Pike County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 41, Petersburg, Pike County, 1 March 1888 — Page 4
-iTe*. Ur. JfBMhr*.»/ Jm£* ** “This can property be Mid tor John Bhec--I ho accept* the nomination. tt must bo ■act fres-will oBeri i* of the itepubh BranraE feel rd like to shirk the netslnstloo: To get elected to bo oujr chore; For Cleveland hau't wrought the desolation -That poa and 1 foretold la m No. the tamer aaeat* revo lted. And the miller papa hi* reat; And tha aettler1 a wrong* aie righted By the Barchard Accident— Prat— And the conn try Isn't bUgtitedNot to nay great extent! n. It Isn't quite the circus we ooald hope for— The rebel debt was certain to be paid; It Isn’t what we east the honwcope for— "The rebels on the Pension roll*!" we said. And the the folks would be afflicted Under Grover's government. And progress be restricted By the spread of discontent— PTC*— And It ain't as yon predicted— Not to nay great extent! IU. The Nation's credit stand* aaltlgh as ever;’ ta fact, no other nation's stands so high; Tet we declared Ute Democrats would never Maintain it tor a moment—you and L SaXHMAK— . Yea. as we anticipated. And were wont to represent. All the money'd be Inflated, Aad the Surplus would t« spent— Pucx— Aad It isn’t as you statedNot to any great extent! IV. hum— We used to stir up soldiers to dissensions By asking what they fought the rebels tor; But these two years hare given them more peaThan any equal period stnoe the war. SHKKMAg— 4 Yes: the Bureau is directed By a veteran who ‘'went;" So the soldiers are protected. For he gives 'em every cent. PtrcuWhich ain't aa yon expected— Not to any great extent! 80IIUfA!C — I quite incline to shirk the nomination: Twould be an empty honor, and-no mote;. Blaise— For Cleveland haan't wrought the desolatloa That you and I foretold m 'Sk Snsnuas— All I«abor la requited Blaise— With Its CAAh equivalent; Ssmut as— The darkies ain't affrighted; And the surplus Isn't spent— PccxAnd the country Isn't blighted— Not to any great extent! -Pu*
REPUBLICAN WAYS. / Hit Black Record of the Kins-Ridden 1‘mrtjr Miown l> For twenty-three year*, man ami boy, the Republican party acted as though it was the absolute mentor ol the Republic. It were long to tell of the violence of its reign, and the unbroken night of its despotism. Its deeds of darkness would till a volume. Its rogueries were as the sands upon the sea shore; its violations of the constitution as the leaves upon the trees. Every office that existed at the time of Iancy, or that, was created was filled with a partisan, ly a mere partisan in a mul•ases, but an officious, offenaggressive partisan-'—one of kind, pestiferous, insectiver ilways on the wing. In a euse, a Democrat was not rer of wood and a drawer of he belonged to an inferior urnan beings, deficient in and utterly incapable of _ l the administration of the Government because of it, even if he had not been a traitor per se, whose rights the results of the civil war had forfeited, and whose - future toleration or citizenship in the land would have todepend tynn-h upon his future actions. If these brought forth fruits meet for repentance—for example, if he put on a collar of nalitienl serfdom snil
had engraved thereon tho single, word •• slave ”—hU domicile might ' safely then he vouchsafed, aud the graciousness still be extended to him of paying taxes and inhaling a sufficient amount of atmospheric oxygen upon which to exist. Times changed, but not Republican insolence, self-assurauco and imperialism. It had been so'used to proconsuls. So many of the ways of the satrap were iu ways. It had walked | so long in paths that had never been j beset by hostite force or lurking dan- j ger. Its table service had been so long of silver and gold, and its garments so long of purple aud fine linen. The fat Mfto so thick upon its political corpor- „ osity that it would be a Jcshurun forever, kicking when and where» and I whom it pleased. The shoulder strap had for so long been its sheet anchor, - the military order for so long its ultimatum. Federal spoils for sojong had furnished it perfect cohesion; the iron of its war begetting had so long furnished it peffeet discipline. So long had been the sound sleep of its undisturbed confidence, and so thoroughly did it believu in the constant iteration and reiteration of its own hypocrisy and cant, that when one fine day the Democratic wolf did come along sure enough, all it could do. when outside there arose a tremendous hue and cry, was to poke its head through a window and blubber impotcntly: “llow dare Tour*—Kansas Citi/ Times. BLAINE'S OPEN LETTER. Why U> nmS much' Mar SU1I Be Considered a FwwUMUty. •• Your candidate I can not be. ” said Horatio Seymour in 186$, yet he was the candidate. Two days before the assembling of ..the Cincinnati convention ih 1880, Mr. , S. Tikleu. universally credited witlj uncommon astuteness as a politician, wrote a letter to the New York delegation, wherein, having reviewed the |***talection procee<liugs of 1876. he said: I bare itcadfsstlj endenvored to prwerre to tao Democratic patty or the failed Stales the sapreae (sene before the people for their decWn next November, whether there thall be h (orerameot by the eoeereigw people through elections, or a yavenuaeut by discarded »ermsti. holding over by force sad fraud, and I have withheld no sacrifice and neglected no oppartaalty to opioid, orgaaiie and coasoiklaie against the enemies of republican institutions, the great party which alone, under God. cna Si;. eCectuallr res »t their overthrow. Bat he protested that he desired nothing so much as an honorable discharge from leadership which hnd left its scars upon him, and the convention took him at his word. It preserved in Us platform rebuke for the fraud which bad defeated TUdea in 1876. and 1 under another candidate, will ho a moot question always -or not Hr. Tildcn's declinaI unalterable. It is certain, that by the assumption that circumstances would he be a i convention of the party A opportunity of triumph that enjoyed by Jackson’*
— Mr. Blaise’* declining to hare hi* to the Chicago convention may or may not be sincere. The bitter experiences of 1884 would justify the declaration of withdrawal lot the beat possible showing be made for the candidate in that campaign—and no ode could have presented it more deftly than the candidate himself—It remains the fact that Blaine was distinctly repudiated by the American people because of a lack of confidence in the intcgt ity of his character - ns an official The vast Irish vote sum* moned to his aid upon the supposition of his deep-seated prejudice against the Government of Great Britain could not save him. . He would be a bold, man who, having no new evidence to present, would venture a new trial before twelve million American electors and hope for vindication. But audacity is one of Mr. Blaine's marked characteristics This was shown in the swiftness with which the Indianapolis suit for libel was instituted, and the readiness with which, the campaign being over, it was withdrawn, upon the allegation that an impartial jury could not be impaneled in Indiana to try such an issue. To bo in the attitude of having a nomination forced upon him would suit Mr. Blaine's purposes if he still feel that he must have a chance at the Presidency, but such a letter as that from Florence is a dangerous expedient It releases every politician from all sense of personal obligation to Blaine nfid sets him searching for and making interest with a new leader. So far as expression has been beard from the Republican press njam the Florence declaration the willingness to let Blaine go in peace must prove humiliating to a matt looking for protests against the course he indicates as personally necessary and desirable. Whether Mr. Blaine write an open letter for general reading or a private letter, which he insists shall be burned, his reputation makes bis effort unfortunate. No one who knows him will ' incline to the opinion that he dismisses the ambition of fifteen years thus readily. The general inclination will be to await ihe progress of events. But the shrewd, it may be the super-smart observer, Will flatter himself with the notion that the letter was designed to r^ise up a colony of rival claimants for the nomination in order that their contention may create Blaine's opportunitr.
Mr. Blaine knows that the American people look upon the Presidency as a great prize, and will not readily believe that any man having even the mere chance of grasping it will permit'' the opportunity to escape him. Mr. Blaine has not stated that he would under all circumstances decline a nomination. Am! he will be regarded, therefore, as still a possibility.—CA*ruga Harold. ■ wa- ■ • - ■ PRESS COMMENTS -At the close of the war it was an oversight not to include Murat Halstead in a constitutional amendment ’ He feels that he was nothineluded in the settlement and is still fighting.—AUa California. -Governor Foraker will head tho Ohio delegation to Chicago and be Sherman's spokesman in the eonven- j tion. Garfield did something of this kind in ISftO, and we know what the result was.—SI. Louis Globe-Democrat. -Many people still thiuk that Dr. Burrhard did some good work for the Democratic party in 18*4, but if they want to see the doctor eclipsed in that line let them watch Bill Chandler during the next few months.—St Louis Despatch.
-mere is a wuiety-prevauing suspicion that Mr. Blaine's letter means about this: “ 1 will’ take the candidacy it 1 can get it; otherwise 1 shall positively decline to do so, my decision on this latter poiut being irrevocable. —Chicago Sews. -When that great Chicago show scheme is effected and Libby Prison is planted on the shores of the unsalted sea, won't it be a good plan to have Governor Foraker be chief crier at the door aud let Editor Halstead take tickets?— tt’ashiHQtoH Critic (but.). -A Boston paper says that if Mr. Blaine writes a book it will be ven generally read. There is no doubt of , it. That'is the trouble witji whatever Mr. Blaine writes. Even the letters that he marks *'Burn this letter" are always, very generally read. —Chicago Herald. <. -The Florida Republicans are \ s#id to be hopeful; and nobody will grudge them the sweets of hope. Why ' they should be hopeful, however, i doesn't appear. Hon. William E. ! Chandler's mathematical abilities can I not again be used to count then) in. — N. Y. Sun. -A number of Iowa Republicans ; are still under the delusion that the . campaign this fall will turn on the : Drum dag circular. The long, trailing j moss on the back of the average Repub- j lican is to coarse in grain for any use- ] fttl purpose, but it helps to make poli- : tics picturesque.—St Louis Republican. { -Some enterprising showmen are | talking of moving Libby Prison to ; Chicago and setting it np as a money- j making curiosity. A better scheme, ! perhaps, would be to put it on wheels and cart it around the country as a ! kind of bloody shirt campaign docu- ] ment. It would be a very tangible aud ; forcible appeal to the fading memories | of the war. — Chicago Herald. DEVOURING CROW. r—c—M. ntrram or Iowa'* Croat lllooUT-shirt Orcts We can not complain with reason of the Solid South as long as all our energies are bent to making and keeping a Solid North. The great public at large recognizes the fact that the results St the war are secure in the statutes and the constitution, and feels that they are secure beyond doubt and not needful of defense, at,least until they are attacked. The Republican party, in the fall plenitude of ite pdwer, turned away as a last resort from the force bill and the use of the army in Southern elections, aud trusted to time for the settlement of a question not to be settled by force. Haring done this when it had ample power, how can it wisely now propose to return to it when it is out of power? The Democratic party, by some process. is stealing very largely from the Republican parly in the strength of the press. There moat fee Intellectual reasons for this. The Democrats have been gaining the yonng men and first voters very largely who have preferred business issues to partisan issues. Every issue of the war to settled and safely embedded in the statutes and the constitution.— An Stott Register, gr-RtoedrhJtort Organ,
*M ponding relative to the owuersh p of • herd of cattle, and the soluti n d«]i Ins upon the proof of the brand, v *u found on com pari son to be il time* a* large as the branding iron which thi claimant used. Thirteen witnesses were introduced, all of them expert* in branding and cattle hading. They ail swore that when cattle were branded id the dart of the teitson, the brand will never, do matter how largo the animal may grow, get larger than the dimensions of the iron died. On theother hand when either grown cattle or calves are branded :in the light of the moon the scat will spread, and the lighter the moon tbs larger will be the spread. And the suit* involving several thousand dollar?' worth of cattle was settled on this testimonySo the question is legally settled that It lie the moon that does it A Materialistic Epitaph. A Flench physic un, rather demonstrative in his materia' istic philosophy,, has had the following inscription made upon tbs tombstone of his wife! “Here is deposited the matter of which Mrs. --, wife of Dr, Z-, wes composed. De^ prived of its principle of life Octobsr S3. WSt." A Tremendous Sensation would have been created one hundred years ago by th e sight of one of our modern express trains whining along at the rale of sixty miles an hour. Just thiuk-Uoiv our grand fathers would have blared ftt s uch a spectacle! It takes a good deal to astonish people now-u-days, but some of the marvelous cured of consumption, wrought by Dr. Pierce's Golden Mjsiical Discovery, have created wide-spread amazement. Consumption is at last acknowledged curable.. The “Golden Medical Diaeovenr" is the only known remedy for It. If taken at the right time-which, bear in mind, is not when the lungs are nearly gene—it will go right to the seat of the disease r.na accomplish its Work as nothing else in the world can. Tax ne w * ball-pointed * pen will N> used by all reporters of the nat anal gamu next season. —Borlingtn* Frm Fmt. •• (live Him •$, and Let Him Gaess.** We once heard a man complain of fueling badly, and wondered what oiled him. A humorous friend said, “Giro a doctor f3, and let him guess. * It was a cutting satire on some doctor*: who don’t always guess right. You need not guess what ails you when your food don’t digest, when your bowels and stomach are Inactive, and when vour head aches every day, and you are languid and easily fatigued. You are bilioit*, and Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets urill bring you out ail right. Small, sugar-coated. easy to take. Of druggist s. Whs* would this world be wtthout a woman?—a jierfcct blank—like a sheet of paper —not even ruled.
‘•Bad Bms tVorrlcl EtxhtHii Yr«ir«.“ It should have road “married,” but the proof-reader observed that it amounted to about It e same t hin g, sod so did hot draw bis blue pencil thrcujh the error. Unfortunately there was«ohsiderabio truth iu h:s observation. Thousands of husbands are' constantly worried almost to despair by the ill health that afflicts their wires, and often robs life of comfort And happiness. There is but one safe and sure way to change all this for the better. The ladies should use Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. Wbo lovely woman stoops to folly in these days the elevates her bustle in a very unseemly fashion—.Vn» Ham _V>«. Pi so'* Cure for Consumption is the best Cough Medicine. If you don’t believe it, take a dose. By druggists, 35c. a bottle. Ir there is any one who should he * wrapped in slumber,” it is s man who tnorea FREE! A 3-foot French Glass, Oval Front, Hickel or Cherry Cigar Case. MebCiirsn o5LT. It. W. Taxsill A;Co.,Chicago. Thb larber’B apprentice is genend’y a stripping fellow.—Bastes CommtrcM Uiisertuer. Rain advertisement of Blue Grass Region elsewhere in this paper. What is the difference between a tube and a foolish Dutchman? One is a hollow cylinder and the other is a aiUy Bollisiltt
THE MARKETS. New Yook. February *7.1S88. CATTLE— Native Steen. ( 4 «» COTTON-Middling... U'H* FLOUR Good to Choice...... !» H WHEAT—No. i Red. i CORN-Ka*.■,. Wii* S» © 5 40 10S S (»J •H OH* 43 « 8M a is no ky 14 SJ 85 O » u us S!* 7* 35 OATS—Western Mired.a PORK—Ideas mem. » 33 ® 15 50 ST loots COTTON—Middling. 0 REEVES,—Good to Choice. 4 35 n 4 75 Fair to Medium_ S 50 a 4 00 BOGS—CV>mnioo to Select. 4 35 4ft 5 40 SHEEP—Fiiir to Choice. 3 50 «4 5 35 FLOUR—Patent*... 4 00 a 4 15 XXX to Choice_ * 40 h SIS WHEAT-No. * Red Winter. . S ' c S® *!*» CORN—No. * MUed. 45mi 4. , OATS-No.*.. S#fc<t »J RYE-No. *. 5# a *>•« TOBACCO—Lugs. S S' f ‘ Leaf—Medium_ % 00 HAY—Ooicc Timothy. 13 to BUTTER-Cboice Dairy. S3 EGGS—Freak. . O PORK—standard Mesa ;SC*i 14 £5 a BACON—Clear Rib.. St,a LARD—Prime Steam. WOOL—JFair to Choice . 33 j CHICAGO. CATTLE-Shipping... 3 00 © BOGS—Good to Choice . .-itT'nS 10 © SHEEP-Good to Oho ce. 13 60 ® FLOUR—Winter. ^50 * Pate DU. 3 75 a •WHEAT—No. 3 Spring. 75St» COKN-So. A. © OATS-No.3 White.. 37-*© PORK—New Mess. © 13 Of, KANSAS CITY. CATTLE -Shipping Steer*.... 3 *5 40 4 S) HOGS-Sale* at. 4 70 a 5 » WHEAT—So. *. a. 73 OATS-No. 3... 3S a *<H CORN-S o. A,. « a 43 NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR-High grade.3*5 « 4t0 CORN—White.. W a OATS—Choice Western-. 3* *4 HAY-Choice. SO S3 PORK—New Me**.. . BACON—Clear Rita_ .... *S<& »•* COTTON—M.ddl n*.' .... -t» IS LOUISVILLE. WHEAT—No. * Bed.. tt «* CORN—No. 3 Mixed.. © 5314 & f» 5 60 5 40 3 45 4 50 tit* 4'V ao* ii 85HM © 14 5a *•* OATS—Nat Miaea. PORK-Slew. BACON—Clear Rib.. COTTON—Middling. 35 16 t« 8 ' 10K !. Bitters the Test of Tom, aU Blaenau* if the LITER, gTOK
At a, laonmav »t*pxku,cosstiM1XOV, JATODIC*. SKXHEADACffiK, B1LI0r8C0»LADns,*t Atwppatr attainder tefcMftdaHadnw.
TeUuqr Destroyed By dysperwii, bodily comfort may be «- rived aeaji by the potent aidofHoo tec tern Stomach Bitters, which renews the proc - esses of digestion and assimilation, thus furnishing the system with the elements of rigor, the groundwork of functional regu - larity. Ferer and ague, constipation, liver and kidnev t roubles, rheumatism, arc overcome by this- superb regulator, tonic anil! appetizer. Pips Lises-—those written ta favor of smoking.—roam S&iHg*. Untis burdensome. alike to the sufferer andallarouni hum whiledyspepsiaandits Attending evils hold sway. Complaints Of torn nature cam be speed ilv cured bv taking Prickly Ash Bitters regularly. Thousands OQce thus afflicted now bear cheerful testimony as to its merits. As awkward waiter frequently plays thui deuce with the tray.—Motel MaiC Ptnrtirr Feeble Lungs Against Winter with Hale’s Honey of Hove hound and Tar. Bike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. In high feather—a new bonnet at the the-. Fen Throat Diseases. Coughs, Colds, etc., effectual relief U found >» the use or “ Mroim't B.\>ncKal TnchetFries $5 ot*. A'o'd only fa tuxes: AM object of charity—to So good, of COUrse.—frf.M mnjt js._ It afflicted with Bore Eves use Dr. Isas.e Thompson's Eye Water.Druggists sell it.Sc. A chluiitt bawl—Please, mister, gimme a oenti—HMMnffne Critic.
TOnic la prepared soMy fbr th s enrepf O'UH'lahits wWeli Ifllrlalt ^nioanWod. I t wire* tone aoi ;:f ei*f «> tu the otertne organs, sail
corrects uaozrrcu* «...--- -«* tie*. Itisof jrreat valueVa eh a«?»* of life. Thensettf MBit B El. I,** FESi.llali TOXIC Coring pr**naacv creatly reUetea the pain* ©i ntotherhooa ana promot'» apee^ly recorerr. It e**$sts nature to aafely make the critical chance fr»>m girlhood In ^-lac**!. It u pkasvot to the taste and may bo __ - Jtiapl^asMitto t takes a* all times frith j'erfect safety. rriee, 91 • roe. *AJVB ft AXL VW OC.'fiT*. __ a.S.MEKPvKLL DRUG GO.M&r*?- tJT.LOCIS . rO* AXL DISORDERS OF TH3 Stantssh, Llucr H®" nsd Ec^sls -TAKE—— LIVES! PILLS 1 believe Piso’s Cure tor Consumption saved my life.—A. H. Dowell, Editor Enquirer, Edenton, N. C., April 23,1SS7. Tlie best Cough Medicine is Piso’s Cure for Cositi*mos. Children take it without objection. By all druggists, iae. CURES WriEHE All ELSE f AitS. SCouffh Sjrrup. Ta.«te8good.
Neuralgia, Headache. Son Threat, Sprains, Bruises, Baras, Wounds, Lama Back, And Alt Mas Of Aa Inftammatort nature, SaM Vy DranUU. COa u« *1.00. *0X0 BOOK. ■«Ti |m mu. Addrau WIZARD OIL CO., CHICAGO. Something New, ON APPROVAL. | _ Settd jroar uddrm oc a Paata! Cat* far iM FnliU of warranted FLOWER SEEDS, k!cci what yoo auh at tell price aad Adiita FLOWUI CITY SEED CO, Ha. *3 Stmt* isl KocbMUr, K. I. The Blue Grass REGION or the mrbe xo buzsjlcus. Tht on hr peefij Row Hiae-cr*** Uod Ear* edtWBt WtaUf I'Mare llmte, struck emi *k»w **»• boijrht at purree*. to tk* Mulatto roil land «>f OMtkimt JBtooaaH. 11 to to ike *%»•• Utttnd* m» *l«i f^auoii* Kb* (.tom R« siw» of kntwekf, wad has « Itaweoaw nil Isewvflgr rhtm4 with nko*p>h*te. i losc-r. Blear Caww Or*kw4 knMaal liaereh; do t xceedmgbr well. * bile it to a food mb, wad a a e£ eo) - BSi&Kg&Si! K5S®E$& Q WEBB WKIE Sartajrflrki. *0.; G*x A. PTRlA rum CUjr. M«x; L. R. SlI>W CT.1T* — * ~
k JONES rm”SK.E!£Kr " Irm Untn. SuiT tnnait. Mam ■MM tu» mm* Ml wMmk ■sajissssysv
Hood's gamaparUls is prepared n»m •n1™tlandelion. Mandrake. Dock. 4*nlp«f Jleriie«. »na other wei! known TegetaWe remedies, ip iiwa » peculiar manner as to derire the fnll mitlielnal ralne of each. It will cure, when In the poorer or medicine, scrofula, salt riienm. sores, bolls, pinple*. ail humors, dyspepsia. biliousness. slek healMhe. indigestion, generaldebllltr.entarrb. rheumatism. kidney and lirer complaints. It orereomes tl inter tremfi tired feeling and Purifies the Blood 44 Seven years ago. while By little boy V Isyi-« In the yard, he was bitten by es^dor. The J entered his blood, and sores sofi»broke out about his body. Several times we _ the sores up. but lu spit© of ail we Would soon break out aeain. Fir Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and be took one —- third of another, when the sores disappeared. He has not a sore spot on him now, and I consider nna perfectly cured.” WM. H. B. Ward. Downinytoi* Penn.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
SoM bT »n *«***»“- tl: sixftwIS. P3-(; arsfl only by G l. HOOD * <XETApottiecaHea, Lo« ell. Maaa. iOO Doses One Deiistr
Sold by *!S arngststa. H:»lxfor«. Prepared only »y C.LHOO»*€O.Ajwt!iac«riea.LowaU,Jla*a. 106 Doses One Dollair
OF LIME, SODA, IEOH. CURES COJBOIWIW, cor g ns. colds, asthma. BliOACHITIS. DEBILITY. WASTING DISEASE*. ■»« all •CROFTLOTS BI MORS. Almost M pa’atsbl* nwsrn. Knit b» taken with pleasure hr arilcam perwna and chi drcu.
W FLNE«yE, BIX>OT>. biuin. other preparations of Cod-Iirer #nlW n» (M UsA Vil; II Hi' i ’*v v > — - •■ - »w its hes% reeo«»B«iii!jWiw** ££!££*. MiKUigictoi**ion r llOSWili lift**. 8pw m u.w»w~ LSlSike. 6yaU<J «.sa*ta^# Touv£-7k roar SmmT «.-M crt wialkSr. kwiM«g. U*.*ff3tel eltcuAur, whkii wiU uo
THE ARK AND HAMMER BRAKE SODA fa unexcelled tor ito lerfal purity, strength and whiteness. Impure Soda SLIGHTLY DINGY wUtetd.r,lIt may but a comparison with CHIRCH A CO.'S ARM A HAIHUm * .-.'ill nil ovr the diiifereacC. _
be «rS9B£todlftpoooofin bulb, f wnasnallfhaottc'i i <rfAh*lr«oa«, to an j CM Mpabfca of pm rbaric* larvate, we matin “M tMRb tcsnltiar la o*rr obtaining tl»e e.i--na atoen ftiik ana Hu tin Rlbhoa Ke«:K.nnts^ terwalof ik*i»nr«« th«<- «b« Imported tU» &*«.** gocd*. Tb« jp jp>ad» may bfdvp'etktl uoonaoaaportorto anj.U*s*»g »o b# vigfci. htlMrav bwl of Anrtkt. To* n'*fht ijr iS%v it over known. A trand Low S f.tnUal lidlaa; bcau*irt»l,olegant»ct»'.ije cv» «l* absolutely f»vK» ”• fear* expended ito/UMia-ia at dollar* In tfei* dire. :!«■. as*l «*a oflh*an finMMhr, mrM,nil moat ccn*pbffta»»Ki taunt ribbon*, la *mr c- niecirai.le abad* and wW It,todaj I of MKoifcttt jraaatr. adapfa-d frr nock-wor, bonnet »ir.u*o, b, it u mruiaxa, bs>wa.‘ acarfa, «IreM tririurbiga, aidi-quilt week,el note. Seaao of tbeae ttmuuanas* Utiroo juiUtM *|»»ii m i* IhhP”thMich miuna,iHw« yaWwaiwturtal U ^ y^1" I be Bar bo d**i«v-ad«i on aa Ixnutiiti?. «*6>-ie<l. fcubKu abb andalo- • __-_I '...tinlofn Fir^ttle 1'ooipaolon, pobtUbeJ moctfeJj by no, hi_nil JrrJ, bj tbora i.-titij——** *•** J*‘**T*.*** *** b*l»OOt JKO- , odicol cf like klod m ih* wtaldL Vory hrpr a ad bi Bilatnl* flki>T»t* J: regular price 13 CM. peryear; d im|3<S coniwaaawa eri!l arod » to yon foe a trial y«*r, ao-i will abo wad Wxeftfer ribbooat tj aaaad 2 box** rto.:* aabacriprioaa and 4I«oxes» I. On^tnt postal ‘ toMf ht **-u» lor H-*. than $I. Get 3 fH^afc to join jm tboioby «•- tiatf 4«db«rriptlem» and 4 bcitofbr Mat* f I; can bllbtwri Ktnntca. Tb* above orifcr to baaed on tLla brt :—t! xeewfeorendf eba periodical rrf rtrd to. fair eao y ar. wan* H tl rfouftrr. and MV ui ib. 1\in price Aw in It » t« afto* ywt • J»d nob^ow, tkatM, aak* nm*». Wo make tfet ytrat nfi r la artn to at net Main 29 V ‘ ■ un» Mtfcocribefx, who, aottcv.lMKMit year, and he ycora itotnfl»r, ahall ivwan! os «k I a prog*.bocanar tbo majority of itoia trttt wbh tomww tl i-ir •Otuuriybuoa*. and will do <o. Tto tawy iwfoml n bat a i taall aattwa of the wire yon »wU taaoo u» juy at any star • tar tawb Mattox amort rnent offer Inferior nbbona. Bent latipam m toewa; yonartli net ft*ily »wwiite«aatil oAiryinaaoaZL «*fe daSWre gwuotmmL B«n*y reftukd-dtnaai wia«|W feccly wfefed. Batter cat baeat,«tKadrt vua.fcr Obiy I* ora» t apy«uraram._ A^tow. B. EAlUiT 4 utx, ftauituut, rociui at, .tUism, WlAI* UU9 r*raf«a}llMtoiHaa
W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. FOR GENT LEItfBN. Tht only Im calf AMB gflm Si hoc> In the world maUe witlMat Hack* or wall- A'* stylish and dnnMeas those co»iin* 15or*©, ani hiiTtiur no tacks or nails to wear lhe stocking or In ft Ihe fleet, makes them as comfortable aod well -fitting as a band sewed shoe. Buy the best. Non< *, sen aine uaI«js stamped on bottom “W. I* Dotf tie SB Shoe. m L. DOrGLAS S4 SHOE, t; be original and only hand sewed welt S4 shoe, w a belt equals cssttmeads shoe© costing from IB to I?. T.i> liOI GLAA - IB It W. __ ceiled for hearv wear. w. I* DOrGLAS at SHOE is «orn by all Bsjr*. and is the beet school shoe in tii t world. Au the above goods are made in Coop b m. Barton and Lace, and if not sold by your di aalar, —““ W. L. DOrGLAS. Brockton. Mania arxAiBnu»rtfn«mM»r«*>w
Take an Agency at Once fcf Be* uB woodtorfan* flitteOir. HIIX'B ALBrU, hr TVu. K. R1U. i«thoro»'1 in JUnnal ofEauUt Mid IMM IVrmt.” «» Pe r -mu, 1.000 ISBdedljUi SeUi at (right. Dial delay If jm want a pvt or the daee territory now namfiL'i rh Adrirtn* miL STAItBMO BOOK CO. IgMlkMi. 133 Stale Street, • . CK UMO. BJL ir>mna>nt>mr.ewm<ra "" rr—S'
HAT AILS YOU? Do yen fert dull, languid. >'>*-*$'*£*•.’*£* fes-, and indetcribably miserable. both pbys^ call}- and menially: experience a sense of fullness or bloating after earing. or of goneness,'" or emptiness or stomach in the morntng, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in a£h£S154h!*£3mSP before tlie eye*, nervous prostration nr exhaustion. Irritability of temper, hot f ustaea, alternating with chine sensation sharp, biting, transient mins We and there, cold feetTdrowsiness after meals, wakefulness. or disturbed and uurefrsshing sleep. constant, indescribable feeling of dread, or of lmpeudyou have all, or any oonaidenible number of these symptoms, you arc suffering from that moat common of American maladies— Bilious Dyspepsia. or Torpid Liver, associated with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more complicated your disease has become, the _._ii__V i a its" gar arfflna tir. riTrct * wviucii will subdue it. if taken according to fflH’ctions for a reasonable length of time. If nos cured, complications multiply and Consumption of the Lungs, Skin Disease*. Heart Disease, til__ • 1 L’i.lnoe hiaiilan AP At flPP BTSVW Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave maladies are quite liable to set in and* tiooaer lUiUUUlCS U« V- \|uivv ^-- - or later, induce a fatal termination. Dr. Pleree»« Golden Jlediral Discovery acta powerfully upon the Liver, and through that great Wood-purifying organ, cleanse* the system of all blood-taints and impurities, from whatever cause arising. It * equally efficacious in acting upon th-i Kidneys. and other excretory organs, dec using, strengthening, and healing tiietr diseasis. A* [i^t tr lip, f d* liiiii,, —* * ci uc,i, in — — —- — ^ ilc appetizing* restorative tonic, it pr<-motes duration and nutrition, thereby building up nigpunon Hiiu uuiriuDu, tuvicw; puuwus both flesh and strength. In malarial dintriot* this wonderful medicine has *aI“S)Ill*rT“*l IBIS WUUIKTIUI uicuiviut: j celebrity in curing Fever and Ague. Chills and Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases- kiss Dr.’Pierce’s Golden Medical Pis* cover? CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Btotcn, or nrupuon. to too worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum. “ F»ver-norea,“ Scaly or Bough Skin, in short, all ddeasea caused by bad blood are conquered liy this powerful, purifying, and Invigorating me*, cine. Great Katins Ulcers rapidly bed under influence. Especially has It man* potency in curios Tetter, Edema, , Boils, Carbuncles. Sore Eyes. Scrotand Swellings, Hip-joint Dk ■ . -■ m" Goitre, or Thick Keek. lings, Got_. „ __. . and BHifed Glands. Send ten cents In stamps for a large Treatise, with colored pirn tea. on Skin Dleeases. or the same amount for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections. “FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.'* Thoroughly cleanse it by using 1Golden Medical Dfocovery, and good digestion, a fair skin, buayant spirits vital strength and bodily health will be established. CONSUMPTION, which is Scrofula or the Longa, la airested and cured by this remedy, if taken in the earlier stages'of the disease, From ltn over this terribly fatal d abandoned that name as too restrict* e for a medicine which, from its wonderful Liver, Blood, and Lungs. For Weak Lunas. Spitting of Blood. :5horU of BreathT Oirooic Nasal Ottairh. Bronchitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred affections, it is an eflkdent remedy. Sold by Druggists, at $1.00, or Six Ilottles fsy*send ten cents in stamps for Dr. PlereeT book on Consumption. Address, «63 Bain St, BUFFALO, N.T.
THOROUGH BUSINESS EOOCRTION. BRYA STT A STRATTON. The Louisville Business College, Ooznar Tfrrd ksd Jefferson Streets, Louisville, Xy. SNTRAKCS: HQ. 400 THOO) STREET. M-Etpi.Mii teassMp,S!ioiajiiTslaBpl! InisITraiiiiit For Colles* as R. BERRSDGE A CO., * - >rs to Woods Sc Oanatsoy.) PBOPRIETORS OP * Star Livery, Feed and Sale Stables, CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG. 3, reoeire falx NEW FURNITURE STORE! This Irm has opened i luge stock of Haw Furniture, alt the latest styles Ik Bedsteads, lartotejais, Qsirs. tans, tail Cases, Tables, Sales. Our foods are all new—no oil etock to select from. Onr place of buslnesa la at Kina t #0 Stand, where we can be found selling as cheap as any house In the country. We al o f -■* a lull stock of UNDERTAKERS’ SUPPLIES F. M. BANKS Petersburg, Ind.
DRV GOODSJOHN HA-MMOISTD. NEW GOODS To which hedirecta attention Hia DRV GOODS are flrat clasa, and the atoek Is large Hats, Gaps, Boots, Shoes and Notions. dive him a call and yon will he convinced that be la giving BARGAINS on hla entire stock. SOLID GOODS AT LOW PRICES. EUGENE HACK. ANTON SIMON. —Proprietors ot— THE EACLE BREWERY. VINCENNES, INDIANA, Furnish the Best Article of Beer the M&rket Affords AND SOICIT ORDERS FROM ALL DEALERS BOTTLE OR KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES. i On Bale at All Saloons. ISAAC T. WHITE. FRED’K H. BURTON. MARSHAL C. WHITE. TTPSTallsSR tto WHITE, “Wholesale Druggists AND DIALERS IN Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass and surgical instruments. No. 106 Main Street, - - - Evansville, (nd.
TH33 OSBOI^ BROTHERS v m»r* ignored to their elegant Xew B^uildtag^oBMairStreat, whew they *»▼« » Urge ml BOOTS AND SHOES. Tot new. Women and Children. We keep R. L. Stern** and Xmmenon’e brands . oat line Shoe*. OSBORN BROTHERS, Petersburg, * - * • * Indiana. O. -A-. BURGER & BRO., FASHIONABLE MEBCHANT TAILORS, ! Petersburg, Indiana, Kim tamed Mr La® M if Late Styles iif Piece GoodL Consisting: ol the very bast Suitings and Sroadeiotha. Perfect fits and Stylos Guaranteed. Prices as low as Elsewhere. ADAIR. I FINE SHIRTS TO ORDER >:AND>: Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, Etc.
