Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 23, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1888 — Page 4

THE INDIANA STAjTE SENTINEL. "WEDNESDAY, JULY 11. 1888.

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INDIANA STATE SEXTIXEL. TERMS I'KK YEAUi Single copy....... - SI oo AVe ask demoerat.s to bear in mind ami select their own state paper when thrj come to take subscriptions and make up clubs. Agents making up clubs send for any Information desired. Addesa INDIANAPOLIS SENTINEL, Indianapolis, Ind. WEDNESDAY. JULY 11.

For President, GROTER CLEVELAND of New York. Fob Yice-Premdent, AtLt.N O. TIICKMAN of Olilo. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. GoTertior CorRTLAsn ". Mat.ov. Ijeutiunt-io?ernor Wim.ivm It. MtR3 freeretary of State Kobkrt W. Mikr"". Auditor delate (.'harlkj A. Mux'x. Treasurer of State Thomas U, Uyrnk. Importer Suprnue Court .Ioiin" W. kl.KX. Attomey-4.ior.eral .If ihn It. Wil.non. Superintendent Public Instruction E. E. GRIFFITH. Judges of Pqpreme Court First District W. E. Nihlack. Second District ti. V. JIowk. Fourth District Allex Zollax.. TRESIDETIAL ELKCTOn. At Larcrc Tim as Ii. Cobb and Jnn.v E. T.amk. Viral district, S. B. Yasce; Second district, C. S. rOBBlss: Third district, 'harlu U Jkwett; Fourth district, Nu hoi.a- Corxkt; fifth district, Joh!R.Ea5t; Sixth district. Thomas J. Stcot; Peventh district, Da vip S. (ioouixo ; Eighth district, S. H. iTktt; Ninth district, Jon F. McJIigh: Tenth district, D.D. Dvkkmax; Eleventh district, John N. Tl RNKn; Twelfth district, .loiix H. Bam; Thirteenth district. M. A. O. i'.UKARU. "We have no asylum for idiots in Indiana, but I think it would be very well for the next legislature to turn its attention in that direction." Ben Harrison's compliments to the greenbackers, 1878. Like ?Ia.tcf IJko Man. The Indianapolis Journal was in March, SS2, when the Miller anti-Chinese hill was ponding in congress, the personal organ of Benjamin IIarki'on, as it is today. Like him it strenuously opposed the restriction of Chinese immigration. Its editorial columns were iillel with praises of the Chinese, anl with lcnunciations of those who were tryinir to keep them out of the country." On March L'S, 1SS2, in a leading editorial, the Journal said : They who shout "The Chinese must go" are as mistaken as the dweller on the Yazoo who stands upon its banks and curses the Father of Waters. Repulsed from our shores, the Chinese flood will pour ! i T J it 1 1 t into rem, mio me aouui Sea islands, into Spain, into Cuba, into Mexico, to him the lower levels. But finally he will overspread districts whose inhabitants have miscalculated the extent and mijjht of the flood. HIS VIkTUES ARB SOBRIETY, MODESTY, PATIENCE AND ECONOMY, AND HE IS A TEACHER TO THE LABOR OF ALL L A N D S. Whatever his faults, HIS LESSON MUST BE LEARNED BY THE STRIKERS AND GRUMBLERS EVERYWHERE, for none has so successfully met and triumphed over the harder - conditions of life. He is a wonder and a marcel, an astonishment and a surprise, but a warning and an admonition as well. Six davs after the above anneared Ben jamin Harrison voted in the senate to Q sustain President Arthur's veto cf the anti-Chinese bill. The Free Trade Cry. The republican papers are making a desperate effort to cc nf uso the minds of voteis rh to the real issue before the country. They charge that President Cleveland and the democratic party etand for free trade, and they are trying to make it ippeor that a democratic triumph will involve the destruction of the protective tariff. In this they are not dealing honffctly or fairly with their readers. They Bre wilfully misstating the issue. They ire trying to put the democratic party in a false position. In & word they aro lying. The question of free trade is not before the country. Nobody is proposing the abolition of the protective tariff. Neither ihe president, nor any senator or representative, nor the democratic national convention, nor any democratic state convention Lai proposed anything of the kind. As President Cleveland said in Ljj message, "thy question of free trade cr protection is absolutely irrelevant" The policy of the democratic party is defined in the president's rnes.-ape, and in tlv3 Mills tariff bill now pending in pongress. The public revenues are redundant. There is an enormous surplus In the treasury, and it is increasing every day. It is the fruit of unnecessary taxation. The existence of this surplus is recognized by all aa a menace to the prosperity of the nation. The democrats lay that the unnecessary taxation which feeds this surplus shall cease. The republican party says that it 6hali continue, and that, if it becomes necessary to repeal any part of.it, the tax on whisky chall be tak

en off, and the taxes on food, on clothing, on shelter, on medicines, on fuel and on tools shall remain as at rrrcscnt, or be increased. In a word, the republican programme is higher taxes; the democratic programme is lower taxes. The republican policy means heavier burdens ou the farmers, the wage workers, on all who earn their bread in the sweat of their brows. The democratic policy means a lightening of their burdens. Let us glar.ee at the Mills bill. It increases the tree list by the addition of certain raw materials which are extensively used in our manufactures, and which are now, for the most part, controlled by monopolies. The proposed free list includes the important articles of wool, salt and lumber, except logs on which export duties are imposed at the place of shipment to the United States. On the same list are flax, hemp, the sulphates of iron and copper, tinned plates, jmtash and soda, coal tar and the numerous preparations therefrom, which include the aniline dyes, other dyestufis, tannin, sulphur, and the important vegetable and mineral oils, all non-dutiable crude materials which have been advanced in value or condition by refining or grinding, except some that are specifically enumerated, ail earths and clays, the ores of. copper and nickel, with quicksilver, brick, vegetables, wood rulp, feathers, and paintings in oil or water colors, and all building and monumental stones, with professional productions of a statuary or sculptor; also iron or steel cotton ties and the regulus of copper and antimony. In the production of these raw materials unskilled labor is almost exclusively employed. It is susceptible of demonstration that this labor has never been benefited to the extent of a penny by the duty on these products. The only persons it has "protected" have been the employers, many of whom have amassed great fortunes. Remitting the taxes on such articles as wool, lumber, salt, etc.willbe agreat boon to the manufacturing interests of the country; will increase the demand for labor, and therefore its remuneration; will cheapen the cost of living to the masses, and will help everybody but a few dozen millionaires, for whose exclusive beneGt these taxes are now maintained. It is natural that they should object; it is strange that anyone else in all the land should do so. The following table shows the more important of the tax reductions proposed by

the Mills bill: Evinced to. S 6 00 7 00 11 ft) 'JO 00 20 00 1c 2c 10 loo 35(cj4l) Pis; iron, per ton.- 5 Iron railway tars, per ton. Steel rails, per ton. 72 14 Ort IT M 11 0 20 00ff.2 00 Iron hars, rr., (charcoal)Konnd and sheet iron Nail., per ih Copper, manufactured, per If. Lini in pijrs, mt It Nii kfl in ore, per In Cotton, yam, per cent Othpr yarns awl bleached linen, pvr cent O.ttoa cloth, per rent Woolen and worsted goods, per cent.. HV and Press good, part wool. 3 p C -'c I-" M as 40 35 p C 25 40 40 40 45 0 25 per tent 30c and 3."c"Ml pc Hcady-madc clothing, per ce:il 4V and 35 p c Carpet, per cent 121.jcand 31 p c Watches, per cent 25 It will be seen that the changes pro

posed in the existing schedules are very moderate. They will leave the avcragurVv

amy on uiiuaoie gooos -u per cent. ir higher than ever was proposed by Alexander Hamilton or Henry Clay when our industries were in their Infancymuch higher than was fixed by the Morrill tariff bill of 1S62 (the republican war tariff) ; 10 or 13 per cent, higher than was recommended by the republican tariff commission appointed by President Akthcr in 18S2 and composed exclusively of protectionists! These are the facts. They peak lot themselves. They show that the free trade cry is all humbug. They cut the ground from under the republican oigan grinders and platform builders. They disclose the folly and wickedness of the free whisky programme of the republican party. They prove that the legitimate interests of the country have nothing to fear from the retention of the democracy in power. They afford the best of reasons why every farmer and every wage worker in the land should stand by Cleveland and Tiivkmax.

r

u.yx vyKotKETT f 'lie 6ure you

right, then go ahead." lie has faith the good sense, the justice and the patriot-? isra of tho old soldiers, as of the neonle generally, and it is to these qualities and H not to prejudice and passion ignorance that all his official acts and utterances appeal. His record in the matter of pensions, when dispassionately examined, will be found to be one which every lover of his country must approve. Jt is the record of a patriot, a statesman, an incorruptible public servant, a vigilant guardian of the public treasury, a hater of shaai and fraud and false pretenses, but withal a faithful friend of the men who risked their lives for the flag, and the zealous defender of their honor as soldiers and as citizens. A Gold Bug Candidate. Terhaps no part of the republican platform better illustrates the hypocrisy and false pretenses of its framers than its professions and practices in regard to silver. It reads: The republican party is in faTor of both gold and silver as taoney. and condemns the policy of the democratic administration in its efforts to demonetize silver. And yet they unanimously nominate for the office of vice-president a prominent monometallist who has, or lately had, a banking house in London. On the loth day of May, 1S79, (see Congressional Record, first session", forty-sixth congress, page 1367), tho Hon. Levi P. Morton, then a member of congress from J the city of New York, made a speech pro testing against th passage of a bill then before the house, providing for the unlimited coinage of silver, in which he not only denounced the proppsition as repudiation and a fraud, but 6 poke of the bill of '78 which had passed, as one that had not only done no good but had. made all property values insecure, because the quantity or value of silver bullion in the dollar was not equal to the value of the gold bullion in tho gold dollar at the market rates in London. His language wasa3 follows: I believe, bit, and my constituents believe that this bill means to-day the repudiation purs and simple of one-sixtli part of all indebtedness, public and private; what the measure of repudiation in the future may r-rove to be, will be determined alone by the future value of silver bullion. Are the interests of the people to be advanced by adding to the colossal wealth of the owners of silver mines, or discriminating iu favor of this, class of property owners? Will the dollar etatnp of the L'nited States upon S4 cents of silver belonging to private individuals add to the wealth of the nation or of the private individual, the owaer of the bullion. Jla the late coinage of silver in excess of the amount which has been used um a circulating medium, now stored in the vaults of the treasury, added to the prosperity of the country? Lvery oue will answer no. If this bill is to become a law, it is inevitable that the country will be drained sooner or later of its gold coin and bullion, aud that silver will become the sole unit of value, and that instead of a double standard, we will have a single standard, and that of silver. If this bill is to become a law the German povernment and 11 who have silver bullion, the world over, will pour it into our mints to receive for every 84 ceuts a legal-tender silver dollar; they will make by this simple process nparlr 'JO per cent, and our own people who will be obliged to receive the coins as legal tenders will be the losers. Coinage by the government is properly only an official attestation of the weight and fineness of the metal stamped or coined. A silver dollar thus attested to-day bhould contain 48L45 grains as tne equivalent ot a goia ooiiar. i ne present value of silver bullion in London is about Ml pence per ounce; until it is worth 59 or () pence the government 6hould have the profit, if the fraud of stamping SI cents as worth a hnndred is to continue. " - . .1' . If this bid in to become the law of the land its tide should be changed to read "An act

for the relief of the owners of silve rniines,'and au appropriation made for the purpose of erecting elevators and .warehouses for the storage of silver coin and bullion. If the owners of silver bullion cau have their property carried by the government as this lull proposes, anil can have certificates of it deposit made a legal tender for all dues to the United Slates, including custom-house duties, why not clothe bonded warehouse receipts and all other representatives of property with the same functions of money? The only sufe way, iu my opinion, is to stop the coinage of silver altogether, and to say to tho leading commercial rations of the world, "We will not at U nipt to help you out of your troubles until you a:;ree vith us to use silver as a measure of value. We are ready to enter into such a mutual contract with you ns will have the eflcct of restoring silver to its old steadiness of value so that it may again be the measure of other values." It was the republican party that demonetized silver. It did it by a fraud and a trick. It did it at the behest cf the combined money rings of Wall-st. and of Europe, in which Levi T. Morton was prominent. The remonetization of silver was brought about by the democratic

f party with the aid of a few republican p senators and representatives from the far West. Tho republican party, as a party, is opposed to tho '"dollar of the fathers;" the democratic party, as a party, is in favor of it. The triumph of the former at the coming election would probably result in the re-establishment of the single standard in our coinage. For this reason, as well as because all its interests are opposed to the republican policy of free whisky and monopoly taxes, the West ought to be solid for the democratic candidates tins year. The Passing of Porter. It is understood that Ai.nert G. Porte n has contracted to run for governor and deliver the republican and independent lalor vote to Bex Harrison, in consideration of receiving a portfolio in the latter's cabinet "when he gets to be president." This is a contract that neither Albert G. Porte it nor Benjamin Harrison can carry out. Both are going to be cheated in the transaction. Mr. Fokter's nomination for governor, which is already assured, is a confession of weakness on the part of the republican managers in this state. Mr. Porter doesn't want to be tho candidate. lie has I said so repeatedly, and w e are bound to take his word, lie doesn't want to be governor. He has had all the honor and distinction that the office, can yield, and a second incumbency of it is no temptation to him. Gov. Porter's ambition soars higher. He would liko to be president. Failing in that, he would like to be vice-president. Missing that, he would like to go to the U. S. senate. Or, that be jjg out of reach, be would like a cabinet office. Or he would, probably, be willing to accept a first-class foreign mission, lut, as we said, he doesn't want to be governor. Least of all does he want to bo a candidate for governor when the prospecti of defeat are so strong as they are this year. He has only consented to accept the nomination with the understanding above stated; that, if elected, he is to be transferred to "President" Harbison's cabinet next March, provided, of course, there is a President Harrison neit March; and that, otherwise, he is to have the call on the next U. S. senatorship, provided again, of course, that the republican party has the bestowal of that prize. Here are a good many ifs and buts and provisos and conditions and contingencies, but such is "politics" especially republi-

andTcan "politics,'4,, in these days of the g. o.

p. s sorrow and tribulation. W hat appears in the whole matter is, that the republican managers of Indiana, having secured the nomination of their candidate or one of their candidates for the presidency, are turning imploringly to Albert G. Porter, begging him to come to their rescue and save the state for them. There are several ambitious republicans with "claims" on the part, who would like to head the ticket this year. There is Col. Kobertson, who has been a päckhorse for the party for jears; who has never got anything for his party services but kicks and cuffs and an occasional idle promise, and who was "martyrized" last year in the interest of Ben Harrison's senatorial aspirations, with the promise that the martyr's crown should come to him in 1888 in the shape of a unanimous gubernatorial nomination. There is Chairman Huston, who has set up for a statesman, and who has a bar'l. He wants to be governor as badly as Torter doesn't want to be. There is pious Will Ccmback, who has spent the better part of his life a-hewing of wood, and a-drawing of water for the g o. p. He wants to be governor. And there is Gen. Hovey, and there is Gen. Suackleforp, and there is Joh M. Butler, all of whom have "claims," and all of whom demand that they be recognized now. But the machine will have none of them. . It demands Porter. It insists that only his nomination" can' save'' the state to Harrison. The situation i3 anomalous.' Ben Harrison was nominated at Chicago upon the strength of positive assurances that he could bring the fifteen electoral votes of Indiana to the ticket. It is tho first time, we believe, that a "favorite son," nominated by either party, for the purposo of carrying his state, has felt constrained to ask an oid time rival and enemy to take the burden from his shoulders and carry it for him. The democrats can afford to view the situation with complacency. The nomination of Porter for governor will be, to begin with, an advertisement of republican desperation, the moral effect of which will bo all with tha democrats. The Harrison machine detests Pouter. It has kept him in the background and snubbed him or ignored hlin whenever there seemed to be danger that he would interfere with Harrison's ambit ion. Now that it wants him to pull Harrison's chestnuts out of the fire it is very "sweet on him" all of a sudden. It is flattering him and puffing him up and assuring him that he is, after all, a wonderfully great and a phenomenally popular man and that he alone of all the republicans in Indiana is able to pull Harrison through. Mr. Porter is very susceptible to that sort of thing. He is excessively vain in fact, and is profoundly impressed with the idea that he is immensely popular with the voters of Indiana. He vaunts himself much -on his facility as a "mixer." It will bo remembered that he told the Chicago convention in presenting Harrison's name, how he saved the day for tho republicans in 1SS0 by carrying Indiana at the October election. How it tickles him now after all. these years of neclect and humiliation at

the hands of the machine, to be told that he only can save tho day again in 1SS8, and to name his own terms for undertaking the job! Albert G: Porter's popularity in Indiana, however, is largely mythical. It is a superstitution in which Albert G. believes devoutly himself ?nd which he has spared no pains to foster in the minds of his fellow partisans. It w ill be thoroughly exnloded this vear. His reputation as a vote getter rests entirely upon his election in 1880 under circumstances which can never be repeated in Indiana. As governor, he was the product of Dorsky's boodle and Dudley's manipulation of the civil service. This year he will have to run against an able and popular man with a brilliant war record and a splendid record in congress. He will le handicapped with the unpopularity of Harrison and loaded down

with the rottenness of the Chicago plat form. He has no war record of his own, although, of course, he may be able to induce tho managers of the cyclorama to paint him a little one. Ho is as narrow and offensive a partisan as Ben Harrison himself. The prediction of the A'e ws that he -will land the latter "high and dry has no substantial basis. Some of Harrison's partisans have boasted that they would heal the powerful labor disaffection against their candidate by Porter's nomination. They are reckoning without their host. Porter will be rominated, of course, with that end in view, but the contract is one that he will be unable to fulfill. There is no man in Indiana who can identify himself with the Steve ElkinsJay O ould -Vande rbil t - free - w hisky - pro-Chinese-monopoly-tax conspiracy this year and bamboozle the workingman into giveing it his support. Neither Albert G. Porter nor any other republican can carry Indiana for Ben Harrison, or for himself as a candidate in Ben Harrison's interest. Harrison a Spoilsman. No honest civil service reformer can consistently vote for Ben Harrison. lie is a spoilsman "from way back." He is thoroughly identified in Indiana with machine politics of the most odious variety. While in the senate In was noted principally for his industry and pertinacity as an office broker. He has no more claims upon the support of civil service reformers than upon that of tariff reformers. One of the few speeches he made in the senate was in opposition to a measure providing, among other things, that any contribution by any executive officer or employe of the United States to campaign fund:- should be a misdemeanor, punishable by a tine of ?"00 and dismissal from office. This was in December, 18S2, and this is what he said: I insist that it is a common principle, applicable a.s well to the service of the United States and its employes as to the service of corporations aud individuals and their employes, that when a man has once earned the salary stipulated by law or fixed by contract, has earned it by the stipulated hours of work, it is his, absolutely his; and the principle sought to be introduced here is that the covernment may follow that money into his control and dictate the use of it to him. I say that may not be done. The covernment of the United States cannot prohibit any man from using money that is his for any legitimate purpose. We may prohibit the ue of it for illegal purposes of fraud or corruption in elections, but I deny that the government may control the use of the money that it has paid to the man for services rendered. A year later Senator VooRnEES introduced a bill prohibiting officers and employes of the United States from contributing money for political purposes. As to which Senator Harrison said: I have once before declared myself upon this question, Mr. President. I say for one I will never consent to vote for any law w hich deprives the members of congress, which deprives any publio ollicer, however humble, of the privilege of converting any part that he may choose of his salary to legitimate, campaign expenses. It is significant of the style of statesman Gen. Harrison is that he spoke more warmly and more earnestly upon this matter than upon any other that engaged the attention of the senate while he was a member of that body. Gen. Harrison is the same kind of a civil-service reformer that "Jim" Blaine and Steve Elkins are. The "Doubt fulM Slates. All Steve Elkins can say for New York is that it will be "fair fighting ground for the republicans." He figures out the election of Harrison by counting Connecticut, New Jersey, West Virginia, Indiana and California in the republican coluinu. Why he doesn't include Kentucky and Texas is a mystery. California voted against Garfield in 1SS0, when tho tariff issue was uppermost, because he was charged with writing a letter favorable to Chinese immigration. This year the republicans present a candidate who voted fourteen times in the U. S. senate against anti-Chinese measures. Ho will not carry California. New Jersey never failed to give its electoral vote to tho democratic candidates but once since the republican party was organized, and that was in 1872, when Horace Greely was the democratic candidate. Connecticut and New York almost invariably vote alike. In conceding New York, as he virtually does, Elkins really gives up Connecticut. Indiana is a democratic state, and more certainly democratic as rgainst Ben Harrison than any other man the republicans could have nominated. It is twenty years since West Virginia went republican in a national election, and it is as surely democratic as Alabama. Elkins will have to try again if he ie going to figure out Harrison's election without New York. We observe that Col. Robertson is hurrahing for Harrison. Everybody in Fort Wayne knows what Col. Robertson's honest opinion of Harrison is, for it has been often and freely expressed. It is well known, too, in political circles throughout the state. Tho gallant colonel's enthusiasm for his long time bete nolr is, of course, forced, and we imagine that it will not survive the convention of Aug. 8 when the Harrison machine gives Robertson the grand razzle-dazzle. The republican slate is already made. Alpert G. Pohter gets the governorship, Gen. Lew Wallace tho lieutenant governship, and Robert S. Robertson gets as usual Left. It can hardly be possible that he doesn't know what the Harrison machine programme is, or that he hugs the fond delusion to his soul that his "claims" upon the party are to be given any recognition. The Harrison machine will make a doormat of Robertson this year as it has so often before, but t ilJ -cbatir izs to con-

ciliate him with promises of "something good" when Benny gets to tho Whito House. But the colonel knows the value of promises from this source. Wasn't he

promised thell. S. mrhalshio in 1SS0? The New York Timrx doesn't take anv stock in Ben Harrison's pretensions as a civil service reformer. It says that among the few things for which he succeeded in making a reputation at Washington during his senatorial career was industrious, ingenious and varied oflice-seeking for his friends in Indianapolis: Whatever conclusion he may have reached as to the expediency or desirableness of the civil service reform law, he was a profound believer iu the doctrine that ihe otiices should be distributed first to and then by the senators. Some of the requests that he urged w ith the greatest confidence and vehemence indicated an almost grotesque conception of his official responsibility for the character of the appointees allotted to him. The disapproval with which he must now regard Mr. Cleveland's shortcomings in this regard as set down in the Chicago platform is doubtless genuine, but he is not a man to whom the correction of the evils of the service, such as they still are, would come easy, either by natural perception of them or by any aversion to profiting by them. So far as heard from the only person who is .impressed with Harrison as a civil servico reformer is Brother Foulke of Richmond. The republican papers of California are having a hard time trying to defend Ben Harrison's Chinese record. They denounced him savagely when he was making it, and are now forced to stultify themselves every time they say a word in his favor. The Portland Oregonian is the only coast paper which can consistently support Harrison. It has always been a proChinese paper and an organ of mono poly Free whisky, as proposed by the republican platform, means ; an epidemic of drunkenness. It means a premium on intemperance. It means that a man can get drunk for a dime. It means universal demoralization and a saturnalia of crime and lawlessness. At least, that's what it would mean if it were carried out. But the American people have too much virtue and patriotism to permit such a vicious and wicked policy to prevail. They will keep the tax on whisky, and reduce the taxes on clothing, food and shelter. Gen. Harrison declared in the U. S. senate on July 20, 1832, that "the common concurrent consent and common sense of all the people agree that whisky, beer and tobacco should remain the last three subjects of internal revenue." Gen. Harrison might have gone further and said that the common concurrent consent and common sense of the people demand that the taxes shall not be removed from these harmful luxuries, so long as the necessaries of every day life arc heavily taxed. The North Manchester Journal reproaches the democratic party for not "disturbing" the "robber tariff," and at the same time supports Ben Harrison on his free-whisky-high-tariff platform. This robs the Indianapolis Xevs of the unique distinction of being the only paper in the country that supports a man while damning his principles. A correspondent asks The Sentinel if Richard P. Bland, author of the "Bland silver bill," is a democrat or republican. Mr. Bland is a democrat and represents the Eleventh district of Missouri in congress, as he did when he introduced his silver bill, which became a law. Six months' residence in Indiana is required to entitle a man to vote in this state. This in answer to a subscriber's inquiry. "When Baby wu sick, we gave her Castor!, When she was a Child, she cried for C&storia, When she became Miss, she clung to Castori, When she Lad Children, she give them Castoria, A letter from John M. Ward of the New York base ball club and author of the new book Base Ball." Pond's Extract Company: Dear Siks Ilaving used Tond'a Extract as an application for the bruises, sprains and other injuries, incident to ball playing, I can safely recommend it. Yours truly, JousJI. Ward. New York, June 14, 1SSS." No medecine in more coiiscientioudy prepared, more powerful, or more highly eonct ntrated, than Ayer's ISarsaparilla. Its standard of excellence is the result of careful study. This preparation is acknowledged by the medical profession to be the best blood purUk r. I have had catarrh in head and nostrils so bad that there were great sores in my nose, aud one place was eaten through. L got Kly's Cream Balm. Two bottles did '.he work. My nose and head are well. I feel ?ike a different man. C. M. McMillen, Sibley, J.kson Co., Mo. SOME DOCTORS honestly admit that they can't cure Rheumatism and Neuralgia. Others Bay they can but don't. Ath-lo-pho-ros says nothing but cur. That's the secret of its success. Years of trial have proved it to ba a quick, tae, $ure cure. Concord, Is, n., Sept. S. 1S87 In my own family AUdopborufl wa ued as lt reaort, tUe user havinir suffered from rhetnratini for years .id bavin Imon tinted for tho d bv ditt'etvrit physicians In this State aud Jla.suehiifotta without even trmiorary ri-lief. Jon my recomraendAtion soorvoof pw. plo Jive uM thin remedy with ttm aiue rofiulu cliifiued for it C 11. Waso.t. Dnbnqne, Iowa Jan. 3. PK Athiophnri'w Jms completely cured 111 of Brvoun hmdnche. and 1 feel thuiful for all the good it ha dote me. Mrs, LociEt Cherrt. Send 6 cents for the beautiful colored picture, " Moorish Maiden." THEA THLOPHQRQS CO. 112 Wal! SL M.K

O0000 PILLS. HEVTATIE OP Z2I1TJJ10XS. ALJTJ.T1 ASK IXIt JiJl. riEZtCES ihulets, OB LITTLE S UQAJt-COA TED PILLS.

Tie In ir entirely vegetable, they operate without disturbance to tne evstem. diet, or occupation. YxA up in glass vials, hermetically scaled. Always fresh and reliable. Ai a laxative, alterative, or purgative, these little Tclleui give the moet perfect satisfaction. SM HEtDiCHE. 0 milous Headache, Dizziue, Constipation, Indigestion. Hilions Altacks,andail derangements of the -stomach and bowels, are promptly re'ieved and permanently cured hv tho uso of Dr. rierce-a Pleasant IurjrallTe Pellet. In explanation of the remed al power of these Pellets over so frrent a variety of diseases, it may truthfully be said that their sction upon the system is universal, not a gland cr tissua escaping their Eanative Influence. Sold by drupgisis,S6 cents a vial. Manufactured at thi Chemical Laboratory of World's Dispe8art Medical Association, Buffalo, J. V. is offered by the manufactur ers of Dr. Sage's Catarrh IlemeUv, for a case of Chronic Nasal Catarrh which they cannot cure. SYITIPTO-flS OF CATAKIUI.-DulL heavy heuoache, obstruction of the nasal passugr-s, discharges falling from the bead Into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak, watery, and milamed; there is rinRinj In the ears, deafness, huckirisr or coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with fcal from ulcers; thevoice is chanced and has a nnsal twang; tha breath is offensive; fm-ll and taste are impaired; there is a sensntion of dizziness, with mental depression, a backir.sr cou?n aud ireneral debility. Only a few of tho atove-named symptoms are likclv to be present in any on case. Thousands of cas-8 annually, without mnnifestiiifr half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dantrrrous, or less understood by physicians. By its mild, soothing, and healm? properties. Dr. Safe's Catarrh Kcnrsdy cunt the worst ensesof Catarrh, cold in the head," Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache. Isold by druggi6ta everywhere; i0 cents. "I'ntold Agony from Catarrh." fror. W. IlArsNER, the famous mesmerist, of Ithaca, JV. l' writes: "Some ten years aro I suffered untold ag-ony from chronic na&l catarrh. My family physician gave me up as incurable, and said I must die. My case was such a bad one, that every day, towards sunset, my voico would become so hoarse I could bareJy speak above a whisper. In the morninir my coughing and clearing of my throat would almost etranR-lo me. By the use of Dr. Sajre's Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a weU man, and the euro has been permanent." "Constantly IlavrZilnfr and Spitting." Thomas .T. Bushing, Ksq-, kos Pine 5?rt, St. Louis,-Mo writes: " I was a great sufferer from catarrh for three years. At times I could hcrdly breathe, and was constantly fcawkinir and spitt inp, and for tbe last eigrut months could not breathe throutrh tbe nostrils. I thought not hing could 1 done for me, Luckilr, I was advised to try Dr. Sago's Catarrh Bemedy, and I am now a well man. I beheve it to lie tbe only sure remedy for catarrh now manufactured, and one has only to give It a fair trial to experience astounding resulta and a permanent cure." Three IJottlcs Cure Catarrh. Eli Bobbins, Runynn P. 0 Columbia Con Pa., save: "My daughter bad catarrh when she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr. Sage's Catarrh hemedy advertised, and procured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it helped her; a third bottle effected a permanent cure. She is now eighteen years oid aod sound and hearty." HUMPHREYS' ECLTCPATEi: 7ITS2ß:AaY SiSCIFXE For Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs, Poultry. SCO PAGE BOOK on Treat mcnt ef Animc's and Cbart Sent Free. cmns Fevf rf. Ccn?"stions, Inflammation, A.A. Splnnl lUeirf-iBiiiB, .tiu-t rever. 11.15. t rat nn. liinnir) itiriniui C. '. Pikirtnpfr. aeal DitUarves. ft 1. & m m If, I'II(IIVII1 uiiiic I'.. K. ('oug'.im Heaves, I'neumonla. . IK. Ir'. Colic or tiripeo. IloISyche. C. ;. ! ixenrriage. IlrmorrhaRen. II. Ii. 1'riuary mid liidnev Dineases. I. 1. Fruptive I-.e-.sr. Mange. J. Ii. Diseu.es of Digestion. KtaMe Cnse. with Specifics. SlanuM. V Itch Hue-1 Oil and lledicator, S7.09 Price, Single Bottle over rOdosesX - .60 pold l?y Drrcirlstsi or Pent Prepaid on Receipt f Price. Humphreys' Med. Co., 109 Fulton St, If. T. H0KEÖPAT2IC SPECIFIC Ko.j la UBS 2k) yean. Tha on' suecesMul remedy for Narvcus Debility, Vital Weakness, nd Prostration. Iroru over work or other coe. f 1 per rial, or S vial and large vial powder, lor fi. ß'jLD BY Die.'GOi -TS. or sent postpaid on receipt of price. UaBpUnj.' X Mil due O-, 1 U t u.loa St., k. L. y p-t4- i Vv.rt ; in "j Thisis the Top of the Genuine Pearl Top Lamp Chimney. All others, similar are imitation. .This exact Label is on each Pearl I Top Chimney. I A dealer may say and think he has others as good, BUT HE HAS NOT. Insist upon the Exact Label and Top. IOC SALE tYlKTW'URL. re Ait CHLT BT EEO.iS. MACBETH & GO,, Fir,ti!r4i,rä. EXHAUSTED VITALITY. A Great Zlcdical Work for Young and Middle Aged Men. More Than One Million Copies Sold. P- treat upon nervous and physical ebilitr, r-re-I mature decline, rxl.auMed vitality, impaired vigor and Impurities ( the tlvxi, and tbe untold miseries cniwNiirnt there in. Contains rtnopse, mhstaiitial eiiib.sHl binding, full gilt. M'arraiit-! the let popular lodind tnsitise published in ths Knslish lantmace. lriee only il by mail, postpaid, and wincoaicd iu a plain wrapper. Illustrated ample free if you send now. l'u!lished by tho PeaNvly 'ledioal Instiuno, No. 4 I'ultineh Mreot, Tntoa, Mass., Win. H. Parker, M. 1., onmlting Physician, to whom all orders thould be addre.-d. HANOVER COLLEGE, riftT-sfvrnth 'far opens Wednesday, Sept 5. Clawical and Seil nti fie Curcs in Col lese Proper: Preparatory Department, Music. Tuition free to all ntu.lenls, except in music. rn to both sexes. No saloons. On the OhK near Madiaon. l or catalogue address President i isukk, Hanover, lni. WFÄtf Adtica Fresl EDwtaicU I Jj ,t Vir" fan-M ror4. Pr. f.?- .flE mature Psclineaiid Fuiwtim a) d:annifVLe'V -Ä rutedKAoirf.'loraach Vedielr. Seale4 "Tjf!lelsJ Treatise tfriarK)9; riiraiMi. . OülüiV? MAIiTCa U ra.ariM.,Ttrt.

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