Pike County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 9, Petersburg, Pike County, 19 July 1888 — Page 4

The Brat reason that t mention an leading to this spirit deriv'd in the*«ext, is the consideration that the poorest of u« hsve ail that is indispensable in life. We make • great add about our hardships, hut how little we talk of our blessings. Health of . body, which Is given in largest quantity to those who have never been pelted, and fondled, and spoiled by fortune, we take aa a matter of course. Itithcr have this luxury an i have it alone, than, without it. look out of a palace window upon parks of deer stalking between fountains and statuary. These people' sleep sounder on a straw mat tress than fashionable invalids on a couch of ivory and eagle's down. The dinner of herbs taste* better to the appetite abarjiened oa a woodman's ax or a reaper's scythe than wealthy indigestion experience* sealed at a table covered with partridge, and venison, sad pineapple. The grandest luxury God ever pare a man ia health. He who trades that <>« for all the pslacca of the earth is infinitely cheated We look back at the glory of the last Napoleon, but who would have taken his Versailles and his TuiUeriea if with them we I tad-been obliged to take hi* gout I "Oh,” says some one. 'it isn't toe grosser pleasures 1 covet, but It Is the gratification of an artistic and Intellectual taste" Why, my brut ter, you have the original from which these picture* are copied. What is a sunset on a wall compared with a sunset Sung In loops of fire in the heavens! What ts a cascade silent on a can vs* compared with a cascade that make* the mountain tremble, it* spray ascending like the departed spirit of the water slain on the rock* I Oh. there is n great deal of hoi low affectation about a fondness for pictures on the part of those who never appreciate the original from which the pictures tire taken As though a parent should have no regard for a child, but go ia- . to ecstasies over it* photograph. Bless the Lord lo-slay, oh, man! oh, woman! that though you may he shut out' from the works of a Church, a Bierstadt, a Kubeas and a Raphael, you still have free access to a gallery grander than the Louvre or the Luxemburg or the Vatican—the royal gallery oil the noonday heavens, the King's gallery oil the midnight sky. Another consideration leading us to a spirit of contentment is the ta t that our happiness is not dependent upon outward circumstances You see people happy and miserable amid all circumstance*. In a family where the last loaf is on the table, and the last stick of wood on the lire, you sometimes And a cheerful confidence ig God. while In a Very fine place you will nee and hear discord sounding the warwhoop, and hospitality freeling to death In Ihe cheerleaa parlor. I stopped one day on Broad way at the head of Wall street, at the foot of Trinity Church, to see who seemed the happiest people passing 1 judged from their looks the happiest people were not those who went down Into Wall street, for they had on their brow the anxiety of the dollar they expected to Blake; nor the people who came out of Wall street, for they had on their brow the anxiety of the dollar they bad lost; nor the people who swept by in splendid equipage. for they roet-a carriage finer tnaa theirs. The happleqt person in all that crowd, judging fro pi the countenance, was the woman who sat at the apple stand battling I believe real happiness oftener looks out of the window of an humble home than through the opera glass of the gilded hex of a theater.

r~ 1 lad Karo growling on a throne. I and Paul Binging ln » dungeon. I find Kin* Ahab going to bed at noon through melan “cboly, while near by U Nabnh contented la the pceseeaton of a rineyard. Hamaa, Prime Minister of Persia, fret* himself almost to death because a poor dew will fiat Up his hat; and Ahitbophel, one of tho i lawyers of Bible times, through r of dying, bangs himself. The wealthSect man. forty years ago. ta New York, when congratulated over his large estate, replied: “Ah! you doa't know how much troubto 11 have in taking care of it.” Byrou declared la his last hours that he had never seen taore than twelve happy days in ail hts life. I do not believe he had seen twelve minutes of thorough satisfaction, si I. said: ”1 turn with disgust i tho cowardice and selfishness of man. I hold line a horror, death U repose. What I have suffered the last twenty days is beyoed human comprehension:” While, ea the other hand, to show how oee may be happy amid the most disadvantageous circumstances, just after the Ocean Monarch had been wrecked in the srheu, the captain heard a long. a sweet song, coming over Mm water, sad ha bore down towards that voice, and found ft was a Christian woman an a plank of the wrecked steamer, singtoff ta Us tune of ‘-St Martin's." Let me to Tay While the “ >*y. laearmeroU, > .• high ” to (Mart rtght toward God aad man- ws i happy. The ktsit wrong toward God why we sbeaid come le the text is the fact

Up imp lit be. Rut children do neyknow as much iui a father. 1 cun tell you why you j arc not largely affluent, and why you have ! not been grandly successful. It la because you can not stand the temptation. if your path had been smooth, you u-ould have depended upon your own surefooted- | ness: but tied roughened that p»th, so you | hare to take hold of 11 is hand. If tho weather had been mild. you would hare loitered along the water courses, but at j the first howl of the storm you quickened your pace Heavenward and wrapped j around you the warm robe of a Suriour'a righteousness. “fChat have I doue I" say* the wheat-sheaf to the farmer, “what have 1 done that you bent me to hard with your flail!" The farmer makes no answer, but the rake takes off the straw, and the mill blows the chaff to the wind, and the golden grain falls down at the foot of the windmill. After awhile, the straw, looking down from the mow upon the golden grain banked pp on either side the floor, understands why the farmer bent the nheatsbeaf with the flail Who are those before the throne! The answer cam* : - These are they who. out 1 of crest tribulation, bad their robes n h ul and made white in the blood of the Lamb'' Would to Uod that we could understand that our trials are the very best thing for us. If we had an appreciation of that truth, then wg should know why it was that John Nnyra. the martyr, in the very inidat of the flame, reached down an 1 pirkrd up one of the fagots that was consuming him, and kissed it, and said: •• Blessed be tied for the time when 1 was born for this perferment." They who suffer with Him on earth shall be glorified with Him la leaven. Be content, then, with such things as you have. Another consideration leading us to the spirit of the text is the assurance that the Lord wil provide somehow Will He who holds the water In the hollow of His hand allow ilia children to die of thirst! Will He who owns the cattle on a thousand bit's, and all the earth's luxuriance of gralu and fruit, allow His children to starve! Uo out to-morrow morning at five o'clock into the woods and hear the birds chant. They hare had no breakfast, they know not where I hey will dine, they haTe no idea where they will sup; But hear the birds chant atelveo'clock iu the morning. “ Behold the Ton is of the nir; for they sow not, neither d» they reap, nor gather into barns, yet your Heavenly Father feedelh them. Are you not much better than they >" Bcvcn thousand people, in Christ's time, went into the desert. They were the most Improvident people 1 ever heard of. They deserve! to starve. They might have taken food enough to last them until they got back. Nothing did they take. A lad. who had more wit than nil of them put together, aske l his mother that morning for some loaves of bread and some fishes. They were put Into his sachet. He went

out Into tne f rom tots psovtsion the seven thousand were fed. and the mate j they ate the larger the loaves irrew, until the provision that the boy brought to one saehol was multiplied so he could not have carried the fragments home in six sachets. 1 “ O," you say, “ times have changed, and { the day of miracles has gone.” 1 reply that, what (cod did then by miracle. He I does now in sortie other way, and by natural laws. u I have been young.” said l' ivid. “ but now I am old; yet have 1 never, area ‘die righteous forsaken, nor bin seed begging bread.” It is high time that you people who are fretting about worldly circumstances, and who are fearing you are coming to want, understood that the oath of the eternal Ood is involved in the fact that you are to bars enough to eat and to wear. * Again: t remark that the religion of Jesus Christ is the grandest influence to make n man contented. Indemnity against a'l financial and spiritual harm! It calms the spirit, dwindles the earth into insignificance, and swallows up the soul with the thought of Heaven. O ye who have been going about from place to frtace expecting to And in change of circumstances something to giTO solace to the spirit, t commend you. this morning, to the warmhearted, earnest, practical, common sense religion of the Lord Jesus Christ. "There is no pence, aailh my Ood. for the wicked,” and as long as von continue in your niu yon will be miserable. Cotflo to Christ, Hake Him your portion, and start for Heaven, and you will bo a happy man— you will be a happy woman Yet, my friends, notwithstanding all these Inducements tea spirit of contentment, 1 have to tell you this morning the human race Is divided into two classes— those who scold and those who get scolded. The carpenter wants to be any thing but a carpenter, and the mason anything but a mason, and the banker any thing but a banker, and the lawyer any thing hut a lawyer, and the minister any thing but a minister, aad every body would be bappy If be wore only somebody elsa The anemone wants to be a sunflower, and the apple orchards throw down their MoasuAas because they are not tall cedars, and the scow wants to be s seboouen, and, the stoop would like to bo a seventy-four pounder, end parents have the worst chil

Into the cool ses to ,°Jp ‘he“ ** will S Sow;’* and the earth and sleep tn my bosom 1 say: “Hush! while 1 le hymn;" and while six strong men carry us out to our last resting place, and ashes come to ashes and dust to dust, we will see swo scarred feet standing amid the broken foil, and a lacerated brew bending orar the open grave, while a voire, tender with all affection and mighty with all omnipotence will declare: “I am the resurrection and the life; hethnt bellereth tn Wh, though he were dead, yet shall he lire.” Comfort one another with these and the trees ■curl will say and the winds sing thee BEING AN ANCESTOR. The Moat adftof.etorjr ml All the lUesattwlnsMl an Msskinl. Of all the bene Sts and blessings which fame may be supposed to confer upon mankind it Is dittnilt to think of any thing which brings to the honored Individual leas satisfaction t han the glory of being an ancestor. IVsthitmorous honors must always be regarded as barren an unprofitable, but In the case of most of them there is some feist foretaste in anticipation. Whatever a man has dons, ho has not only the satisfaction of actual achievement, hut he may enjoy the hope, more or less tangible, that some time his merit may be recognised and due credit he given to him by posterity, although his contemporaries deny his meed of praise, la the case of descent, however, the men who appreciate the fact that they are founding families are so few as not to count in the argument; while no precfcnce yet vouchsafed Vo ordinary mortals can put an individual in possession of the knowledge that n century or two after his grave is filled la he will become famous as the great great greet grandfather of a poet, n statesman or • hero. And when one comes to think of it. It is doubtful If one deserves any especial credit for being an ancestor. Even the principles of heredity hardly justify one in attributing a man's greatness or his virtues too exclusively to his forbears, and, la any case, the remoteness of an ancestor from the glory of his desrendenta makes it difficult to regard him in any way out an a figment of the brain. There is a shadowy unreality about the whole troop of progenitors which renders them at best little more than men; names; and indeed ancestors are mostly fictitious beings, creations of the brain conveniently fashioned to suit the taste of whoever devises them, and then ticketed with the misappropriated name ef some defunct worthy, probably as unlike this false image as possible. There are plenty of people whose only exhibition of leugination Is In this direction, and thejir conjuring up of fictitious forms is generally the most effective when it is least conscious. The bygone personages whose names are applied as labels to the fanciful ereat'oas of the ancestor maker would doubtless have been sufH firstly astonished could they have seen or foreseen what Iheir alleged presentiments would be like. Indeed, it is to be feared t hat they would have been keenly pricked by unavailing, remorse, because they in reality fall «© fi»r short ef the more than human perfection of these shadows, and perhaps that is one of the compensations to he set down is balancing the privation of getting no satisfaction in being an ancestor. It Is just as well, after all, to know uothing about it Our descendants will not know us, and, looked at in alargc sense, no huma n being is even really hon ored as an ancestor at all, but at most ieuds his name to a tiguirnlof the brain of some later generation.— Stolon fuuu«r.

HASTE AND WORRY. Two lopontoiublr Mental Mas AlttlAt thr Stomorh. There are two mental ains against the stomach, whlc h bring about a terrible running account, the full payment of which often completely ruins us These are haste tnd worry.' None of us are entirely guiltt«s in these lvsspecta. We tell children that it is "bed manners" to eat fast; we liken them to pigs when they do it; but I hare often questioned whether they were half as much to be blamed as either the mother wh o could not find time to eat her own meal because she was full of care for others, or the father whose one thought is to swallow hia boiling coffee and get through his steak or chop in time to catch the tram. How many homes mn are ia which breakfast is, in reality, a-sermable, hurriedly prepared, hurriedly eaten and hurriedly digested; w|))Je dinner ia the middle of the day, in a house where there are many children, is scarcely less %a as far s« the mother is concerned, and we evening ■seal Bads every body too Ursa to care to linger orer it. or there are constant calls upon the mother for her attention. This is bad in itself, jut It is ten llmeaVfcnewhen worry, anxiety or excitement adds its quota to the disturbance. , y American women suffer from • oqrvous dyspepsia to a distressing extent; Twttf they very seldom stojj to consider how largely it it due to their own fault or indiscretion. Just to the extent to whieh they hurry and worry they ate distinctly hlamable; and where is the woman who does neither! Certainly she is rarely found in the working or professional classes. The homes in which peace and quiet reign at mealtime)*, la which food is slowly eaten, and the practice of cheerful conversation persisted in. are few indeed; and still less frequently met with arethoee ia which rss! for all who are actively employed. precedes or follows the midday meal.—Oris.**

LIFv, it« rutilUUAL la Portugal ■ man may look about him. •ad almost (Mytt bow tke world baa grown older aad sadder. Hero be will see the plowman aad tbo carter guiding ozea la site aad shape such as the ancient Romans bred, yoked to such primitive plows or carta as are still can sea on Ureek and Roman coins. Their rules aad methods or Ullage are the same simple aad often foolish ones as the ancients followed; the old best hen superstitions still mingle with the new religion; the people's language is 1 ilter to the old eae that came from Rome tihaa any still extant, the plowman and wagoner and reaper, the shop, herd la his goat's skia coat, and the maiden,'with her distaff, might all take their places in seam such rural procession as we sec sculptured on n Roman basrelief of the Augustan age. The very aspects of nature, the genial air. Urn vines and olive men, the rocks, Talleys, running streams, tke songs of birds aad murmuring of been on thymy hills, are all such as the sweetest of all pastoral poets nsed as accompaniments to his idyllic song of a happy rural Ufa. From just such craggy mountain sides overlooking tbo see, ns Theocritus sang of, and beneath just sach a. tall sumo-pine ns he describes,

USEFUL AND » bruise in sweet oil, ana 'to of turpentine, will usuthe Unsightly black-and-ally blue spots. —Many delicate and sickly like to drink cocoa, and it is very nutritious. Of course, you require milk and sugar when you prepare your cup of cocoa: so many products are needed for that seemingly simple article, a cup of cocoa. —The annoying dryness of the tongue and pharynx, so common in acute febrilo diseases, may be relieved by brushing pure and undiluted glycerine over the affected parts. ’’The great thirst ceases, and the patient's condition is made more comfortable. —Lemon Syrup.—Five pints of water; six pounds of suitin';; In ounces «*f**«-tiu-io «eM. Vial these ingredien ts for ten minutes; add the white of an egg to clearit Boil five minutes, and, when cold, add the juice of ten lemons. Bottle and cork tightly.—Good Iloutetxepi*g. —A person suffering with boils should eschew rich pastry, gravies and every bind of meat, except lean mutton. The boils may he brought to a head by using a warm poultice of camomile flowers, or boiled white lily root, toy fermentation with hot water, or by stimulating plasters. —An English writer urges the importance of thoroughly airing rooms and flushing all waste pipes on the return of a family after a considerable absence from home. The shut-up house is often filled with noisome gas,through the evaporation of the water which keeps the sewer traps operathe, and this is not necessarily revealed by an odor. Many cases of sore throat have been traced to the neglect of the precautions mentioned. —The following •‘silver-cleaner” is said to be ai.'cordlng to the formula of one of the best silver manufacturing companies of the country: lhssolve one pound of Spanish whiting in water and let it settle; then pour off the top so the grit will be freed. Let the residue settle again and pour off the top, thus obtaining the pure whiting; add one ounce of borax, dissolved in as little water as necessary; add one-half pint spirits of camphor and one pint aqua ammonia; put in a bottle and cork tightly. —A nice bread pudding for the children's lunch ean be quickly pregpred after the following rule: One quart of grated bread crumbs, one quart milk, yelks of four eggs, well beaten, butter size of an egg. one cup of sugar, twq, teaspoons baking powder and two teaspoons extract of lemons; mix all well together and bake; beat the whites of the eggs with a cup of powdered sugar, flavored with one teaspoonful of extract of lemon or orange, cover the pudding with it, and baked until brown* ed a little.

DISEASES OF SHEEP. Ho* I* Tnct CMttmw. thr Mo#t Common symptom of All Allnprnt*. The stomach of the shpop is a very largo organ—a fact which voterinar- [ ians frequently forget. The veterinarian usually takes tha hone as his standpoint from whieh to judge the sheep’s ailments and he might just about as well judge from a tree as his standpoint. Consult the average veterinarian, or the average veteriarnian work, and you will very soon get the impression that the best thing to be done with a aiek sheep is to kill it There is not much that is better as a general remedy for sheep than pugativee, and yet it b about the last remedy recommended by the veterinarian in general. Costiveness is a very common complaint, or rather, a symptom of disease in sheep. We should very much like to know if our correspondent's sheep are inclined to costiveness. If they are, it is possible that a dose of Epsom salts or raw linseed oil, the fnost suitable and effective purgative for sheep—four ounces of the fomer or half a pint of the latter-— would remedy the trouble. This course of treatment relieves the bowels, reduces fever, lowers inflammation and restores tone to the stomach and liver. It may be mentioned in this connection .that stimulant) ought always to be giv-ch-sheep in connection with the administration of nurgativee. Ginger is usually Wjptvlt convenient for tikis purpose and may bp given in half ounce doses. Or they may he administered together, aa, for instance, Epsom salts, three ounces, ginger, one drayi, mixed in water.

But there is a cause of disease, as we hare frequently said. What is the cause in any case? is the-question, for practical treatment can be of little avail, while the cause remains to give impetus to the disease. Sometimes it is next to Impossible to Ml what the causes arc, and sometimes they can be determined by a careful investigation. Once we hail an inquiry from a very careful horseman concerning a disease which was appearing in his stables. We knew that he was a careful Horseman, and consequently knew that his horses received what an intelligent, careful man. would esteem'the best of care. Yet we: could account for the disease only up-: on the supposition that the stables were dkmp; and this turned out to be true.) The dampness was not great and had) escaped the notice of oapcorrespondenLr A stranger who was not accustomed to inter these stables every day would probably have detected it the moment be entered them. Wc become so accustomed to our surroundings that we do not fully comprehend often defects that may be there. There is certainly no such prolific muse of disease among sheep as dam p, impure air, impure water, want oil water, underfeeding, over-feeding, or irregularity of feeding. W’e may be permitted, too, to call attention to the injury frequently done to animals at this class by depriving them of salt. Sheep that are not furnished with salt will show the effect of the negtoat. J * We are reminded, too, that it will not be out of place here to suggest to our flock masters that, the proper time to prepare ourselves to ward off disease, and to cure disease, is when sheep are in perfect health. Did you ever think how little attention we ] either to ourselves or our while in perfect health? It is i or they become sk$: that we east about us for the means of 1 health. But a conation of health presupposes that the living is prsper, and that if we continue ’ he kind #f living-in which we or our animals *re in 1 thaiw irtti ho MKieiiiees. As the ■ will be no sickness. As the flockmaster is compelled, to degree, to be his own i as already said, to act in ticulars in opposition to his only safety is in becoming wall ' in regard to " ‘

Wren you come right do *“ leloooe-it! in the cue. it's the_ that shows which way the Dftmit Echo. alto the facts lag straw hat rind blows_ Cured of Mai ria. fl Rohm Sr.. I have been using At Plasters for the last five r years ago, after haring I wards of six months with - myself with an enlarged h and constantly troubled y and my kidneys did not act Haring spent most of my cine and medical adrioe, 1 expense I would use At Plasters, two on the set one on the spleen or ague the pit of the stomach,, breastbone. 1 continued i: about thirty days, chant: week. At the end of th« fectly well, and have rents ocs’a foaocs iirs. Home two m sick l or upalaria, I found aen, dysoeptic, ith n headache, iiry well either, wney for medihonght lo save dock’s 1‘onors lil of my back, ike, and one or. uat under the ing the Plasters lg them every time I was per■d so ever since, lonsn D ior. Tna dead neat who want; to borrow adollar is broke and the fcUot wholei dutthim is cracked.—DanriUs sn FREE! A 3-foot Fre th Gloss, Oval “-*' —Case, Her- ; Co.,Chicago FREE! A 3-root Fre at Front, Nickle or Cherry C rarCase, CHARTS OXLT. R.tV.TSS8.! ■-,& BoaaoiNO-ncr&i keepe . although not overburdened with cred' Ity, frequently lose money by crediting 1 se roomers. THE MARK TS. NnrYi CATTLE—Native Steers OOTTON —Middling. oChotee... FLOUR-Goodto WHEAT—No a Red. CORN—No^A. OATS-Western Mixed PORK—Mess (new)....,. ST. LOUIS COTTON—Middling. BEEVES—Good to Choice . Fair to Medina, union to Select. ■Fairto Choice...., FLOOR—Patents. R, July IS 1888. i t s> ®»soo .... «« »» s 3o m «» 89 n »* S it 98 II 75 # U W XXX to WHEAT-No. 8 Red COKN-No.» Mixed OATS—No. a EYE—No. 8_ TOBACCO—Lugs. Barley Leu, Barley HAY—Choice Timothy. . BUTTER—Choice Dairy BOGS—Fresh. PORK—Standard M< BACON—Clear Rib LARD—Prime Steam.. W OOL—MUr to Choice. JK CHICAGO TATflWtoipptng.,. HOGS—Good to Choice ..V SHEEP—Good to Choice... FLOUR—Winter..'.. Patents. WHEAT—No. a Spring ... CORN-No. 8. OATS—No. 8 White. PORK—New Mesa. KANSAS C CATTLE—Ship ping Steen HOGS—Sales sET.. WHEAT-No. 8. OATft—No.3... . CORN—No. a. HEW ant si4* 13 13 » 13 SO 313 <» sat >8 .VS S3 S3 FLOUR—High COHN—White OATS—< 3 13 HAY — PORK—New ww BAcON-Clear Rib COTTON-Midd WW id ai 50 Mtrii « Ht LOU IS V WHEAT-No. * Red.... CORN—No. * M>xed OATS—No. a Mixed.. COTTON—MridUttg 13 n 8H f 83 a mw : * Wi

II II can not tru Burlington Route, thfully be denied that ttt aSkf&“-RI‘■ assrsarsss?i«5 its senrio. the Chicago flerald reoenUy aaid, iS from June 16 to 19, the period of the excursion rates, over 13.000 strangers came to Chicago over the Burlington.” This W»I exclusive of suburban passengers and mostly in addition to its heavy regular passenger traffic. In receipts of live stock, ths Union Stock Yards’ Reports slmar the Builingtouto be far in the lead. Thenlead. The averag number of cars brought in by U^durin^ mi first nix months of the years 1886,1887 ani 1888 is 36,140; and the number for the fin t half of the year 1888, notwithstanding the temporary depression caused by the recen t at. strike on its lines, was 31,435. or bi t StSs below the average. The latter figute also represents about 81 per cent, of th e total number of cars, 102.413, brought to the Yards for the last half year, being more than six percent. In excess of the receipts by any other road. In a matrimonial ce-partnership mail men think if they furnish a name for the firm it’s enough. Its Grasp Relaxed By Hostetler"s Stomach Billers, constipation la succeeded by aregularhabitof boe v. While this medicine is thorough, it docs not produce violent effects or griping. D>rs* pepsin, liver complaint, nervous weakness aim kidnev affections, are among the maladies to which it is also adapted. Wheret er tried, on ibis continent and elsewhere, it shows its ability to expel the poison of malaria from the system. War call a man a crank, when no oae can turn him I—Son ft-anetoeo AUa. A Box or Glenn's Sulphur Soap is equivalent to mauv Sulphur Baths. Don't forget, it. Bill's Hair Dye, Black or Brown. Bi.tcx and blue—a dejected darkey—,BsIr aflheted with Sore Ryes use Dr. Isaac Thompson’a Rye Water. Druggists sell it.:Sc. It to when a boot to new that there to nusie in the solo.—Defnitt rr** Prat. Tutfs Pills FOR TORPID LIVER. A torpid liver d or sages the whole sye. ten. mad produces Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheumatism, Sallow Skin and Piles. There U bo better remedy fer these eoanmoa disease* than Tall * Li ter nils, as a trial will prove. PriebUo Sold Everywhere. ,

UNlUVtHtU.eTL*,.-, talKMtaf* **■»(» Wwtw >wO ■**>***«?£«♦- ■m, wutU, catalog***, book*. ■*•>?»• —xiiftnT MPtTT. rrairml Trr|-*— **“ 1 SC*»*»X«I» pm*. r~< »r—4 *ttm tnu 'mtkrmM «M»|»y WiMN Th«S »tl« SOia— •" l«l>l» ttul »hkh ,r.,«llJ r-»« t?) «r »J) t«*k. tVl—* itMiiBlMmaatkinwurfMMli h lk.<WJ 1»«m« TM<(i»ui(Ubi< ««U •J toll thrash unit. This Hifclw* « rafht ast n~4 Mxmkllrtllnt MM ~ a6 lb« lUanlbUHM itt, whil* Utwalan wtH •»* ut+t&r vr—m Tb» «n«l bmttoef «l»« m«»» *«U w7i«wfc«.»u- —*!L* “ m " |g|» M ab«M tana Fntint* in who haew ail iWt] ■ho swpk>y HM>: thaaa w bin myMy Mo; thaaa who, * this htaiMM rtll «mJ _ale lathi* Dbfae__rueplala. Thi.Wia.wry toutsdbyaU M-iluhm.all eras tha warM. Mr f*« thi* ktftmMllM * > all tnt-ctaM f 0»*r l.OfPb such **a*lt. Tour lUlfilIM?. *"»">•*« AOUTi DtUCZUbt* ▲«M>m*w DROPSY I CT* TREATED FREE. Hare treated aY*e»r And It* eompllcitlona with most wonderful success; utaa ?*eta_rtrds_ -ry hunibtw without neutber It costs y our treutmcnt for y ■ lot lonit stand atdly disappear, and in ten da»s a. least rtSiout {nowISfaS^Wna about d.,*r ■Jo'si, you nothin* to realise the merit of siuont for yourself. We are constantly dUriB* SEfesbswass&sw _V «•>#..it hiltoe. nfsau naniP UP. MX. tru» wwk. Girofull. .ow lonjr aflllcned,.etc. . s aiming I^UnoniAK Tea _ reo by mail. M you orvlGf »>t* wtrertMement to a* wjU » «•»*•)■ w ay postage. Epllep^<EU») Pp«*tiTrty e«»w* 1. H. OnlK A SOWS. M. Of.. Atlantti. Ca rroqNT ^ BILIOUS •Pi CHE GREAT, ENGLISH orUaer. Bile, Indiwestlao. etc. Free from ,*?& swiSSSftiaaSBCREMEDY

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nt SINKS* COLUStOKiSTHOROUGH BUSINESS EDUCATION. BRY.A.TSTF & 8TKATTON. The Louisville Business College, Corner Third and Jefanon Streets, LonieTjHe, Sj. ENTRANCE: NO. -*08 THntD SX«KHJ*r. Wleepii,Bail PsBiaiiip,MasJ,TeiwspHEiti Mow. For CktuTenm Address Gdlsg* u Above. MITCHELL’S ACADEMY BUSINESS COLLEGE Evansville, Xnd., Is a Very Thorough, Practical i Progressive School. ' c Gives Better Advantages than any Like School in Southern Indiana. Book Keeping and Business Foi-ms: Business Calculations and Correspondence; Practical Grammar. Short liaud and Type-tYntinj. Etc., Etc: All at greatly reduced rates. Address TC*. Wi 214> Main Street, Between Sooond and Third, EVANSVILLE, IND. R. BERRIDCE & CO., (Successors? to Woods & OanatseyJ PROPRIETORS OF Star Livery, Feed and Sale Stables? CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG. First-Class Buggies and Safe Horses lor the public at reasonable prices. Horses boarded by the day or week. Hive Hits tirr.t your patronage, and you will reeelve fair treatment. The well-known hoetler. Au KiToy, w,U be found always on hand. '

HAMMOND JEWELER GRAND OPPORTUNITY TO BUY Watches, Clocks, Jewelry. i - PRICES ON ALL GOODS CUT DOWN TO THE LOWEST NOTCH TO SUIT THE HARD TIMES1 SAXjBM P. HAMMOND. _ DRV GOODS. JOHlSr HAMMOND. j N E W GOODS To which he directs attention. U:» 1»RY GOODS are rtrstclasa, and me stock Is largo Hats, Gaps, Boots, Shoes and Notions. Gl»c him a call and you will ho convinced that ho Is giving BAKUAINS oa his entire stock. SOLID GOODS AT LOW PRICES. ANTON SIMON. —Proprietors ofTHE EAGLE BREWERY, VINCENNES, INDIANA, 1 Furnish the Best Article of Beer the Market Affords > and soicit orders from all dealers BOTTLE OR KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES. On Bale at -A.11 Saloons.

ISAAC T. WHITE* FREU K H. BURTON. MARSHAL C. WiH^E. KBIiLKEl c to WHITE, Wholesale Druggists AND DEALERS IS Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass AND SCHGICAIi INSTRUMENT^. Mo. 106 Main Street. ... Ivenevllle, Ind. C. A. BURGER & BRO., FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS, Han Bsmti ftff Lap M Late 8jta ef Ym Guff, / ol ttv, 0** Sal**. sm. Broa^oS^ Pirfurt FHc and Sllfss fi’iTnifttnTli Pyinge ae law ae FkgwhfiffL I lllvvl Ifflv Wi Vvfivv ® ** ^ ~