iaia. Bxceetabt LiscoL.x U rl?ht in kpluSTreautMasou t-j fr.A-tii. II committed acriaie; let hita pay tha pea-.Uy. Boston Post. Bat the penalty i3 out of all proportion to the cr'nna, If crime it waa. Secretary Lincoln i.s no: th? man to be severe in such s case. Tnr. IV'pub'.icm Department of Justice, eaid t ba lrut?d in Washington City, and inc"ui.rg- ot IXr.idy Jack Prcwster, can't catch ila-gito. the thiaf. Tin reason Is if it catche How 'at3 it ca'ch?3 a tfoz?n cr so of K'T) b'ic:.'. :c iv.ndfeis whote indictmer. woti!d hurt tbe r-rfy. Ocr c:-ttcra--d friend cf the Saturday Re ier.-thi'tk that Mr. FisLback's heavy Fa'ary ci a Federal rrTicer should derer him from ri'.irg s-ici) damaging letters to Congressman Tee! le. There i ) something soothing aV)U. a bTtj talcry, yet Mr. FUhback continues g'viuj t!tiagjawyut a terrible rate. .IIxee now are tro specimens of the manncrin which the inhuman atrocities of the Tewksbury. Ma?., Alms House" are being treated by the Republican pres?: The LemocraUc newspapers throughout the Conn try re already bcgt&niu? to Inform their xeaflers that tbo priucipil occupation of tfce Eepub'.Icansof Maiicau-:etU f ir the last ten yetri ku b ea the tinninx cf negro skia. Boston Hera'id. Dcuü.iTits who "befon the wah" tanned negrcca tl .b j:i-t for the fan cf it, while the owners vece allv ami wcull like to do it rgala, are trjsed In ti-.t-lr t.-nderest ceiiBit ilitles over the Indi.-TiUy offered to the dead Ttwabu-y darkej. In'Jtaritj'Olii JournaL The Jjur.:al cvidectly regards the entire aHi.'r ai t:x b-st jlcc cf tha season, alluding to the poor unfortunate penpr negro as "thed-;rd Te .ksbary darkey." If he had lived L?reand it was drawing nigh to an election ha would be referred to as our teenr J co'ored brother. Da. Ne as is rsportel to hive said at a temperance nireuntt on 3tm1ay. f'ata the Repuhllan pr:y i.i fi to be oie of the moral ides s. be, at a member t the Prty, woull like to know where theltt iaori.i idea are The D etor honld no ak fuc'i t..u leMr.t qnctIoni. It ha bcloi rs to tbe partT ha should kuow that m t f the aaoml J4e.t were thrown away last tu no Tier ia erd-r to bet t'i Democrats ia tho State elections, and tht t ie f"v which remained wer trampled to piece by ihi Upabltcan 0-igrt thttt w-nt Xtsie a few wf?ks aij. If eny one row trte to Ret t tn? hiot1 i )"l the forty he will lay hljo-.eif ytblfTt3 rro-t t a resurrtcdouiit. New ifork lfen:I. The "r.oral ideas" of the Republican party having been placed in the custody of ex-Senator Dorsey, ex-Senator Kellcg Hon. Jay Hubbell and other gentlemen equally aJistinguished, not to omit Howgste and Hill, John 8aerxnan, R. B. Hayes, J. Madison "Wells and Robeson, it is surprising that Doctor Newman, late confessor of Grant, wanted to know what had become of the 4'aaoral ideaa" of his party. If Mr. Newman -will consult Mr. W. P. Fishback of this city, 1m will doabtless learn what became of some 9t the moral ideas in 1880, when the Repub-

lie in bosses used $10O,C0O in Indiana to hire

repeaters and bribe election officers to staff ballot-boxes and falsify election retains, and all for the purpose of maintaining the ascendency of the party of "moral ideas." Miss Nei.lik lit burp, daughter of exGovernor HabUrd. who, it trill be remcm be red, fell in love with ber father's coachman end was clandestinely married to him, has finally abandoned his bed and board, obtained a divorce and retreated to the old home. Miss Nellie wa3 an educated belle. She was reared in a home of wealth and luxury, but the fell in loTe with the coachaian, has had four years' experience of wedded life and now returns to her father a grass widow. It seems tbat Mrs. Coachman could not forget that she was the daughter of & bine-blooded aristocrat, and tbat her hus band had been in early life Eocially her in ferior, and remeniberinj; these things the felicity of domesticity was not equal to the demand, hence divorce. It is said that Governor Hubbard will receive Nellie intJ his home. We doubt if Mr. Coachman, UTider taeclrcum3ta-nc??, has sustained a serious loss. He pained large notoriety, tome money, and is again at liberty to mah and marry, or remain content with hi3 Hubbard conquest. THE THREAD MONOPOLY. Professor W. G. Sumner, of Yale College, i3 out in another letter to the New York Times, in which, in his usual lucid and incisive style, he exposes the operation of the Willimantic Linen Company, by which it is able to mile enormous annual profits. It bhould be understood that the Willimantic monopoly, under the fostering care of a Republican protective tariff, is permitted to levy a tax upon every man, woman and child in America. The mills of the Willimantic Linen Company manufacture thread, and th9 letter to which we refer, and from which we make tha following extract, re late-i particularly to the use, value and cost of this article, as alsj to the tax burdens the manufacturers are permitted to ioipr-se. Professor Sumner pays: Thread la use! by every soul In the country Frotathe cradle to the grivo every individual from the b?g?ir to ttie millionaire raast hars it. The tax oa it is one and three-fourths ceats per spool, nnd the retail price is raised by the tax from three cent?, the price at which it is sold in Canada, to fl7j cmt1?. At Willlmanilc there is a magnificent cs!alithm3ut. The visitor there is struck by the ptrlectioa and elegance of 11 the appointmentü. Lie is told that the tariff d'.d H, and tho spccucls is offered to him cs an argnmrr.: lor protection. It was offered at the grctt meeting held in 18S0. when the t.cw mill was opened, and it has bean bo offered again and RSln. I meet that rrgument, and Ia.sk, Who pays for it all? If it is uecessary, in order that the establishment Fhould exist, to tax every soul In tho Cniiel Slates one and three-fourths cents oa every tpo'jl of thread used, then the mill Is not an "industry." It does not proJuce wealth. It consumes wealth drawn from the consumers cf thread. I then turn to seek out feme of tho consumers cf thread, who arc scattered, unseen, forgotten, but all tha more entitled to the untie? of the economist, the statesman, or the rocUI philosopher oa ttet account. I have beforo me a copy ol th9 New ITaven News, of March 16, caatalniuz Cvo letters from cyrsttstitchers, who complain that they can earn Willi a machine only from fifty to seveuty-flvs cents per day. The stata that they provide the thread. I took the C439 of ja.it such laborers to show vvho it is who pays for the glories of Wiillmautie, so so loa s Wir.imaatic is supported by tail 2". Whether a worn in pays for the thread she um?9 ia her work or tit tho thread she consumes oa herself is Immitsrliit to the argument. Any laborer who earns 51 ia tea bouts, earns one cent In six minutes. At the eai of eighteen miaute' work he or she ha rea l 3 red all the equivalent la labor for a spool of th:ei4 according to the relations of v&t'id ii tii3 world's market to-day. If he lived in Canada he couil there get the thread. Tha laws of tbU country, however, tell bin that he must go back and work twelve minutes more in servitude to the Willimantic Linea Company not to set the thread, bnt to supi-ort the mill. When we consit er what this niea-.is to the v4 body of men a::d women who;o lives are running away ia the minutes spent la thit way, it arouses all the honest ladUnatioa nud love of justice of which s aiaa Is capable. Tha Linea Company do not like to have tha truth pointed out, but a mm who sees tho truth a.d won'.d not preach it would be the moät coutemptiWa owa:d. I knovapoor washerwoman who wai left avdlowtea yesr." Ufo with seven children and a little house under a h ;avy mortgaj et 8 por caul. Sao has don., waahine uud houe clsaairg for 'C't drrlg 4 J a'l 'hi h;;d Ities, to c-tra oaouga to nr.p rt tht raaii. "pi-j it-röit, Mid and rrlucip&I. Eery cent to her has b-.:t worth as nu'.h cs $:u; to f man who owaej VTiiUxaatic steck, and tie l.a had to pay t wo cenU tax on evory spool cf tbrcaii u-ed Ju that fimi-7, whllo the Linu Companj h: been pay lag 20 pr ceut. annually aud water in? its stock every ibree of four years. Here, then, is the truth: The sewlus women, the taloswmea. rervants, teicher?, wasberwo men aad the laborars' wives and daughters scat tered In garrets, teucmca's and cottages, struggling often wita pavcrty and misery. ro enduring; a diminution f their comfort and well-being to pay the taxes which go to keep up the mill. The protectionists constantly argue that protee tion is for the good of the lahorer. They speak a. if Congress had a store of wealth which it was diatribattng to the wages class and as ii the free traders wan tea to stop thij procsodisg. I xaear: to (how that there are always two Amerlc-.u laborers to be consldsred. and that the tarilT is plundering one of them pod lively and certsitd at.d pretending to beaeß: the other wlthoui doing so. It would bs diQlcult for facts to bo set forth in a clearer or more convincing ligh, and those who will give the thread monopoly tha attention it deserves will not fiil to see the magnitude of the outrage tie thread monopolists are permitted to perpetrate upon the people. Professor Suxune: Bays the Willimantic mill turns out from 3.000.000 to 6,000,000 dozen spools of thread per annual. Say 5,000,000 dozjri G0,00d,000 bdooIs. In Canada these spools would go tu consumers at three cents each ) 1,800,000; in the United States the coat is five cents per epool or $3,000,000 a difference of' $1,200,000. This or one mill. Manifestly it is the duty of the people to throttle the thread monopoly. Ir it is possible the developments made by the Tewksbury Alms House investigation daily grow in horror, and as facts are piled upon facte the abominations of Republican rale in Massachusetts stagger belief, overwhelm conviction, and set the doctrine of total depravity along way in advance of what it has been since the days when hanging witches and whipping Quakers by the Puritans was thought to be a good way to start the religious faith of a new country The investigation discloses filthy practices which defy exaggeration. They can not be read without producing sensations of unutterable digu3t and loathing. In one tank, without change of j water, persona indescribably filthy, poor

wretches suffering from cutaneous disease.

as well as those who were simply victims of dirt, were all tumbled in together nolens volsn, and where one gang had been washed(?) another was forced into the foul puddle to be chnnel. Can any thicg civilized, half civilized, barbarous or savag be brought forward more repu'sive? Has the Twekvsbury Alms Houee, a Republican insti tution, a parallel in all that Is shocking, of fensive, revolting and vile, from the bottOEl lees pit to Heaven's gates? and be it remem bered the Tweksbury institution is an Alms House, not a prison a place for the display of philanthropic. Christianized, civilizd culture, kindness, charity til thinjrs that adorn and glorify Chris tian benevolence. This Tweksbury horror. infinitely worse than any slave pen ever beard of, or tbat Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe ever imagined, worse than Liboy or Ander son Prison?, has been for years under the control of the Republican party of Massachusetts, close to boston, near Plymouth Rock. Why has the death-hole not been probed before? Simply because it would nurt the Republican party. The Philadelphia Times refers to the Tewksbury harrowing and hideous disclosures as follows: This Is no naw development. Four or five years ago charges of mismanagement cere pre ferred against thj man Marsh aad his family, now undergoing Investijatlon, hut It was thought best In tho exigence cf party that they should be hUKhcd up. Hal t e whole mitter been probed at that tuna aud other re-forms adopted which General Butler's first campaign suggested, the Republican party might hare been able to hold the State permanently, instead of undergoing the overwhelming defeat ot last year. These abuses are In just the place where they are most liable to occur. At tho same time when permitted to grow and come to exposure they make the most profound impression on the people of a given locality. V'htle these matters are not ol so mcch political as humane interest. It is not improbable that the Republicans of Massachusetts regret their refusal to investigate what Is now seen to have been a treat abuse. Hero we have the fact stated by an independent Republican paper that the Tewks bury infamy would have been overhauled five years ago had it not been "thought best, mi the. txigenclet of the party, thit they thou Id be h tithed up." There is God and morality for you by th3 ton. Pauners are sold for Btiffj; paupers are skinned and their skim are tanned; psupers are robbed and starved; the idiotic and insane are treated worse than brutes, dogi or cats, and that, too, in a State overwhelmingly Republican a State whose men and women, papers and priests, are forever denouQcirg Southern civilization and claiming for Msissachusetts the proud prerogative of being the rchool teacher of this Republic Such is Republican rule in Massachusetts and everywhere else where it can stop investigations of its abominations, if the exigencies cf the party demand such action. The Internal Revenue Tax Law goes into elfcct on the first day of May, and the Washington Bureau has concluded its preparations to pat the law into effect that day. Among the tables prepared for the us 3 of taxpayers and officers is the following, relating to some special taxes, which will take effect on the day named. It will be found convenient, and ij as follows: Rcctifiors of leg than 500 barrels..... Rectitiars of 5(Hi bnrrcLt or more...... Dealers, retail liquor ... I) aters, whoiesie )tquor.. De&iers ia malt liqtiois, wholeeaifc.. Driers In ma!: liquors, retaU. . fioalcrs in Jwif tobacco $!03 0-3 . 2" 0 CO 25 00 100 00 5 J 0C 20 00 12 00 L. era in lenf tobacco, received f rum producers la "the baud," Uss than 25,000 pounds per annum-... 5 00 Rciail dealers in leaf tobacco 2 O 10 And on everr dollar ot their monthly sales in excess of rate of 503 per annum.. Desleis in raaau?acJn;ed tobacC3.-. Mi:infact'ire;s of stills And for cscn still manufactured and lor each worm manufactured Mit'iu'aetarc'sof tobacco Msmifecturersof cigars 31 00 2 40 50 00 CO 00 20 00 6 0) 0 CO Peddlcm of tocacco, Ürat c!as (more than two horses or Hher animals) 10 00 Fedd.ers of tot-aev, second class (two hor&cs or other animals).. Peddlers cf tobacco, thud class (one horse cr other animal) Peddlers of tob tec . fourth class (tin loot or 15 0) 7 20 public conveyance).-- .. 3 W) IW-wers of l-M than 5tX b.irrels -. 50 0) ßrewers cf 00 barrels or more........ ICO to In the tobacco business the tax has been eor.ii Jerably reduced, but in other respects .hers 13 little change from the old schedule. Ex GovrE'R Hedf.icks. of Indiana, beiu? In s'ntttigjcdLeM'aa'j ex-Governor Samqel J. Tilden, says : "lam of he opinion that If the tie tatlflf if fourd to work pretty weil and the pr.vv!ity of the'eonntry continues, the tartfT will not be ". very live question iu politics for soma time ta c ie." Ths Governor hit it that lime, a bcll-rkger. CimraercLl Uszjtte. Shu! The Indianapolis Journal is just aYrat ready to Esy ence more that the Goveracr is "on the Lnc?." You wiH disturb the current of its thought?.' Now the modern dinner table has the eame ceatues cf aspect at the end of the dinner that it bad at the beginning. B.;ston Ilerala. Our esteemed contemporary doubtless refers to the dinners at the Tewksbury Alms House. There is nothing on the table lit the beginning of a meal end nothing at the end thus "the same neatness of aspect" is triumphantly preserved. PEllSOXALS. Governor Crittenden, of Missouri, fell In with Senator Edmundä last week and had a long talk with him. lie was much Impressed by the Vf rmonter, snylng sf terward to a reporter: "Politicians tomehow avoid sue'i men as Edmunds and Tburmai and take up suca nt ndescripsts aa Hayes." Two pairs of feminine eyes play a part In the 3lar Route trial. "The two lide3. whoe striking beauty makes them the subject of much remaik." writes the Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, "thow constant interest in every feature of the t'ial, ai.d their patient and uuUring watchfulness can but be noted by Jndge, Jury, counsel and spectators. Ihey are sisters, born in Arkansas; one lathe wife of ex-Senator Oorsey, the other the widow of Teck, who was indicted with Dorsey." Thb richest woman in Colorado, it may surprise many to know, it not a bonanza princess, nor am I aware that the smallest portion of her wealth ever came in any way, cither directly or Indirectly, through mlnlrg. Fhe is Mrs. John W. Iliff, widow of the late John V. Ilia, popularly spoken of as "the cattle king" of the State, a maa who died owninsr, perhaps, twice as many herds as any other stockman ia Colorado. Considerable over 100,000 was the number of cattle pease Bed by Mr. IUff when he died. Kansas City Journal. Ma. William Hoyix, of Claremont, Bury, England, who la one of the most indefatigable gath erers o! statistics in the temperance Interest, has put forth some statements that the Salvation Army and Blue Ribboa people assume to be a demonstration of the good result of their laborsHe has shown that in 1876 the consumption of in toxicatiog drink ia the United Kingdom amount ed to 147,288,750, an allowance of 4 9s per head of the Dorm'ifttion. In l&Sd It had fallen off to I 3 lös lid per head: in 1881 It rose to 3 12s 10d. i and agaia in litf declined to 3 lis 7a. Ia 1&82

i the total consampthn tri 126,251,359. A decline

ia yearly cocsamptlon amounting to 21,(27.400, to certainly a great deal, and might be a gratifying exhibit for the temperance folks if they could justly claim all the creditor It; bat Mr. Hoyle frankly says that he attributes it mainly to de pressiou in trade, and leaves it to be interred as bis opinion that the aaore money the people have to spend the more will be spent la liquor. It ibej can find opportunities for doing to. HecCC he and other extremists are desperately filming against all granting of licenses. People shall be scbar. willy-Lilly, if ifr. Hojle can hsve lit way about 1U GovEEXOa Ta bob's mines la Few Mexico give promise of yielding him een greater returns than bis Colorado ctrikea. It is openly stated Uiat If they pan ont as richly as they promise, tho Governor will enter upon the erection of Opera Hons es ia New York. Chicago, Washington, Kausas City and San Francisco itructures equaling in splendor his Theater at this point, foe New York ellflce to cost Si.0C0.O0O. Tabor has long had thij scheme la view in tact, bis intimates say It is his pet ambition. He bai divulged it to Extern managers and they have encouraged Dim la itDenver Tribune. INDIANA POLITICS. A Gloomy View of the Condition of Affairs from a Republican Staadpolot Kind Words for lion. Joseph K. McDonald. Special to the CourieJournaL WASHiyoTo.v, April 21. The following in terview with a leading Republican here is lull of meaning, and mach significance can be attached to it It is enough for me to say il a a mat in tne next inaiana campaign lew a able and Influential workers as Thomas J urady will be found spending their time and money for the sue cess of the Republican tickets. For fenr I should be misunderstood, however, let me state that the interview below was not held with Colonel Brady. "Have you got any Indiana news for me?" "The telegraphing from here that Judge C. C. Hinds or Judge Frazier, of Indianapo lis, will succeed Judge Gresham in the Judgeship of the Di'tnct Cocrt of Indiana is a little premature." 'Why do jou think so?" "Well, I will tell you. Senator Hsrri.ton is here now, and he has given np all hopes of either of them being appointed, if he ever had any." "How do you know?" "Because I beard hirn say yesterdey that he was satisfied that Judge iiibbey would be aopointed upon the return of the President. That is the reason I think the dispatches were just a little premature.'' "There is no quarrel iu the Republican par;y in Indiana now, Is there? Tnat is to say, there is not such a difference of opinion and want t.f hartuouy between the two factions as to endan r tho success cf the party in your .State iu 14, is there?" "Now, you ere making inquiry into our family affairs. 1 will ay this, however, that for some reason or other tha worker., the men wto have heretofore plirnedor.r battles and led us to victory, are as dumb us oysters. They are taking no part in our quarrels, so far as we can discern, but we suspect that they are applying a deadly poison to the party whenever and wherever it can be done without being discovered. The men who put Indiana into line in 1SS0, and threw the weight of the State to the Republican party in the October election, thereby turniDs; the lead from Han cock to General Garfield, have been ignored by the Administration in everything and in every way. This sort of treatment naturslly embittered them, aud, while they are not making au open war, thj are. as I have said, using auoihcr power and influence in a quiet way to bury the party, not oiily in Indiana, but in tho whole country." "Who pecras to be fhe choice of Indiana Democrats for the nomination for President in 1384, McDonald or Hendricks' ' "Oh. McDonald, ten to one. I tell von. if Jce McDonald is nominated by the Democrats be will carry the State by 50,000 ma jority; mark my wcrds." McDonald. 3crteIIa (Ho.) Democrat. There is something in the atmosphere hat betokens a grand triumph, for the Democracy In ISiL The procession is al ready forming for the grand display of free hailots, and the ltnes are bein? drawn for tiie most megiificrnt conqaest in nil his tory. But what of the leadership? Vhocf the Psruocratic giants sdiiil le-id on to victory? Who arnonsst the hots ot statesmen shall be called the chargs and liftfd high in th? sunlight of publio opproval? It begins to look as though fenator Joseph E. McDonald, cf Indiana, would fill the measure of Democratic expectations. The great Northwest and the West, tho still greater Southwest and the Southern States, hsv? tfiken with exceeding kindness to the mention of his name, tnd the McDonald boom may fairly be d; cribed aserowirs rapidly. A maa of wondrous activity, of executive f.'.rve, r,l education, of intelligence and uncompromising Democracy, ha La3 grada&il von Iiis way to the front ranks, while his ilLi&'rious sirvicea on behaif of the party and the per p'r entitle him to tinusual consiiie ration at. tbe party's hands. He had declared himself unreservedly upon all s public tinea:i''n?, and has been fosnd in thorough sympathy with the people as oMa'nst the c rpora'iors. He. has declared that a tariff in execs of a revenue standard is not right, and tbat aside from the bürdet s of Government free trade is the doctrine. His platform i.j, th?iefore, "a tariff for revenue only," und thorough reform in all departments of the National Goverranei.t, whereby taxation shall be reduced, corporations controlled, monopolies broken and honesty in the udministration of public affairs be restored. The Democrats are watching tha developing of the McDonald boom' with all the intensity that belongs to the great interests involved. The great moral organs of the Republican party do not seem to ba posted on the recent horrible revelations of a Massachusetts Poor Honse. The New York World eays: How the truly good Republican journals would have im oroved the occasion, day a'wrday. to read homines cn the career of the Marsh family in the Tewksbury Alms HouHe. ii the Matsnes had been DewHimln ana tbe discovery of their ml'det'ds had been made by a Republican Governor! hut now not a moral idta is to be had from one of them about the trade in paupers, alive or dead. and for aught that appears ia their highly respectable pleasau tries about Governor Butler, everything is for the best la the grand old BayS:ate ex cept this Governor, i'rooa. ly mese sxgacions organs have come to the wise conclusion tnat tney have played the game of moral ideas for about all that it's worth. The Huntington Democrat strikes the mil ca the head squarely aa follows: There ia no end to the robbery forced upon the farmers and mechanics by te Republican party leadtr in the enactment of tariff laws. Tncsa leaders bave openly Insulted the Intelligonc I the masses by joining hands wl h monopolies.and the rank and file who have steadily voted the Republican ticket for the past twenty years are not expected to question the policy or epedienc?of such a course, and should any become bo bold. they are at once read out of the party or aenounced as traitors to the Government. Such drnuveiatlnn. however. ias lost its terrors. Tae question of finance, tariff, onllectlr g revenues and the hon est disbursement of tho sme are ot vastly rcore importance than the uves of the pa-ty. The good work of mut be eonunuea in i&s. it they ever expect relief from tho methods of the present Republican rulers. We feel that we are doing tbe pub)ic a fa vor in calline their attention particularly to Hood's Sarraparilla. This is not a patent medicine, but a proletary article, possess ine real curative properties, and its-effects upon the blood are very positive. Spring debility, biliousness, dyspepsia, and all troubles caused by impure blood, readily vield to this excellent medicine. We think those who eive it a trial for that "out-of sorts" feeling frcm which so man suffer, and which is peculiar to this season, will toe quite satisfied with the results.

XEWS OP TUE WEEK. Twenty persons have been arrested for 3 murder conspiracy in County Clare.

Edwaid M. Erskine. Secretary ct the British legation at Washington, is dead. James Park, Jr., one of (lie heaviest iron man ufacture's cf Pittsburg, is dead. A company has Lx-en formed In CTf-tcLnatl to pur wflaij lu o iua ana tioase it abjoati. At lik pool, eanaar, ere aestroTca ware houses and sbi stores of the value of töOO.COu. i ne Washington relics are to be transferred irum tae rateusumce to me Rational Mutes m. A false report that the President was rerlorjgly iu oomuünta iwuaeuiiia excitement In asn logton. Two thousand burned Filday. destitute. nouses at ueini, India, were A great nany people are leit Tbe Wheat crOD of MlnneaMa and DaVnl. rm blaed will show con IderaoJe increase over last jesfs yield. Two or the Nihilists sentenced to doath at at Pe?eibur have Heen executed, one by hanging ana iue otner dj mooting, Mrs Stover, thesister of President Johnson, and who was frequently at thu Write House during aar. jonason s incumbency, la dead. At Sacremento. California, Frldav. tha wall nf a building fell upon a saloon, kililn fix men and possibly more, and woundlug twtlve men. About 8,000 emigrants sa led fr&m Liverpool Frciay. most of them latevdicg to settle in Matlota. They represent au ugsrcgdte capital cf a ternois gaio r.f wind and cyclone wept lurunun ix;iiinj-w a unuGy ana aioijoay. Fevt-r-al villages were destroyed, many people kllkd aud many more wounded. James G. Anderson, a grain dcar of St. Jaob. Msdiscn County, lilu t is. Is al'.egtd to have (.wd indorsements to rotes to the aoiout.t of 12,000. His preterit whereabouts are unknown. Secretnry Teller sup-cs's that the Union Pacific Rail way Company pay to the Govrf,mnt. without prejudice t contested claim, the l,CSö,S31 8S due on claims that are not toutet:ed. The examination of the dvnainlie conspirator proceeledat the llow fctree: I ice Court, in Hin doo, Fr:day. The evidence reiided to show tbe connection of Wilson and Whit-head nitli tne manufacture and distribution of nitro-glycerine. Bth Elward, a colored murderer awtlttnir execution in Jil at Munfordville. Hart Count?. Kentucky, made an attempt to escape Thursly, having bv some means obtained a Dlsfoi. Find ing himself thwarted, he retreated to his cell and blew out bis brains. Ths Ohio Democratic Convention will meet at Coluuibu, June SI, for the Pottli allon of candidates fir Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Judge of the Supreme Conrt Trssnrer. Attorney Gpuersl.snd Member of the Hoard of Public Works The election occurs October 9. A 6now-fttorm of preat severity occurred Funday in Wyoming and Western Nebraska. TeleKrtpb. lines were prcstra'ed, and trains on the Luton riaEc Kail way tre blockaded. Th owi passing away rapid -y. exd it ia boned Mock witl not suffer treaty in censeouence of the seo k. A combination of B-wton capitalists hv nm jcred a system of railroads between New Yo k ant thnilestr n, 8. C, that u:ll. It is clalmed.be Kfl miles ehor'.t-r thn Miy existing line, and alM intend cotinectl.'g cii c'n nail wi;h the South Atlantic e-at hy a route ISO miles shorter than anv that low exists. A New York lawyer nnrred Savdara is accused cf couspirirc witn other- (including J. Maoiw Hng4. of :n!cito) to ttrpetrate a swindle of suza-'itiC pro )'rtioi-a upon a syndicate of foreign ctp:ti-ts, wnom it was intended to lead Into in ve-'.ii;? l utuia lards to which the accused had no title. Tho jry in thn csrr of Timothy Kelly, tried at i-iUDi'n tor c-norr ty iu the Phoculx Park mur aers, disagreed, ana trie prisoner wi.l have to stand another trial. The defense relied upon proving an alibi, and produced a nnniV?rof wi uess- s who swore K elly was not la Phcenlx Park the evening of the tragedy. The greater part of tho village of Oakvllle twenty miles from Toronto.was burned ft e itiesday morning. The members of the village Fire De partment at an early stage of the coiuiügratton devoted more energy to putting themse Ives outside of two barrels of whtsty than to lighting the fire, and the consequence was disastrous to the village. Tbe body of Maegie ITeunecke, the Milwaukee girl wh we unexplained disappearance last Oct- b?r gave rise t- all sorts of moories. was found Friday in tee Milwaukee River. Tbe gtrl ws about twelve years cf sge, and. as there is no reason known why she should hare romml'teJ suicide, it Is supposed (he accidentally fell Into the river. The Supreme Court of tho United States baa decided that the reduction cf 10 to 00 per cent. mace in is.b by tae Posioflice Dcpartm ut iu the rates for railway mail s-rv.ee from the stira agreed upon when lh eintraft were Mgned lor tne lour years irom lh,.i to is9 was not authorl zed by law. Hie contract hetn bindia,: upon both parties lor ttia lau period covered. Wilson. Republican, was given a certificate cf cb'C'io-. as Kepresentativo in Congres from tinFifth District -f Iowa upon sn ostensible msiorIty of twniy-f vir votes at the November eiectu.u. rrt-dtrirk. his Democratic oproneat. rlsim t:. have cli'orivered errors In thi count of vou-s tbat vi 1 rev.Tgs tbe ves itt aud cive him a merlin ol I X) vo; 8 er more. President Arthur arrived In Washington at 9:30 bunaar evenme irom ms noutneru excursion. showing little trscss ot the IUne-s he wss aii to have experienced on boaid tbe Tallapoosa, et äavasuch, Thursday niht. The only untoward symptom reported by tho correspondents U the f.ict that he retired to his berth on board the special car, Saturday evening, at tho alarmingly early hour of 6 o'clock. Parliernen. House, at Quebec, was destroyed by a Thursday evening the flames first appearing in au upper story. Many public documents and copies of acta of Parliam -nt awniiing extcutive s-tnetion wero burned. The water pressure was delayed fiftee-.i minutes, which allowed the fire to S'.hi great headway. The building wss insured for S1CO.00O, m sUy la English Companies. The wife of Judge W. J. Stephens, of Missoula. Moct . was awakened Thursday nisht by a bun: lirettcmpUng to eater her room, ber husband plng ar-sont from tome, fhe warjed the man to e-tve. Mit nc of a;a Her. wnot ice tried to snoot him with a gun, whch mis'ed fire. Shsthen pr.-M-nred a rewdvor, with which she fired twice. or,e ball taking t Beet in the burglar's breast, kill ing him. Robert if. Dougla. son of the fstnons Stephen A. Pun!as, lati-lv Uut-ltcd Htstes Marshal for the Weitem I is-trlc.t of Nonh Canllua. having rctzirtl t B'lrnrxder the records t f tceotllce efh'ssnc cessor, the Uisrr'.ct Attorney has lx-en directed to brn ection against cim lor abs;rcnner oil. Rial re.-trds. Tne ca e is somewhat complicated by the fact that the Judge b for whom the suit should be brouiht Is Douglas' father In law. Curler, the second of ho elloed assassins of Lord Oeveuoish and Mr. Burke, to be put on trial at Dublin, was convicted last neonofaay suo stntenrd to l e barged on May 18 The prisoner. when asked if he hud anvthirg to say, avowed bims?lf a member of the Invlnclhles and the Fe nian Brotherhood, bntdenied that he was in Ptsenix Park iheiiiht of themutders. He h-id exc-ecc-ed nomeicy from thettourt. ard. IovIcr Ireland. unready to die for her. on bine 'ea irem ;re dock he shouied "Gcd save Ireland:" A number of natrons of O'Brien's circus at D - ver, Del.. Saturday night, took an emphatic man ner of expressing their poor opinion tl me performance. As a portion of the wagons were be ing driven to the depot to take the cars for the next town on tae circuit a crowa or men ooenec fire upon them with repeating rifl-sand revol vers Ten or twcive i tne cireu iocn were wounded, one of tn proprietors. Chailes Hender sod, being shot in the eye. Under the protection of tae Sheriff's posse the remainder cf the vans were loaded aud driven to tbe df pot witftout mo lestation. A number of houses in be-locsltty where the attack was made were riddled with bullets. No arreU were made. A too free lndu'gence in Bbrimp salad by Presi dent Arthur at Savannah on Thursday produced resnlis early Friday morning that cause 1 his friends on hoard the TalUpoosa. and tho cuicers and crew of the ship, serious auxiety. For a time tne President was In Kreat agony, but tne prrfesslonal oflices of theship'asureon brought him rtllef, ana late lu the afternoon he was able to lave his bed and sit for a while on tne qunrie.dck. Secretary Chandler 1 reported to have beeu much slarmed. and was disposed to telegraph to Washington for medical assistant. The President s departure irom Bavannaanas oeen potponed. Jay Gould has issued a circular to thes&onkholderaof the Wabsh, St. Liuis and Pacfle Railway imparv. ir'vlng notice of the creation of a collateral tins lean of flO.OOe' 00, bearing 6 per cent, interest and running thirty years, to nie,t the ob ligations of the Car iru-rt Jmpawy 'a relieve the Wabash Company of rts floatlt g debt without drawing rrxin the nrt earni-jrof the Comiapy. Th )ivti wl 1 be guarar.tw! b tho St. Louis, Iron Monntntn nnd 8tuherri Railway tympany, and teenr hv mortcaie bonds, real etae. stocks etc. Mr. eiou 11 tkc occasion to oonlradict the nimor ecemly circulated detrimontal to the credit of the Compauy. When the elirht men chanted with being conOirtied in the dynarndte co- aiiracy were brougkt into the Bow Street Poiiee:o t,unooD. inun.(wj ttbecasie known that the p isoner who had called l.imspl! Daltnn had turned lnlorraer. He stated that bin real name was William Joseph 1 yncb, and t Ast be was born in New iork of Iriso pa rent. His acquaintance with Dr. Gallagher, ne tpsiiif d. wsa beun in October iast. thtvuiri the medium of an Association In New York lor the liberKion ot Ireland by force. Lvnch gave a rrciiv.stantlal scennnt of bis coTiltection with Gl laf.ber. according to which the latter directed his wiovementa in the United Mfttea ana alter pom ilinu arrivtfu iu iuu.auu, vraii-iict uin.iu.iu . dim anlntlnhlnarnn tiA Parliament bnildinffs . . i j j t j 1-11 r. I and coramlsslordng him to brifg v Uro glycerine from WMtoheAiTa factory in Rirmlrctam. Gal1 lasher, ha adao said, had furuUbed him with

money on i"rrsi occasioia, Seierat times dar

mg wren i k-""uy n irors tae prt "ner( dot k. dei ponced him n an infamous lUr. inquiry aicw u im evenvg verilied much cf whet Lynch s?id rclaute t tks existence of ciuoa mere naving nr taeir pnrj ose the destrue Uon of BrttUh property by the u: a cf explosives The bearing of testimony la the second trial of meaier rtouie conipirtcy cei at Washlngtoa coucinaea last w-etx, oain lasted flva addressed the txur; njKn the s;atute under wiuca tni iDaicrnicQi or jira inl Ujrsey w V.V' k 8 '' nncT the act of 1874 Court statd that the Jury aad only to decide wietöpr a fou piracy had eilsted within the " aj:owaJ,T me statute of limitations pi7.ouiij mat A lLoruov BrewPterwiIlraa.kesv. adarvts for the enral Oovern meat 1:1 ciowrtf me (ace. V nne tne day tho rat.d Jury returned two additional indicimcnts '"fr'K"- Willi. PUt Kollos witH TOrrVpilT? , T. 'S muny wtie Uultea States Senator uiwuiueraiitzicga umi.ar oiienso agaiux uuiuas . nrauy wuua StCOUa Atslilant Postmater Oeneral. Didn't Like the Hews Publication. Si a ..isctatt. April 18 A Strika f th scsnic artists preparicg tbe scenery for the dramatic festival stopped work for a while una auernoou. ine cause of the strike was cue utterances imputed to one of the Directors of the Dramatie Festival Ai.. ti:nf as printed byaruoning paper in the siiape of an interview. The lantern , ttiere printed was regarded orTeniiv bv th iirtiat.. The interview was in regard to a supper given some of the scenic artists by C.ilonel George Wrd Nichols t th Vi... City Club recently. The Directors concerned met, and the article explained satisfaciotily and work was resumed. The Lagrange Democrat sees it as follows: The Madison Herald an vj. Tv .ijournal, favcra the nomluation of Hon. John u cravens for Gavemor by tne Democracy la 1S84. Tho c-tQtlJat should come from the Northern fart of the State this time, at leant as far nnrti ex-GovcTüor leanc P. Gray's residence. r von aee: A Military Man Made Happy. WasHiaoToK, D. C General G. C. Kniffin. in a letter natine his wife was rn rd nt p-iinfal ailment bv St. Jacohs Oil. vritM that after witnessing its magical cure of pain he would cheerfully pay $100 for a hottl nf fit Jacobs Oil, if he could not get it cheaper. Rumors continue that "hieh tinks" hnlrl sway in the White House. The Washington Capital says : .Mr. Allan Arthu. the scion nf th hnntA Tina b-cu having high jinks la the White Honbe'this wefc with his Princeton (tollecn mmr..-,ir,n I hty Cime here oa a sinirln? tunr inta(u.ihä boys got up into the Executive Mansion and got t-ieir tifcbt-trouscrt d lees under the mahocanv in ihe State Dining P.oom they gave up tho idea o; coatiauing their musical eineditifn Th .ys srg some very good sones ia front of Mrs. iidvcs vine clad portrait, and had a very good tiR.o Indeed. We unders'and, al?o. that the boys found their way to the wine cellar. e'rasgtng 1'alns Dr. R V. Pierce. Enßalo. N. Y Dear bir My wife had cuSered with "female weiKnessei' lor nearly three years. At times ehe cmld barolv move, she had such a.-8?g:ng pains, eonen saw ycur Favori:o Prescription" sdierthed, but 'supposed like most patent medicines it did not amount to anything, but at last concluded ti try a bottle, hica she did. It made her sick a.t first, but it began to show its effect in a marked improvement, and two hottle. cured her. Yours, etc, A. J. Hcyck. Deposit, N. Y. Tha Had and Worthless are never imitated or counterfeited. This is especially true of a family medicine, and it is a po-itive proof that the remedy imitaieu rs ot ice mgcet value. As soon as it had been tested and proved by tee whole world that Hop Bitter was the purest, best and most valuable family medicine on earth, many imitations spraug up and began to steal the notices in which the press aud the people or tne country Had expressed the raeiüs of H. B.. and in every way trvice to induce eufferinc invalids to nee their stuff instead, expecting to make morey on ne credit end good name of H. B. Many others s'arted nostrums nut itn;n similar style to II. B., with variously ce-vtf-ed names in which the word 4-Hot" e r 'Hops" were uied in a way to indues! ole to believe they were the FA-oesshon Hitters. All such pretended remedies or cire?, no matter what their Btjle or same is, and cspec'a'lv those with tie word "Hop" or "Heps" 'n their caroeerinar-y way connected with them or tf eir name. are imitations or counter'eiff. Beware of them. Touch none of them. Use nothine but genuine Hon Bitters, with a buneh or cluster of green Hops on the white label Tiuit nothing c-ke. Druggists and dealerB aie warned acaicst dealing in imitations er counteif-rt. Advice to Mothers Urs. WInslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used when children are cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once; it produces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little carub awakes as "bright aa a button." It la very p!eamt to tute, lteoothes the child, sofreu'a the gums, allay all pain, relieves wind, reiiulHtes tho bowels, and is the best known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teeth ing or other causes. Trentr-se ceats a botUe. A Card. Xo all who ard unfit ruiü from the errors and .lu atsreiions ol youth, nervous weakness, early cecv, loss cf iaaahctt.-d, etc., I wül sead a rotii nt will cure you, free of Charge, t.iis groai remedy ws-a discovered by a XLd&sion&ry In South America. Solid a self-auarvEStrd envelope to Rev. hrrti T. ItirTiRn. Station D. New York City. A Story cf infantile Soffering Truly as Told by ms Parents. Mr. Editor We feel it our duty to writo you what the Cuilcura remedies have done fojour Mttle boy.who has been ternbly aflllcted with Salt Rheum, acmiuia. ana isrysipeias ever sip ce ne was born, and nothing we could give him helped him nntil we tried Culicura, which., after sing quite a quantity, began to help him and gradual! cured him, until he is now as fair as any child ills body wft completely covered, ana rn face and hands swelled very badly. We had no comfort with him: it was so much work to take care ol him. ana he suffered so. ve began to treat hirnwhen he wss IS months eld. giving htra at first 10 drops of tho Cuticura Resolvent at a time, bathing in warm water and C'aticnra Snap, and applvlng Cuticura carefully to the entire body. He is now S years old and is perfectly well. Wchive not wrnteu before, been ose we thought it might appear again; but it atui noi, end we are very thankful. MR. AND MRS. EVLKSTl' bi't JBl.a. Belchertown, Mass. BEST BLOOD PUEIFIfcB. I have used your Cuticnra remedies la several cases of Eczema, Moiat and Dry T etterrd cured them all. l our culicura Resolvent, so- Jar as my supplv erablea me to tes' it, has. lny hands, exceeded ia efficacy and etUcleBcy any alterative cotapound (blood partner) l have ever maae nte of ia an acUve practice of thrirty yearH duration. Jacksonville. Pa. CUBE IN EVER? CASE. Tour Cuticura remedies outsell all other medl rnec f keen far skin diseases. Mv customers and rwitipnta sav tnat tney nave eneciea a cure in every instance where other remedies nave failed 1 1. v . &is.vn a. v, a l . mi. is. Franklin Fall. . H. , CUTICTJBA BESOLVEAT, The new blood nnjifler. Internally, andCutienra and Cuticura Soap. Ua great skin cures, ex ternally, cleanse the skia ana scaip aaa siny the blood ot every species cf itching, scaly. pimply, Rorotulo-us. in Untile, mercurial aba canc?roua numors ana sxin sortures waen r"ysiclaas, hospltats and all other mean iaji. toia everywhere. Price: Cuticura, 60c ar.d fl per box. Cuilcora Resolvent. $l per bottle; Cuticura Soap, 2 c; Cuticura Shaviug Soap, 1 c. Poter Urne vd rbemical r- Ttotitan. 1-1J A T TTV For Infantile and Binr. JD.h; A. I ) J- X Humora. Kough.Chspp'.Ki U rpTT or Greasy Skin, Blsxk JdJ. i. Xl heads. lmpleB, and ikio BlemiKhts. cuticura teoap, an ettjuiite Skin Beautifler, and Toilet, Bath atf. N unery Sat stive, fragrant with delicious flJTiSi odors and Cuticura btlsamf.

OUR

LITTLE

BOY

ThPrphetndn6ted la Ills Own Coua try Even In Bis Own House. The L'tfcest, simple larratlve of Mrs. 8. j Whlpp.wL'9 i es Idea at Ko. 177 WUUaa Etree . Providence, K. I.: Taring the rast six or leven yecn I have been severely affiljtevt wish Kidney disease, causina-

intenae tackachc. dizziness, and other sever r&lng throngh ray ,x3j ted l!mt, recderls. izt o weak and i-rostrate tbat at limes it was impossible for me to do an.v part of my housework. I bars had also a fjuue&g of the hecrt, and was terribly distiessed for .atb- I was very miser able, and completely worn ont aud dlsc&aragfrd; I had co ambition to undertake io da anything, and barely sufficient stren;tk to nwdtr exlsteaea aetlrabse, baying failed to 6 an) relief trssn the doctor prescriptions. At this trtxg crisis a friend persuaded m to obtain isbottlf of Hunt's Keraedy. aad now I rejolca tat ! followed tUs friendly advloe, lor the remedy atu d its e a charnr amycde. After I ksdukeu a dtees.mT health began to Improve; I felt better every way. The fluttering cf the heart, the lateiiwbacaaches, and terrible shortneEs of breaffi vdily dis appeared, my Btrengia and ambitiös- booh returned, and before 1 bad taken two liOtJ of the Remedy I was entirely well, and able to wiu aa iron and do m? housework. Once ;n a-whiler am troubled with the headache, and as rooo as X am taken I resort to Hunt's P.enudy, and a fewdoses fix me all rlrAt. I shall never be wltlent it in the future. I hve frequently recommended, the Hun's Remedy to y friends, and they fcavw experienced relief frcm the first dose. I heartily recommend it to all-who are aOlicted with Kidney disease or diseases of the Liver, El dder, or TJrimary organs. I think, no family should be withwt it. MR3. 8. J. WIIIPP. No. Ii . William St., Providence, B. L" Arts Xlfc ss Charm. I have osed Hunfa Remedy for Kidney troubles, and recommended it to omen, and always found it to act like a charm." JOIIX l HAMBERS. 723 Carson Street, Fittoburg, Penn. "GraUtude is the memory of the heart." How many heart memoriet cluater a ound Hant's Remedy in trateful households v here It baa wrought its magic cure Every Corset is warranted satisfactory to its wearer in every way, or the money will be rerun led by the person from whom it was fceucht. TtinTrOir!trironon-d by our leader? phyalptaas aat lrjrln-i to the wearer, uidniilorwd by ladm aa tee " most i-omXortahlO and perfect Ctiti:g Corset cvr PKICESby MaU, Peataa-e PtJ It naltV PrraorTlngs. 1.60. Stf-AdoltaK. UM AbJmlBal (extra heavy) S.OO. Xaralac. Strjealtä Prcservlns: (Bae eontUI 3.00. Pars klrt-ÄupMrUBC. IX.. Tor sat? by leading- ItclaU Vealm fTtrrwkctSi CHICAGO CtJK'SKT CO., Chtcaco, 111. ALSO i?ort BT SALE Vance Hunter & Co.. 39 West Washlnotoo St., Indianapolis. PHIOB, S1.25. Ire YOU IER.0ES aad UCK HTAl OER6I? The Howard Gal. anlc and Magnetic ShleM and four other electric appliance . Tf ese are invaluable, end afford eure ani speedy relief in all diseases of a nervous or muscular type, sich es Nervous bcfeiliry, KhenmatiFm. Paralysis, Epilepsy. Aponlexy, Overwor'jod Uralu, Exhanftl .ii or Loss of Vital 'erjry.Wcak Back, KM .icy Ulsea Lung, Liver and stomachic Cmiplalnu. wd all Ci easea cf a perse nal nature, nre ADAPTrtr) TO KOTH No. I Shield, $4; Ko. A, $6; 2, $10. Na. I Spina!. $!5; Ho, 2, $25. Ovarian No. I, $5; No. 2, $12. Suspenscry Wo. I, $4; No. A, $6T-Mo. 2, $10. Send for Illustrated Parr.phlet. AMERICAN GALVANIC COXPT, 13 MADISON SXKXET. Ponthwest Corner fTlftrlt. CTTT A GO. ALsuIliurL.-. .c-T!i3 arian etta"jl-U m r.a lor tUo Cure el n 41 IPILFPTIl; FtT. to&I''rJJtrnclcf2hiUiiiJ Pr. Ate. Veaemlo '-ate of boodw vho r le.li .j v.,.-,. as wttticwk doebt t" ate oo, n l vre m.Mo rxetrian a nth.-r living r-nyMrian liaa.Larxt Sooni (ni.utns; wa liava h.-.ir entern I ovrr X'i ywarh1 ;.:miIii-; .uc.-exiiuy rnn-i af urn. im hr . Tmhlii-li-1 w -n tlüs Kim b-sr?.,:, UV I ir-e 1 Mile "f hi woniti-rfnl com trim f. sv -f-f rvlii rir I tl.-ir i'-.p.-r ' V. is l.iru4 -.. .. ,. i rf:,o . ii'.i-- r'lio to a'l'iri i :. .:!-:. J.!, Mwi J-La St., y?w Tut FOR S.A.XE. TJIOR BALE-Matthews' Patent Pnewr4bleMemX" orandnm Book. Send for samplt. copy and price list. Samples sent postpaid V. any address onjeceiptof 50 cents for o. 1, or o cents for No. Z. Address aNTLN CUiU iLSV, ladiacapolia,

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