Pike County Democrat, Volume 16, Number 42, Petersburg, Pike County, 25 February 1886 — Page 4

U tarrilc

business K, and Ufe itiHfcjured stateWl some of them Bfijas completely ^Eppes. But why Bui dSaultiugs to Hit order to keep up Hjensive wardrobe, Bores of men who p . and are lashed p>er in the attempt? ciars may theorize /heir terms of office .proving our tnonocou ihry. It will l>e ill be no better un

their ministers to ;ta they were the early piety; and after a high - ral with silver handles at tfie ir coffin of extraordinary bright-* 1 be found out that the underrated OUt l^gJaoifci'natA e:C)o not **evd to me to vreach the of a mautr regies like that. ith, a»d tall by his wife’s to death, the patswYork it ought ■t the man more than wedding dress. ~ each are stimated " tire personal n to do*iu order to keep robes? Steal that Is the Hue thing they can do. Dtir^mfteen years there have been le fine business men ship wrecked irdrobe. The temptation comes !yv A man thinks mere of hip an all the world outside, ’and !>end tl^p evening in describhim toe superior wardfamily across ton struct bear toe sight of, the his galthntry and Inis nd without translati

VWMB MtMttftefe that they hfttt hive udthihg (or t%» Cft'ttfe «{ suBeijig pman! Chrfstinifi *<m cricking fc& paiaL hfivoi the back by shutting Kind to hid* the one oent ’he the poor box! A Christian the story of the Hottentot* crying e*pU oo* t*ei*s into a twenty»ttfe dollar handkerchief and then giving a two-cent piece to the collection, thrusting it dorm under the bills so people will not know bat it was a ten-dollar gold piece. One hundred dollars for incense to fnshien-tWo e*hts for God I Hod give* Us ninety ceiit* Odt df every dollar, the other*ten cehti, by command of his Bible, MMng to him. Is net God liberal according tb this tithing system mid ddwh ill the Bl'd Tehtameilt— it hot God liberal In giving as ninety cents ddt df 4 dollar when he takes bdt ten. We dp not like that. We want to have ninety - nine cebts for ourselves and one (or God. Now I would a great deal rather steal tan cents from you than Odd. I think"O^e reason why a great many people do not get along in worldly accumulation (aster is because they do not oBgetve this divine rule. God says: “WeH, If that man is not Satisfied with ninety cents out of a dollar then I will take the whole dollar, and 1 will give it to the man or woman who is honest with me.” The greatest obstacle to charity in the Christian Church to-day is the fact that men expend so much on their tahie and women so much on their dress they have nothing left for the work of God and the world’s l ettfcrmt'it. Again, extrftv agafit cbsfttlhe is distracts tb public worship. Yon know very ’ell there are a good many people who go church just as they go to the races, to who will come out first. Men and omen with souls to be saved passing the our in wondering where that man got his ,vat, or what store that woman patronises. In many of oar churche< the preliminary exercises ftre taken up with the discussion o( wardrobes. It is pitiable. Ik it nht wonderfill that the Lord does not shrike the meeting houses with lightning? What distraction of public warship. Dying men and women, whose bodies are soon to be turned into dust, yet before three worlds strutting like peacocks. People sitting down in a pew or taking up a hymn book, all absorbed at the same time in personal array, to sing: Rise, mv soul, and stretch thy wings, __ Thy better portion trace; . Rise from transitory things, Toward Heaven, thv native plaeel

I adopt the Episcopalian prayer and say: “Good Lord, deliver os!” Extravagant costume belittles the Intel* :ect. Our minds are enlarged or they w ittdle just in proportion to the import* nee of the subject Oh which We constant? dwell. Can you imagine anything more jrarfing to the human intellect than the iy of dress? I see men on the street judging from their elaboration, I must have taken two hours to artheir apparel. Alter a few years of ;ind of absorption, which out of Me's magnifying glasses will be enough to make the man’s char* ble? What will be left of a itellect after giving years and discussion of such questions? and in idiocy. I have seen men [summer watering places through the mere wreck of what they once Sallow of cheek, meager of limb, at the chest. Showing no animate in rushing across a room to pick ady’s f an. Simpering along the corthe same compliments they sim* twenty years ago. et, my friends, I have giveu you only milder phase of this evil. It shuts a t multitude out of Heaven. The first eal of thunder that shook Sinai declared, “Thon shalt have no other gods before me,” and you will have to choose between i the goddess "f4'~j$ion and the Christian !ncil. There are a great many seats in Heaven, and they are aif easy see' \ ' it not one' seat for the devotee of costume. Heaven is for meek and quiet spirits. Heaven is for those who think more ol their souls than of their bodies. Why if you, with your idolatry of costume, should somehow get into Heaven, you would be for putting a French roof on the “house of many mansions,” and you would be for in* traducing the patterns of Butteriek'* Quarterly Delineator. Give up this idolatry of fashion or give up Heaven. What would you do standing beside the Countess of Huntington, whose joy it was to build chapels for the poor, or with that Christian woman of Boston, who fed fifteen hundred children of the street, at Fanueil Halil, one New Year’s Day, giving out as a sort of doxology at the end of the meeting, a pail of shoes to each one of them; or those Dorcases of modern society who have consecrated theit nsedlCs to the Lord, and who will get eternal reward for every stitch they take? Oil, men and women, give up the idolatry of costume. The rivalries and the competitions of such a life are a stupendous wretchedness. You will alway? find some one with bl ighter array and with more palatial residence and with lavender kid gloves that make a (tighter fit. .And if you buy this thing and wear it you , will wish you had bought, something else > and worn it. And the frets of such a life will bring the crow’s feet to your temples before they are due, and when you come to die you will have a miserable time.

l nave seen men ana women ol excessive costume die and I never saw onei of them die well. The trappings off, there they lay on the tumhled pillow, and there were just two things that bothered them—a wasted life and a coming eternity. I could not pacify them, for their body, mind and soul had ■ been exhausted in the worship of costume and they could not appreciate the gospel. When 1 knelt by their bedside they were mumbling out their regrets and saying: “Oh Qod! Oh! God!” Their garments hung up in the wardrobe never again to be seen by them. Without exception, so far as my memory serves me, they died without hope and went into eternity unpreipred. The two most ghastly death-beds on earth are the one where a man dies of delirium tremens, and the other where a woman dies after having sacrificed all her faculties of body, mind and soul in the worship of costume. My friends, we must appear in judgment to anaker for what we have worn on •or holies as well as for what repentances we have excised with our souls. On that day I see coming in Beau Brummel of the last century, without his cloak, like which all England gbt a cloak; and without his cane, like which all England get a cane; without his snuff-box, like which all England got a snuff-box—he, the fop of the ages, particular about everything but Mis morals; and Aaron Burr, without the letters that down to old age he showed in pride, to prove his early |micked gallantries; and Absalom without ^^balr; and Marchioness Fompadour ^Lout her titles; and Mrs. Arnold, the ■of Wall street, when that was the fashion, without her fripperies

haggardness they (hall go eternal expatriation; while sns of Hearenlly society Vashti, who wore the inod,the palatial haechanalians; rho annually made a little it the temple; and Grand^ancestress ol Timothy, ^virtue; and Mary, who to the world; and and mothers and of the present through great into the hingdem who would of heaven, when will oil God, the 'stater, my mother. ran English writer, the s of the nge of the cave by carvings on horn, a even smSkir than the half a head and neck i to the body, -, and WW Site- .

k KISS SjbRf. Koted ActocFut Two FcbMm Adorer* to §h»n»e. IBerUa Tagblattl On* of our most eminent stay* heroee was traveling by train in Swltserland • few-wanks ft'ga. Opposite him sat a couple of handsome young ladies, who not only fairly stared him out of coustOHattJe. btrt madehirVi the topic of their whispered cods Vsrtfttii& i Wdttdred it firtt tty tills delis 8hte attention, the actor good-haul drediy Submitted tt) it, bttt id l#ug njn lie bet {tan td gttt-fr tifed df ‘‘this sort «tf tWhg,’* Ind determined to pdt a.stop to it; When iu *!»*. tunnel,, before teaching Lansnnne, he imprinted, a few Sndible ktfcses o« the back of his band, After the train, emerged from the tunnel the actor sat calm and mpa»ve as if nothing had happened, while e ladies first stared at each other and en began a aeries df mutual recriminaj Mona on the enormity of their conduct In taking such liberties drith tile hero df the footlights. Of course, each blamed the other, and the dispute lasted until the train stopped at I,ausanne. Before lear* te the car the actor bowed to the ladies, hat in hand, and said: “Ladim, the great attention you bestowed on mo during tim journey makes me naturally anxious to learn which of yon ge.ve me In the tunnel so striking a proof of your affection.” Ho did not wait for a reply, hut left the ladies ib their reflection? THE FROSTJED RAIL. Two UUI« Girls I.Irk an ley Iron Ball sag Become Capttres. IBntte (M T.) Miner ] Last evening about supper-time, white the dining-room was crowded, the guests at the Centennial, Hotel were thrown into a state of consternation and excitement bv bearing cries and shrieks coming from hpparentlv an unknown quarter. Some thought the house was haunted, and others trere satisfied that the cries were hamad: A speedy search was made, and it was soon discovered that the balcony was the point whence the sounds emanated, and the voices belonged to two little pets of the household—Pearly Bateman aud Rosa—the daughters of the housekeeper When the crowd had reached the npot the little ones were found prisoners in a manner that is familiar to the older folks, but was somewhat new to them. Together they had walked on the balcony, the rail of which is of iron, and as the frost lookei to tempting they had decided to lick it < *The result was, of course, that both glued to the iron, and, luckily, inal attempting to release themselves ‘ they began a series of shrieks. Dr. who was on hand, promptly pi. pitcher of hot water, and soon, _ , _ absorbing the heat, the youngsters wer released.

How Blind People Write. [Milwaukee Sentinel ] A Milwaukee blind man has written • four hundred-page book. He says: “1 started to write my book in 1872 and finished it in 1879, selling musical instruments in the meantime to support myself and family. We blind folks write on a paper with depressed grooves running parallel to one another. W ith the index finger of the left hand we follow up the pencil point (we can’t use pen and ink), and at the end of each word we cover a little blank space to put the proper distance between them., The i’s and the h’s, the g’s and the other long letters extend above and below the grooves.” Was Well Takeu Care Of. '[London Truth.] Mu: safer Eddin, the lately deceased En.ir of Bokhara, had two hundred and eighty wives, two hundred and ninety female slaves, ten female barbers, nine female cooks, four midwives, twenty-tw* needlewomen and hf*.y washerwomen. Dr. Samcel'K. Cox, Washington, after a careful analysis, pronounced Red Star Cough Cure purely vegetable and most excellent for throat troubles. Price, 25 cents a bottle. Hon. Thos. L. James, ex-PostmasterQen-eral, indorses St. Jacobs Oil as a pain-cure. “Have you any old Roman weapons!” Dealer—“We have none in just now, they are being—rusted.”—Karlsruher SadtricJcten, Dr. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription” is not extolled as a “cure-all,” but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being a most potent specific in those chronlb weaknesses peculiar to women. Particulars in Dr. Pierce’s large treatise on Diseases Peculiar to Women, 160 pages, sent for 10 cents in stamps. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street, Buffalo. N. Y. • THE MARKETS. Nsw York, Feb. V, 1886. CATTLE—Native Steers.6 4 50 9 6 00 COTTON—Middling... • # rLOUB—Good to Choice. 3 75 9 6 60 WHEAT—No. 8 Ked. S1X« 92* HORN—No. 2. 54 « 54* OATS-'.TecWn Mixed. 36*9 39 PORK—New Mess. 11 75 0 18 00 ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling. 0 BEEVES-Good to Choice.... 4 60 0 Falrto Medium.... 4 96 0 HOGS—Common to Select.... 3 76 0 SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 3 76 0 f LOUR—XXX to Choice. 3 00 0 WHEAT—No. 9 Red Winter. 0 No. 3 " “ ... S8*« CORN—No. 9 Mixed. 36 0 36* OATH—No. 9. 30 0 30* RYE-No. 9. 00 0 61 TORACCO-Lugs. 3 95 0 6 60 Leaf-Medium.... 7 60 0 8 00 HAY—Choice Timothy. 19 60 0 IS 00 BUTTER-Cholce Dairy.. 99 0 96 EGGS-Fresh. 18 0 18* PORK—New Mess.. 11 96 0 11 37* BAGON-Clear Rib. 60 6* LAttU—Prime Bteam. 5*0 0 8* 4 75 4 40 5 00 525 3 85 90* 88*

CATTLK-Shlpptng. 3 60 a HOGS—Good to Choice. 4 30 a SHEEP—Good to Choice. 4 50 ® FLOUR-WInter. 4 40 a Patents. 4 75 a WHEAT—No. 2 Spring. 19)4 a No. 2 Red. a COEN—No. 2. 3IXa OATS—No. 2... 30 a POKE—New Mess..'... 11 06 a KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 4 tit) a HOGS—Sales at. 3 60 a WHEAT—No.2.... 12 « COHN—No. 2. OATS—No. 2. NEW ORLEANS. FLOCK—High Grades.. 4 CORN—White... OATS-Choice Western....... HAY -Choice. 11 PORK—New Hess. . BACON—Clear Rib... OOTTON-M lddllng. LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No. 2 Red. CORN—No. 3 Mixed.. OATS—No. 2 Mixed. PORK—Mess. . BACON—Clear Rib. COTTON—Middling.. *1)j» 30 a 47 a so a 40 a ... a «X« ... a 91 a 38)4# 32 a ... a ... a 814® 6 IS 4 60 8 00 4 90 5 50 8014 3014 11 10 5 00 4 15 13 29 28)4 6 10 48 40 19 00 11 50 8X 94 39 32)4 II 50 « 8N

TaKnrajicar [Boston Globe.} Among the queer names found in a racent copy of the Congressional Record were the following, many of which rival the famous inventions and discoveries of Dickens and Thaekery: • Joicy Richwine, lepkaniah Crubaugh, Anna Nation, Margaret Greatheus, Simon Fought, Tunis Rwlclt, Sophia Clump, George Knopsnyder, Boston Fowler; Delilah Knili, Sasser Sul* livhHj GeOrgO Washington Waddle, Albeit tide C'bcfcrutti, Oeestesj* 'icajaii doyoer; Hartford Motherly te fchewbing, David Cornprod. Gocbbdwer, C; C. Colclo, Galvin ti. thick haai Bnodd. Vbtstler and His Satellite. [Pairls fcor. Boston lleraUL] . , Whistler had been notably Witty Uttfiag' the evening at a recent reception, and finally. made a bon ntot more than usually pointed and happy that convulsed his listetieH; Oscar Wilde; wfiowaspremn*, approved Mr. Whistler’s brightness. Sod wondered why he had not thought of the witticism himself. “You will,"promptly replied Whistler; “you will.” Thin lightning comment on Mr. Wilde’s wonderful ability to think of other people’s bright things and to repeat them as his own had, you may imagine, an immediate and most discomforting effect OS Mr* WUds. - - From lather's Sturdy Stoeii: [Chicago Times.] Kate Lather, of Galena, Ford County, Ind., who is a lineal descendant of Martin Luther, had both bones of her right leg broken In a curious manner. She was standing in the snow about ankle deep, when abound came along in a hot chase after a rabbit and ran against her. The shock scarcely staggered her, and hardly baUsed her pain, but when she attempted to step she found it impossible, and investigation showed that both bones of the leg were broken. “ i no hot ifite Ihee, Dr, Fell. The reason why. 1 can SO; tell;" It has often been wondered at, the bat} odor this oft-quoted doctor was in. ’TwaS probably because he, being one of the oldschool doctors, made up pills as large as bullets, which nothing but an ostrich could bolt without nausea. Hence the dislike. Dr. R. V. Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets" are sugar-coated and no larger than bird-shot, and are quick to do their work. For all derangements of the liver, bowels and stomach they are specific. Billiards resemble matrimony, inaa’jnuch^as kisses and scratches are common I Where does all the bad weather go to ; When it clears off!—Chicago Telegram.

Asking One’s Age. A lady asked a gentleman his age. Hereplied: “What you do in every thing”—X L. So does Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein excel all other medicines for coughs, croup and consumption. Walter A. Taylor, Atlanta, Ga. A PECt'UARiTT of stage banquets is the great variety of supes.__ * * * * Rupture, pile tumors, fistulas and all diseases of the lower bowel (except cancer), radically cured. Send 10 cents m stamps for book. Address, World’3 Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Ought a teamster to have a teeming fancy?—National Weekly. Thb most desirable hair dressing ever offered to the public is Hall’s Hair Renewer. Nickel-plated watch—Dog with a new collar.—California Jfavcrick. Pike’s Toothache Drops cure In 1 minute, Stic Glenn't Sulphur Soap heals and beautifies. 26a German Corn Remover kil Is Corns a Bunions A man may have no ear for music, yet have a mind to play.—.V- Y. Journal. fo Opium in Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Cures where other remedies fail. 25a Selected miscellany—Mince pie.—Danville Breeze. Phtsicians prescribe Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, on account of its great curative powers. Why is a dirty man like flannel? Because he shrinks from washing. Ip afflicted with Sore Eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson's EyeWater. Druggists sell it. 25c. The latest thing in balloons —Gas_Sioux falls Leader. A QUESTION ABOUT Browns Iron Bitters aitdmm," ANSWERED. probably l Brown's Ir »Iron Bittern cure everypas BROWrSIRONBinERSte« heededn, wpraduce constipation—all other iron medicines do. BROWN’S IRON BITTERS men Indigestion, Biliousness,Weakness, Dyspepsia. .Malaria, Chills mod Fevers, Tired Feeling,General Debility,Pain in the Side, Back or Limbs, Headache and Nenralgtn—for all these aihnsnts Iran is pieeeribed dafir. BR0WR’SIR0HBinERS,^5t: •fleets Uhs ell other thoronsh medicines. Recti SSSSSSjaBSS-SB _W«i fonottoMa derangements become reguHP, if a narrow mother, abundant sustenance [lied for the child. Remember Brown’s Iron [in the ONLY iron medicine that is not J Phyncians and lkrugyieta recommend it. The Genuine has Trade Marie and creased red Knee TAKE NO OTHER.

uar op nnum ALWAYS CURABLE BY TTSmS MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT.

OVHHfift HUH. Utuuuhp, Bnuu^iM, Stint* and Bltaa, Cmta >i4 Brilin, Strains ds Stitches, Csstraeted Hndaa, Stiff Joint*,

op Annua. Scratches, Sore* and GalU, Sparta, Cracka, Straw Won, Grab, Fat Hot, Heaf All,

IW In t»mU;Mt»M«»ml»to«lc-y»«M>U rai bjht «f all “ratENTS

by Scrofula ot Berofnl* fa ‘he bloodshonld be t'.t ri<f (Bscq^c^s m»y result. Consumption . scr<>“>s of the lungs, and In Its early be'cur'd by purifying the blood and butldsystem. For this Hood's Sarsaparilla It It also cures scrofula srhen It appears la the Jbnn ot running sores, bolls, bunches In the neck, catarrh, or In any other manner. While tt purifies. Hood's Sarsaparilla also rltaliies and euriches'tho Mood. * I hare bean taking Hood's Sarsaparilla for about three months. Before that time my blood was In a terrible condttleB. Afterasl-glt fo- about one month inf appetite was better and my general health greatly improved, for a medicine as good as Hood's Sa sa> psrllia too much eaa not be said,” L. L. Lntsar, Bugbee House, Putnam, Ct. " I hare been troubled with scrofnlafortliree years, bsVtng running sores on my leg. After taking ond bottle of food's Sarsdparillir l gm getting well rapid* tj%m Aba ttRKt, Soutfl Dtferf; 1*4/ Hood’s Sarsaparilla SaSflSf SU.togglsWi tt; six to* &■ Made only t* Co L MOOD jfrpwhwcftrteSfi Maas. IOO Doses Ond Beflef nciHALpoa ._ID RENOWNED 5ALVAT0R FOR INVALIDS AND THE AGED, AN INCOMPARABLE ALIMENT FOR THE GROWTH AND PROTECTION OP IN: fants AnD children, a superior NUTRITIVE IN CONTINUED FEVERS AND A RELIABLE REAYEDf AL.» AGENT IN ALL DISEASES OF THE STOMACH AND INTESTINE* y. ».v • ■*> « AL Cold y shipping depot

Catarrh Don’t Give Up. 1 have hud catarrh tfl hcttd and nostrils bo bad that therb *el*e great sores in my hose. and one place was eat en through. I got Eij*» Cream Balm. Two bottles did the work; My nose and head are i*ell I feel like another man. —C. S. McMiujtx, Sibley, Jackson Co., Mo. We recommend Ely's Cream Balm where a cure for catarrh is called for. It is in most cases a perfect cure — Peck Bros., Druggists. Grand Rapids, Mich. A particle is applied into each nostril; is agreeable to use. Prices'* cents by mail or at Druggists, Send for circular. ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego, Y«, -FEVER

PENSIONS. To Whom Pensions i I EVERY SOLDIER r of the United States* ge To Whom Pensions Are Paid. Disabled la, the service! ___ gets a pension • The loss of a finger, or the use of - finger, or any gun-shot wound or other In jury. gives a pension. A rupc* urerif but slight, will give a pension,. Ruptured veins, or diseases of th« lungs. If you are entitled to a pension don’t delay it. Rejected andi Neglected Claims a Specialty. HT* Send for a circular of Pension and Bounty Aets. Address, FITZ6ERALD & POWELL, U. S. Claim Agency for Western Soldiers, 1KD1ASAPOLI8, IXD.

FREE , Prettiest Illustrated I SEED-CATAIOGUE '-ever prints!. Cheapest [ & best SEEDS grown. ^Gardeners trade a spe- * daily. Jackets only 3c. Cheap aa dirt by oz. & lb. Postage or Exp. paid*

• iinKiiwis numwa nu z>wa. H. Sfll.MW.VY. liockfurd HI.

LIVE STOCK CUTS. Wo will tarnish duplicates j of UVU STOC] OUTB or any other Out shown in any Specimen Book, at or below quoted prices for same. UKe%N«spaperCo. Electrotypers and Stereotypers, 224 & 236 Walnut-st, | ST. LOUIS.

CONTAGIOUS! I am a native of England, and while I was In that country I contracted a terrible blood poison, and for two years was under treatment as an out-door patient at Nottingham Hospital, England, but was not cored* I Buffered the most agonizing pains in my bones, and was covered with sores all over my body and limbs. Finally 1 completely lost all hope in that country, and sailed for America, and was treated at Roosevelt In this city, as well as by a prominent physician In New York having no connection with the hospitals. I saw the advertisement of Swift's Specific, and I determined to given a trial. 1 took six bottles and I can say with great joy that they have cffred me entirely* I am as sound and well as I ever was in my ttfg. „ ___ L. FRED HALFORD. New York C tty, June 12.1885Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Thk Swift Specific Co, Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ua. N. Y- 157 W. 23d Street. ^ "Send for Description and ORTI IAN ■ Fm Maps of NORTHERN PACIFIC I "COUNTRY, the Free Govem■h meat Lands and CHEAP RAILROAD LANDS ba Minnesota, Dakota, Montana. Idaho, Washington and Oregon. The Best Agricultural, Grazing and Timber Lands now open to Settlers. SENT FREE. Address, CHAS. B. LAMBORN, Land Commissioner, St. Paul, Minn, worm, warranted to stand in any climate. ’Ask your nearest dealer for them. Illustrated catalogued mailed free by the manufacturers, LYON A H EALY.162 State St. Chicago^I la No Rope to Cot Off Horses’ Manes. iebrated “ECLIPSE” HALT- ‘ anrt BRIDLE Cemblued, u!t._Bw._ can not be slipped by any horse. Sample Halter to auy part of the U. S. free, on receipt of HI. Sold by all Saddlery, Hardware and Harness. Dealers. Special discount to the Trade. N3F“Send for Prfce-LtstJ J.C. Lighthouse, Rochester.N.Y.

* PortMw rtm*djr for lt>« abort disease; by It* -nda of cum of tba wont kind and of lone suadlnf Un MmL Indeed, m etroae la my faith ia ita eOkaejt TWO BOTTLES FBEB, loxalbar with a vaC wans num on two|naau(r.Oii«iw CB.T. a. •nfforer. Giro 1_ mFoorieta.8.% mm NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO, 8t. Lome. -—- 3S.J Il'-ifSIlSrSSS Without a teacher. Self-Instructor' ParticuUid Send (» If ANT ft STRATTON’S BUSINESS ND SCHOOL, St. Louis, Ho. Circulars without the L_ teat free. Add! urora, Eanet Sheep, Hd --wild tUCERSirSSa 1 FINE Blooded Cattli rltrr.dcwa for sale._ i free. N.F. Boyer ft Co, tie. Shoe Jo, Coale HAIR SsSSI >T.

WOODS & OAMATSEY, fSuce0s»or« to Fleming & McCarty) : /-* proprietors or Star Livery, Feed and'Sale Stables, CORNER FIFTH ANI» WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG. . BuKeiyr and Safa Horses for the poblio st reasonable prices. Horses boartf«i by tbs ila)-;,or wSefc. Give this Arm your tlatrouare, and vou will race Ire ftir treatment. The Wetl-buoWn hostler. At. Kvton. will be font, I always on hand. J. J. ADAIR, Importer of Men’s English and French FURNISHING GOODS, -----------t »'

Shirts, Underwear, HOSIERYand GLOVES i y -LntVtot Stock la the City.

NOVELTIES IN ( Neckwear, Suspenders, . HAH2KER83JSF3, JEWELRY, ETC.

Fine Shirts to Order a Specialty. Your Order Will Have Prompt and Careful Attention. (31 MAIN STREET, CORNER SECOND, - EVANSVILLE, 1ND. ADAMS, M. 1>. M< CKILLUS ADAMS. Can now bo found in their elegant new Business House on the corner of Eighth and ftiMn Streets. *nd have one of the handsomest stores in the State. t ' 'rTheir Stock of Drugs is New and Complete, And they guarantee satisfaction to ail their customers. They invite special attention to their splendid assortment pf new and elegant styles in Wall !Paper, Window Shades, And tlieir Superior Brands of OILS AND MIXED PADTPS. THE BEST BRANDS OP CIGARS AND TOBACCO. f CALL AND SEE ITS. ADAMS & SON, - - Petersburg, Ind.

> * K. R. KING^S EW FURNITURE STORE! - - • I This firm ha^ opened a large stock ot New Furniture, all the latest styles la ,Our goods are all new—no old stock to select from. Our place ot business Is at King’s Old stand where we can be found selling as cheap as any house in the country. We also keep a fu'i stock of UOTERTAKERS’ SUPPLIES E. R. KINGS-, - - - Petersburg, IncL. EUGENE HACK. ANTON SIMON. -Proprietors otTHE EAGLE BREWERY, VINCENNES, INDIANA, Furnish the Best Article of B^gr the Market Affords AND SOICIT ORDERS FROM ALL DEALERS | BOTTLE OR KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES. On Sale at .A.11 Saloons. ISAAC T. WHITE. FRED’K H. BURTON. MARSHAL C. WHITE. KELLER cfc WHITE, Wholesale Druggists AND HEALERS IN Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass AND SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS. No. 105 Main Street, ... Evansville, Ind.

Tma 1884. OSBOBIST BROTHERS Have removed to their elegant New Building on Main street, where they hare a large and splendid line of BOOTS AND SHOES, For Men, Women and Children. We keep R. L. Stevens* and Emmerson1* brands of Fine Shoes. Petersburg, -!*••- Indiana. A. BI/EGBE <fe BEO., ONABLJE MERCHANT TAILORS 'C'Wg, Indiana,