Rensselaer Republican, Volume 13, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 January 1881 — Page 4
§p|| GREAT SCRfIAN i^2J NEuRALe,A ’ - GOXTT » SORENESS fasEM GSEBBm I CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINST, SWELLINGS frosteb feet EARS, mgCi^rnm l^ijJiiiiTianiis g| ACHES, ■'•swasassaca*;ssrsasa asr.nr sr^rasi^s^riss »•*“■•■ Biucnon u urn umuoi, tMiuminiimuntiiww. A. VMELMII * oa Battimaru, M4* P.AX “DOOiFM BULL’S SMITH’S TONIC SYRUP FOB THE otEB OF FEVER and AGUE OB Chills and Fewr. Th« proprietor of this MtoSrated aadlrian Jntoo claim* for U a (apariority oror all riHifhi ntf »**r •d to tho pabtls for tBo urs obbtaxh. hpszdt ud mjann car* ol KM ud f rrsr.or riBIIU sod fosw. whtohar of short or land stoodio(. Hr refers to ttea tire Moth era sod vests re e .aatry to hear Bias test! boot to the troth of the seeerUoe that la ao soar whotoesrNrtU ttfsU to eve If Ike dlrestless Are strist ly followed sod carried oat. la a treat many eases s rlnxto dose has bees saffleieat for a ears, sad show rami tea hare bees eared by a eiat to bottle, with a per' feet restoration of the general health. It la, hewerer predeat, sad la every case aeoet oertaia to ears, U lt> ase Is oontinned in Metier doers far a week or twe after the disease has base checked. Bars espetdally Is CUB cult sad loaf-*tai>dtns cuss, Usaallr this aadl cue vi I not rcqr.n say aid to keep 4be bowels Is good order. Should the pat loot, hewerer. reqelre s cathartic modi cine after baring token three me fear doree of toalc. aaiatlo does of BctX's VxaiTAXLE Faacilt Fills will bo euKcisrt. Tb» geoalos HwfTH's Toxic BTBrr Best hare Da Jobe Bcll's pn«u stomp oa eaco bottle. Da Jobe UcLL octr has the right to MASnfset are sod sell t»« original John J Smith’s Tools (Jyrep, of Loatrrtlle Kr kxamlaawell the label oo each Lot Is If B| private stamp Is not oa osch boiUs,do not pars hasp, or yea will ho doootrsd. Bp. JOHItf BUEjLi, Usoafsetarsr sad read* of Smith’s Tonic Syrup, • Bull's Sarsaparilla, , , Bull’s Worm Destroyer The Popular Remedies es the D<iy. ty~Frincipal ogee, «8 Mrtn streot, LomfarlUsjE. WOHAX'S TBIDBFHJ IBS. UDIlt PIIUU, OfUK, USt, v*. » UOOOTIZXB 09 LYDIA Eo PINKHAM’B VEGETABLE COMPOUND. tie Ppelthre Cera fW aTI theoa Painfal CempUiate aad Weakaassaa Mtsaam to ear beet fresale pepaUtlom. B wm corn entirely tho wont fans of Dsbli Ob plalati. all grnrtaa troubles. Inn*mmeflna aad CTkwratton, Falling and Displacetneota. aad the eotaeqaeat Spinal Weakness, aad la particularly adapted to tha Change of Life It win lUtoofre sad expel tumors from the uterus tx aa aarty stage of derrlotxnaM The teadeory to canearoca humors there Is checked reryspaedlly by lie use, 1* cures Bloating, HradaChee, Herrons Protoratioto General DtoEHty, glaaptoamaaas. aad IM That feeling of bearing down, naadng pain, weight aad barker he, Is always pormeitenfly oared by tm an It win at all limes aad under aU dseamstaaeas act to harmony with the laws that gorere the female tystona For tho cure of Kidney Oomplalato es atthar natMt °LI Dljf 2.' I prTK*Ajr» TXOKTABL* eg*. POCJfDks prepared at ta sad IS Wastern Arenas, Lynn. Hast Price *L Six bottlee for |A Bent hy mall In the form of pilla, also la the form of ’ -Him, ea receipt of prtas. gl per box fordthsr. Hre. Plakhaa freely saswms ell letters of Inquiry. Bead for patoah- . lot. Addraas aa shore. Mention Uia Pu*»r. Ho family should be without LTDIA K. PtHKHAJTS La VLi hllA They cure ecatotpatton, bUo«mm aad toeptdlty oftheUrer. Xoantopar hem Co oby Marrigon, Plummer 4 Co.,ChlcagaiWTiolctii t Ritters One II re Thouraad Dollar Dei tod States Btglsteisd JmrPtrOtot. Hood will be forfeited and paid by tho Malt Bit tors Company to oar Individual or aay society o< physicians or druggists U Mali B ttore, a Family Medietas.prepared by them, gees aot ticsl, la a fair co m pet tUre exemlne’Joa. all other mad leal eemsaaoda aowWore the pubUe sailed “Blttom ’l. the foCwlS partlculare: 1. Dig satire Power. L Karra rower. I B;«>i Prododag Power. t Pnreet Aad Best Med Mao. Melt Blttore. e pure onfermeotod Kxtraet of Melt. Hope, CaUeaye, baa. too. are the Purest, moat Bsnoototoel aad heat Mrdiclao for .U egeo ead both sexes ever sailed ‘ Bitten." Malt Bit tors Cempasy, 800 too. BT TM* CSC gp OR. BOSANKO’S RHEUMATIC CURE. THE BREAT ALKALINE REMEbr. Why yon hare Kheumatism! Because your sywem n charged with a poisoaom Trie Arid. r T*to«tshhCMrw<tby nrutxelixing this acidity with Dr. H non who's BheamafleCare, s chemically prepared Alkaline, a Speote hr thrWVrTy —»x«4. FIUCE, 75 COTS. Au Torn Oubbmt Fss ft. Addnss THED&. BQ3AHIO MESK3KE QOl MfQUA, CfT CATARRH CURED. R/Mra Dr. Keck*a Pemoui Cure far Otoank, Consumption, Feaiale Dleonsos, Deaf mean, Ac. 00-rd hareoif after aegartae llyeara. aad thoosaodaof others In past S yea re. MedWtoe gsat her* rwesstotol pans. Write ler Mtlanls'A tltoUi answered freely. Address MBB I*. IICI,
ONLY. Oaly a need See the Master. ] Lortogly.galotlyeaid. Jj Ctoly award! Tto the Mstoer heard. Aad eatoa relating hearts ware fad. Only e look es isms store ers, Sorrdwfml, gentle, and deep. Only a look! Tot the tore eg aeaw shook, Aad he woot elans to wasp Only sense act of deration, uUUncty.Kyfnllr dsan. 4 • -iturely 'twee nawghtr' (go the prenfl srortd thought) Bat yet souls for Ohrlto ware wow! jQgy no hour with tho children. > Planoaatly. cheerfully girwo. I Tto arod was sown I la that hour afooo ' Which would bring forth.fruit for heerenl *C>a!y " Bat Janus Is looking Constantly, t ndor y down Teaarth. aad neon Tk nep who strive to please; And their love be toraa to crown. —Charlotte Murrey, la The Christian-
FROM THE WAYSIDE.
It was Dr. Silas Walsh who sat one day in his office reading a very interesting book. It was part of his business, this reading, for the book was upon a science scope of his profession. He was comparatively a young man, and had the reputation of being an excellent physician. While : he read some one rang the bell. PL? laid aside bis book and went to the door, and when he saw what was upon the stepping stone he was indignant. It was a ragged, filthy boy, known in Ensworth as “Hammer Jim”—ragged and dirty, and with the vileness of the slums upon him—a boy vicious and profane, against whom every other ’boy was warned—a boy who was called a thief and a villain, whom no efforts of the overseers had been able to reclaim, and who seemed to care for nothiug but to make people afraid of him. His true name, as the overseers hail it, was Janies Ammerton. About Ills father no one in Ensworth had ever known. - His mother had died an inmate of the poor house. On the present occasion, 'Jim’s face was not only dirty but bloody: and there was blood, on his grimed and tattered garments. “Please, sir, won’t you fix my head? I’ve got a hurt.” *' What kind of a hurt?” asked ths doctor. “I’m afraid it’s bad, sir,” sobbed the boy.- “One of Mr. Dunn’s men hit me with b rook O!” “What did he hit you for?” asked the doctor. “I dunno, sir.” •.* •'Yes, yon do know. What did he throw that stone at you for?” “Why, sir, J was picking up an apple under one of his trees.” Dr. Walsh would not touch the boy's head with his finger®. There was no-need of it. He could see that the blood had ceased to flow. “Go home,” he said: “let your folks wash your head and put on a clean bandage.” “Please, sir, I haiu’t got no folks,” replied the boy. “ You stop somewhere, * don’t yoij?” “I stop at the poor’s when they don’t kick me out.” “Well, boy, you are not going to die fioni this. Go and get somebody to wash your head, or go and wash it yourself and tie your handkerchief on.?’ “Please, sir, I hain't got no—” “Hold up, boy. I haven’t got no time to waste. You won’t suffer if you go as you are.” And with tills Dr. Silas Walsh closeifthe door and returned to his liook. He had not meant to be unkind; but really he had not thought there was any need of professional service on his part; and certainly he did not want the bov in his office. But Dr. Walsh had not been alone cognizant of the boy’s visit. There had been a witness in an upper window. The doctor’s wife had seen and heard. She was a woman. She was not strong and resolute and dignified like her husband. Her heart was not only tender, but was used to aching. She had no Children living; but there were two little mounds in the ehnrchyard whieh told her of angels in heaven that could call her mother! Acting upon her impulse, as she was very apt to act, she slipped down and called the boy in, by the back way, to the wash-room. He came in, rags, dirt, and all, wondering what was wanted. The sweet voiCe that had called him had not frightened him. He stood looking at Mary Walsh, and as he looked his sobbings ceased. "Sit down, my boy.” He sat down.* If I help you, will you try to be good?” “1 can’t be good.” “Why not ?” ‘“Cause I caa’t. Taint in me. Everybody says so.” » “But can’t you try ?” “I dunno.”“If I should help you, you would be willing to try to please me?” “Yes’m—l should, certain.” - Mrs. Walsh brought a basin of water, a soft sponge, and with tender hami she washed tne boy’s head and face. Then with the scissors she clipped away the hair from the wound—curling handsome hair—and found it not a bad wound. She brought a piece of sticking plaster, which she fixed upon it, and then she brushed the hair back from the full looked into the boy’s face—not a bad face—not an evil face. Shutiing out the rags and dirt, it was really a handsome fkce. "What is your name, my boy?” “Hammer Jim, ma’am; ana- sometimes ragged Jim.” “I mean, how were you christened?” j
“Which’m?” “Don’t you know what name your parents gave you ?” “O, yees. It’s down on the 'seers’ book, mum, as James Ammerton.” “Well James, the hurt on your head ; s not bad and if you are c&reful not to rub off the plaster, it will soon heal up. Are you hungry ?’’ “Please, mum, I hain’t eat nothing to-day.” r Mrs. Walsh brought out some bread and butter, and a cup of milk, and allowed the little boy to sit there in the wash-room and eat. And while he ate she watched- him narrowly, scanning every feature. Surely, if the science of physiognomy, which her husband studied so much, and with such faith, was reliable,.this boy ought to have grand capacities. Once more shutting out the filth and rags, and only observing the hair, nowglossy and waving, from her dexterous manipulations, - over a shapely head, and marking the face with its eyes of lustrous gray, and the mouth like a cupid’s bow, and the chin strong without being unseemly—seeing this without the dregs, the boy was handsome. Mrs. Walah, thinking of the little ipounds in theehurchJU ard. prayed God that she might again e a happy mother: and, if a boy wfcs to bless her maternity, she would not ask that he should be handsomer than she believed she could make this boy. Jim finished eating and stood. “James,” said the Tittle woman—for she was a little woman—“when you are hungry and have nothing to eat, if you will come to this door, I will feed you. I don’t want you to go hungry.” * “I should like to come, mum,’’ “And If I feed you when you are hungry, will you not try to be good for my^aket” The boy hung his head and consid-
ered. Some might have wondered that he did not answer at once, as a grateful boy ought; bat Mrs. Walsh was deeper than 4hat. The lad was sonsidenng how he most answer. Then he spoke sadly and truly: “It they'd let me be good, ma’am, but they won’t,” he at length replied. “Will you try all you can.” “Yes’m I’ll try all I can.” Mrs. Walsh gave the lad a small parcel of food in a paper, and patted his curly head. The boy had not shed a tear since the wound was assuaged. Some might have thought he was not grateful; but the little woman could see the gratitude in the deeper light of his eyes. The old crust was not broken enough yet for tears. Afterward, Mrs. Walsh told her husband what she had done, and he laughed at her. “Do you think, Mary, that your kindness can help that ragged waif?” “I do not think It will hurt him, Silas?” It was not the first time that Mrs. Walsh had delivered answers to the erudite doctor which effectually stop* ped discussion. After that, Jim came often to the door and was fed; and he came cleaner and more orderly with each succeeding visit. At length, Mrs. Walsh was informed that a friend was going away into a far western country to take up land and make a frontier farm. The thought occurred to her that this might be a good opportunity for James Amrnerton. She saw ner friend and brought Jim to his notice, and the result was the boy went away with the emigrant adventurer. Ana she heard from her friend a year later that he liked the boy very much. Two years later the emigrant wrote that Jim was a treasure. And Mrs Walsh showed the letter to her husband, and he smiled and kissed the little wife, and said he was glad. And he had another source of gladness. Upon her bosom his little wife bare a robust, healthy boy—their own son who gave promise of life and happiness in time to come. Tl;e years sped on and James Ammerton dropped out from the life that Mary Walsh knew. The last sheiicard was five years after he went away from Ensworth, and Jim had then* started for the golden mountains on his own account to commence in earnest his own life battle. But there were joy and pride In ths little woman’s life which held their place and grew and strengthened Her boy, whom they called Philip, grew to be a youth of great promise—a bright, kind-hearted, good boy, whom everybody loved: and none loved him more than did his parents. In fact they worshipped him; or at least liis mother did. At the age of seventeen Philip Walsh entered college, and at the age of twenty-one graduated with honor; but tho long and severe study had taxed his system, and he entered upon the stage of mahhood not quite so strong in body as he should have been. His mother saw it and was anxious; his father saw it and decided that he should have recreation and recuporation before lie entered into active business. Dr. Walsh was not pecuniarily able to send his son on an expensive travel, but he found opportunity for his engagement upon the staff of an exploring expedition which would combine healthy occupation. The expedition was bound for the western wilderness, and we need not tell of the parting between the mother and the son. Bhe kissed him and blessed him, and hung upon his neck with more kisses, then went away to her chamber and cried. Philip wrote home often while on his way out; and he wrote after he .reached the wilderness. His accounts were glowing and his health was improving. Three months of forest life and forest labor, of Which Philip wrote in a letter that had to be borne more than a hundred miles to the nearest post, and then followed months of silence. Where was Philip? Why did lie not write? One day Dr. Walsh came home pale and faint, with a newspaper crumpled and crushed in his hand. Not immediately, but by-and-by, lie was forced to let his wife read what he had seen in that paper. She read, and felt like one mortally stricken. It was a paper from a distant city, and it told the sad fate of the exploring party under the charge of Colonel John Beaueharape, how they had been attacked by Indians, and how those not massacred had been carried away captive. Poor little woman! Poor Dr. Walsh! But the suffered most. Her head, already taking on its crown of silver, was bowed In blinding agopy, and her heart was well nigh broken. The joy had gone out of her life and thick darkness was around about her. And so half a year passed. One day the postman left a letter at the door. The hand of the superscription was familiar, Mrs. Walsh tore it open and glanced her eyes over the contents. O, rapture! Her boy lived, was well, and was on his way home to her. When Dr. Walsh entered the room he found his wife fainting, with the letter clutched tight in her grasp. By and, by when the great surge had* passed, husband and wife sat dowu and read tho letter understandingly. “Thank God! I found a true friend, or I should say a true friend found me,” wrote Philip, after he had told of his safety and whereabouts. “But for the C9raing of this friend I should have died ere this. He heard of me by name, and when he learned that I was from JSnsworth, and was the son of Silas and Mary Walsh, he bent all his energies for my release. He spent thousands of dollars enlisting and equipping men for the work, and with hfs own hand struck down my savage captor and took me henceforth under his care and protection. God bless him! And be you ready, both to bless him, for he is comiug home with me.”
Upon their bended knees that night the rejoicing parents thanked God for all his goodness, and asked blessings upon the head of the unknown preserver of their son. And in due time, radiant and strong, their Philip came home to them—came home a bold, innocent man—fitted for ti\e battle of life—came home know-, ing enough of life’s vicissitudes, and prepared to appreciate its blessings. And with Philip came a middle aged strong, frank-faced, handsome man, with grey eyes and curling hair. “This,” said the son when he had been released from the mother’s rapturous embrace, “is my preserver. Do you know him?” . The doctor looked and shook his head. He did not know him. But the little woman observed more keenly. Upon her the light broke overpoweringly. “Is it,” she whispered, putting forth her hands—“is it James Ammerton?” “Yes,” said the man—a stranger nowno more. “I am James Ammerton ! and I thank God who has given me an opportunity thus to show how gratefully I remember all your kindness to me, my more than mother.” ' And he held her hands and pressed them to his lips, and blessed them again, telling her with streaming eyes, that she, of all the world, had lifted him up and saved hi m.—Selected. A lawyer, somewhat disgusted at seeing a couple of Irishmen looking at a six-sided building which he had constructed, lifted up the window, put his head out, and addressed them, "what do you stand there for, like a pack of blockheads, gazing at my office—do you take it for a church?” “Falx,” answered one of them, “I was thin kin’ so till I saw the devil poke his head out of the windy.” There were 160 deaths in Chicago las
Almest Eaten Alive.
Ijtft Saturday Hannitmi Rhf vrika resides on the little Prickly Pear, In the vicinity of Wolf Creek Station, shouldered his gun and went out in the mountains, for ar deer hunt. While he was passing down the course ofa small guleh, and just as he had turned a point of rocks whieh protruded abruptly from the mountain side, die received upon the left side of his bead and face a stunning blow from the paw of an immense she bear, which it appears was lying in wait for him upon the other side of the rocks. The blow knocked Mr. Roe down and caused him to lose possession of his Run whieh was the only weapon he had with him, and at the same instant the infuriated beast, throwing herself upon the prostrate form of her astonished, disarmed and wounded victim, the man and beast were precipitated together about fifteen feet down the steep bank to the bed of the gulch. Having nothing to defend himself with, Mr. Roe quickly determined to “play the dead man,” and turning upon his face feigned unconsciousness through one of the most trying ordeals ever experienced by a human being. The bear evidently concluded if her prey was dead, he had been killed by ner own strong pswss and began her feast. Beginning upon his head, she literally tore the man’s scalp to shreds, leaving it in a condition horrible to look at. He says he could hear and feel her teeth grating upon his skull. She then began upon his left shoulder, inflicting there a ghastly and dangerous wound, and bit him in several places upon his left arm, side and back as far down as the hip. Just as she had driven her teeth into the hip and was, donbtless, upon the point of inflicting such wound as would have caused instant death, one of her cubs raised a cry of distress. It was at this point that Mr. Roe’s play of “dead man,” which had hitherto seemed so unavailing, was es great service to him. The bear evidently thought her victim dead, and, leaving him, hastened to the relief of her young, intending, it is supposed, to finish her meal at pleasure. Though bruised, mangled and fatigued—his scalp a bleeding mass of torn flesh and matted hair hanging about bis brow, his left cheek and ear torn off until they hung at his side by a slender strip, his cheek-bone broken, his skull fractured above the eye, his shoulder, arm and side badly injured, he nevertheless summoned sufficient strength to rise and get away before his antagonist arrived. The story of his subsequent achievments is almost beyond belief but is abndantly vouched for. He was living alone, and knew that return home without summoning assistance was to certainly go home and die in solitude. Although from the scene of his encounter it was a mile and a half home, he walked that distance, and, without stopping at his cabin, proceeded a half mile further to the Missouri river, upon the opposite side of which he saw a couple of neighbors, to whom he called for asstance. As soon as he observed that his cries were heard he returned to his cabin, where his neighbors found him, sitting upon a stool holding his hand to the side of his head, and in that way, as best he could, keeping his mutilatted cheek and ear in place. Such aid was rendered as could be under the circumstances, and medical assistance was telegraphed for, to which Dr. Steele promptly responded. The wounds were dressed early Sunday, and Mr, Roe was left as comfortable as his surroundings would allow. He bore his suffering, including the great number of stitches that were taken in sewing his wounds, with wonderful fortitude allowing no groan or complaint to escape him, except upon one occasion when the needle pierced the flesh in close proximity to tne eye. He confidentially asserted that he would get well, although the doctor regarded his case as a critical one. Since the above was written Mr. Roe has arrived in Helena and is now at the Sister’s hospital. He made the journey of forty miles, from his home to Helena, in a spring, wagon, thus affording additional evideuce of his remarkable endurance, which his physicians regard as being without parallel. Last evening he was feeling quite comfortable and considerable hopes were entertained for his recovery.
“Boycotting”-What is It.
Baitlmoro Bun. The word “Boycotting” has been added recently to the literature of Irish politics. The operation of Boycotting, growing out of the practice first and most signally put upon an Irish farmer of that name very recently, is among the simplest yet surest means of bringing pressure to bear on landlords of any that has been devised. It can only be carried out effectually by a people acting in unison, and tne secrecy with which it is exercised makes it a strong, though impalpable force. The nearest approach to it in England was the system of what was called “picketiifg,” by members of trades union, when on a strike, to prevent “rats,” or non-union men, from engaging to work for employers at wages that the striking trades-unionists had refused. In “picketing” the non-union men were “shadowed;” that is to say, watched wherever they went by union men detailed by a committee for that purpose, a certain number of men taking turn and turn about for this purpose. These picketed workmen were first huietly approached and solicited to join the union. Ifthey refused, a system of espionage and personal annoyance, supplemented by threatening letters, was enforced, that made their lives unbearable. But the English law made “picketing” an offense punishable by imprisonment, and the act of picketing being a visible act the law could be brought into action against oftenders. “Boycotting” is an improvement on this and an amplification of it. There is no overt act In Boycotting for the law to take hold of, and the only law that will touch the case is that of “conspirecy.” But to prove conspiracy the persons who are conspiring must first be discovered. Such a discovery in the case of Boycotting is almost literally impossible. When it is determined by the local council of the league to “Boycott” a landlord, all the persons In his employ are notified of the fact, and are warned that no one will be allowed to work for him any longer. If the crops have yet to be harvested they must remain untouched in the field under peril of the vengeance of the league. When this order is issued the landlord’s far.m hands suddenly desert him. Hired women, doing service in nis household, as suddenlv disappear. The local tradesmen, to whom he has looked for many of the necessaries of life, deoline to deal with him. If he wants to sell any of his cattle or any part of the products of his farm, he can find no buyers. If he has tenants they pay no rent. If he attempts to gather in his unharvested crop or to market any of his farm products he does it at a peril of his life, and is only safe, as he walks about his farm, when guarded by a detail of the constabulary. He is, in point of fact, as completely isolated and cut off from assistance as if he were alone with his family in the midst of the Great Desert. He has no one to whom he can appeal for relief, for in all his neighborhood there Is not one that dare respond with a hand. He is under the ban of the league—but who pronounced the ban he does not know. Tha power that assails him is invisible, but Itis as subtle as the air and as certain as fate Unless conspiracy can be proved there is no law that can deal; with Boycott Hi% hap da have abandoned him. They have a right to do 80 t £®y j are working under a contract. His dometrtics have quitted his roof in a bodyT It is no person’s
1 ( s i J%& ixh |4; 1 1 § I ji|M w V V V f I ■.SYRUP 1
for lk> eve as sesaha. --*■*- boasaaaaan asthmae enmg, «M*frtao*i4«J
business bat their own why they left it. The women of the adjacent village refuse at any price even to do the washing of the fainuy.as they refused Mrs. Boycott. Who can compel them to wash when they have no mind to do it? Thailocal tradesmen will neither sell goods to the Boycotted landlord nor buy his produce. No one has the legal right to say they shall do otherwise. The shadow of the league is over them all. and whether willingly or unwillingly, whether in accord with it or dreading its power, they have to vield obedience to his mandates. In a deaf mute convention at Boston there was a pantomimic row over the charge of their president that the soliciting agents kept back 40 per cent, of 14,600 collected for a proposed home. The scene was a strange one—4oo persons earnestly and excited gesticulating at each other Without an audible word.
Chleago Tribune.
Thomas O. Thompson, Esq., the Mayor’s Secretary,who some few day’s ago slipped on a banana peel and sprained his knee, writes that St. Jacob’s Oil "acted like a charm.*’ You may quit the field of business, though not the field of danger; though Eou cannot be safe, you may cease to e ridiculous. A Judge at Durham. England, lately denounced the defendant in a case as “a fool and an ill-conditioned vagabond.” Talk of Dogberry after that! Shakespeare’s night constable was no myth, after all.
Oar Headers
May obtain a set of beautiful illustrated picture cards by sending their address plainly written, ind a stamp, to the Ja mes Cough Pill Co., Buffalo, N. Y. • N. B.—Please mentiop-this paper. "By George!” observed a Harlem young man who was married last month, “if I’d thought about kindling coal fires I’d never got married in the fall. I’d waited till next spring and had a six months’ honeymoon.”
Given Up by the Doctors.
When doctors have failed to cure, and have gi veu their patients up to die, Electric Bitters have often been used and a cure effected,greatly to the astonishment of all. Diseases of the Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Urinary OrSms are positively cured by Electric itters. They invariable cure Constipation, Headache and all Bilious Attacks. Try them, and be convinced that they are the best medicine ever used. Sold by all druggists, at fifty cents a bottle. Artemus Ward once told us that the funniest storrhe ever heard was about an inebriated reporter, who leaned over the reporters’ gallery in the English House of Lords and inquired, “Will shum noble ’ord please shing comic shong?” Ills Lut Dose. Said a sufferer from kidney trouble when asked to try Kidnoy-Wort for a remedy, “I’ll try it, but it will be my lost dose.” It on od him, and now he reoommen la it to all. If you have disordered urine do not fail to try it. The crowning fortune of a man is to be born with a bias to some pursuit, which finds him in employment and happiness. The little ones love it and often cry for more—what? “Dr. Sellers’Cough Syrup,” which cures them of coughs, colds and whooping cough.
THE MARKETS.
New York Produce Market. Flour firm; superfine state western, 8 00@4 00; common to good extra,'4 00@4 75; good to choice, 4 80® 6 75. White wheat, extra, 4 25@6 75; St. Louis, 4 25@6 75: Minnesota pattents, 6 00@6 25. Wheat in fair demand; rejected spring, 90® 1 00; No 2 Chicago, 1 15; No 2 Milwaukee, 1 17, stock; ungraded red, 1 10®1 20; No 3 do, 1 13%@1 14; steamer do. 105® 1 05%; No 2 red,l*l6%@l 17; No 1 do, 123%® 124; mixed winter, 1 13%@ 1 14: No 2 white, 112%@113. Com a shade better; ungraded, 53@57; No 3, 53®53%: No 2, 56%@67%. Oats quiet and a shade stronger; superfine state and western, 41 @44; white western, 43®46. Hay dull and unchanged. Eggs steady and firm at 26@28. Pork dull; old mess pork for export is quoted at 12 50@12 75. Cuts meats a shade stronger; long clear middles, 7 12%; short, do, 7 25. Lard strong: Erlme steam, 8 90. Butter dull and eavy at 18®27. Cheese quiet but firm at 10@12%. Ckiemce. Flour nominally unchanged. Wheat strong and higher; No 2 red winter 95; No 2 Chicago spring 95%@95%; No 3 do 83% @BS. Com moderately active and higher at 36%. Oats demand fair ana prices higher, at 80 bid. Rye 82. Barley fairly active and shade higher at 88%. Flax seed 1 15® 1 16. Pork active, firm and higher at 1125 cash, 1237% February, 12 75 March. Lard active, firm and higher at 840 cash, 8 40@8 42% January, *6 00 February, 1 67% March. Bulk meats fairly active ana a shade higher: short ribs 6 60, short clear 6 85. Whisky steady and unchangedat 1 11. Cincinnati. Flour quiet; family, 460@486; fancy, 5 10@6 00. Wheat firmer; No. 2 red. 1 02. Corn easier; No. 2 mixed, shelled. 43. Oats quiet; No. 2 mixed, 35(0)36. Rye easier No 2, 96. Barley in good demand; No 2, fall, 95. Pork quiet at 13 00. Lard firmer at 8 40. . Bulk meats quiet and unchanged. Bacon dull; clear rib, 7%. Whisky active and firm at 1 10.. Butter heavy and unchanged. Hogs firm; common, 3 85@4 20; light, 3 20@3 60; packing, 4 50@4 80; butchers, 4^Bo® H Toledo. Wheat steady: No.l white Michigan, 98; extra red Wabash spot. 99. Com quiet; No. 2 spot, 38%. Oats dull; No. 2, 34. Clover steady: prime mammoth, 5 05; No. 2 prime mammoth, 4 60; prime, 4 75: No. 2, 4 15. Dressed hogs, 5 20. Closed, wheat firm; No. 2 red spot, 99%. Dry Goods. The usual holiday quiet prevails in all branches of trade. Cotton goods quiet but firm and unchanged In prices; shirting printing in fair demand, but other calicoes quiet; agents are booking fair orders for ginghams, printed lawns and pique. Men’s wear, woolens quite and steady. Bast Liberty. Cattle, supply light; prices have not advanced from last week. Hogs, Philadelphia’s, 480®490; .Yorkers. 4 60@4 70. Sheep, selling firm at 10 cents higher than last week. > . Russian students persist fin holding illegal meetings and drawing up petitions, much to the distarbailee of the government. |?|SgjP|p33 l . sis
Si turn casks makes a cartoad, and the freight to Jersey City Is about K»0 a ear. The country.
Anxious to Rise.
Daily Journal. , There’s plenty of room up stairs, as Daniel Webster once -said to It young lawyer anxious to rise, but despondent ofhlschancetodoso; but no one need injure* himself either ha climbing the stairs of fame or those of his own house or business place. The following is to the point: Mr.-John A. Hutchinson, Supt. Downer’s Kerosene Oil Works, Boston, Mass., writesl Mr. Patton, one of our foremen, in walking up stairs'last week sprained his leg badly. I gave him a bottle of SL Jacobi Oil to try. He used it and almost an instantaneous cure was effected: “What is the first thing to be done In case of fire?” asked Professor Stearns. “Sue the insurance company,” promptly answered the boy atthe foot of the class, whose father hud been burned cut onoe or twice. “Lot’s take a drink,” said one man to another. “Never again. After the fright I had yesterday I sha’n’t drink another drop.” “Why, what’s the matter?” “Last evening, after taking a few glasses, I went home, and as I entered I saw my wife double.” Women that have been given up by their dearest friends as beyond help have been permanently cured by the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It is a positive cure for all female complaints. Send to Mrs. Lydia E. Piukn&m, 233 Western avenue, Lynn., Mass., for pamphlets. The trouble about taking a medicine warranted to cure all diseases is that it may not know exactly what is wanted of it, and in that case'it will go fooling around in the system trying to cure you of some disease you have not got. Disorders which Aflfeet the Kidneys \re Mu>i.g i lie moat formidable knowu. D abets*, Brig'.i'* JlMut, [rtvjl aid other complaint* of the uriua*y organs are cot ordinarily eared In mvere oeaee. br.t tli'ty m<y be averted by timely midlcation. I useful st'm :!uut us the uriuarv glan 1* has ever bees found la II > 'cter'e St m teh bit en, a medicine which ant ouly a Vdi the reqaiaite *llololll* wlim they bee joi • taacrive, but lucre ieej their vigor and secretive pw-r. Be 1 irre wring the activity of the ki i<»y. aiul M. 111.1 r. li.i. medicine hu the addit’ona! ell-vt «'f et[>el itijr from the bfo >d impurltt* which it is the prc-i’iar of thaw organa to eliminate and pa a..ff Tlie timer* n also a purifier and drenK'h uer of t: e bowel., an inrigoranl of tha alomat-h, and a matchless ranted» for biflonsD-as and f. reran ague. It counteracts a tend-ncy to premature d ctj an l aualaiui .ltd ccmfo.it* the aged asd •nfirin. The man who has not anything to boast of but his illustrious ancestors is like a potuto—the only good belonging to him is under the ground. You can live on Malt, sleep on Hops, resist ague and malaria with Calisaya, and enrich the blood with Iron. In short, you can fintj new life in Malt, Hops, Calisaya and Iron, as every druggist will tell you. We are fond of those who have given us pleasnre, not that we have anything to say, but because the subject is pleasing- < A beacon in distress is “Dr. Sellers’ Cough Syrup,” the most efficacious remedy for coughs, colds and whooping cough. Price 25c. A Harlem minister, while marrying a couple recently, is reported to have been rather disconcerted on asking the bridegroom if he was willing to take the young lady for his weddea wife, by his scratching his head and saying, “Yes, I’m willing; but I had a much sight rather have her sister.”
No More Hard Times.
If you will stop spending so much on fine clothes, ricn food and style, buy good, healthy food, cheaper and better clothing; get more real and substantial things of life every way, and especially stop the foolish habit of employing expensive quack doctors, or using so much of the vile humbug med icine that does you only harm, but put your trust in that pure, simplerehaedy, Hop Bitters; that cures always at* a trilling cost, and you will see good times and have good health.—Chroni- <*■ , The block of granite which was an obstacle in the path-way of the week becomes a stepping-stone in the pathway of the resolute. Business Dilemma. —A man suffering with a cough obliged to keep his room; a note to pay and no money in hunk, and not a single bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup to be had for ten miles. » Obstacles and perploxities every man must meet, and ho must either promptly conquer them, or they will conquer him. Every person has two one whlcn he receives frbm others, and one, more important, which he gives himself. Balheaded men are informed that there i* bat ene avenue of escape from thoir affliction, and that i* Carbolinc, a deodorised extract of petroleum, the great hair renewar, whioh being recently improved, it m-re effioooioo* than ever, and is absolutely faultless. The remedy that will cure the many diseases peculiar to women is Waraers Safe Kidney and Liver cure.— Mother 3 $ Magazine. Large quantities of grain now seek a market via the Mississippi river. Shipments of bulk grain from St. Louis to foreign ports, via New Orleans, from January 1 to October 18, 13,914,000 bushels against 6,184,8§8 bushels for the same time last year. Br.VNus»s Water Sure Istabllslunfnn In it* Ffth year. Tar chronic and man form* of diemm. It has givM health to thousands incurabla by other mean*. Sand for olrcular to h7>BKa«E, kl D., Maw Brighton, Beaver county, Pa. George Munro, the New York publisher, has endowed a chair of history, Eolltical economy and rhetoric at Dalousie College. Halifax, N. S., the incumbent of which will be tne Bev. John Forest. Gan. John A. Logan, Hero of the late wur, and now United States senator from Illinois, writes: “Some years ago I was troubled more or less with rheumatism, and have within the last year or so suffered Intensely with the same disease. I begin to take ‘Durang’s Rheumatic Remedy,’ and am thoroughly satisfied that I have been cured Dy Its use. I do not hesitate to recommend it to all sufferers.” It is taken internally and never failn to oure the worst case in the shortest time. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists. Write for forty page pamphlet to R. K. Helphenstine, Druggist, Washington, D. CT Dr. Kllnw-S GreatNcrve Restorer 1* a marWilks's Psvs sm Agss Test*. The *M sWiM* VMtedr WWW uib st ■Mtssr ..
OUR OWN-MO. 106 » * HEKTOe RAPH, New Pnoccsa or I>bt oorrpi«. Patentad ICay 18 and Judo 1, 1880. clally adapted forsuperintondants and tmhnigm Pedna quastloos for E^ d poirfls. Patents for thla proeaaa haring now bora tsIndiana and Bowlkarn Michigan. ssoraocm ■ ASTHMA “1?^ 64 &^^-*a I S33^sr
II * j • i ‘ jSPjySI?: ; * Syrup. W Years Before the Public. Pronounced by all to be the most pleas•to aud lietom remedy now to wn for them of ewgfc«, eoNs, eroup, hoarseuess, tickling seuaatfon dT toe throat, whooping cough, etc. Over a million bottles sold within the last few yean, It gives relief wherever need, end has the power to impart benefit that cannot be had from the cough mixtures now In use. field by ell druggists at 25 oente per bet tie. BILLERS’ LIVER PILLS are also highly recommended for curing liver com-' plaint, constipation, tick headaches, fever and ague, end all diseases of toe stomach and liver. 80M by all druggists at 25 oenleper box. R.E.SELLERS A 00., Battle Creak, Michigan, munfricTtraam oar not onx «mh*whb threshersT^^^ 1 Traction and Plain Engines and Horae-Powera. gsst<w».’ris Thresher Facfy } KstaMUhed htfoVwM. I 1848 00 YEARS JL manmceinect, or l> vition, to “ka «j»“ iB tread warruety ffitta am aO owywih. SEPARATORS and Coin plot* Stenw Outfit* af maickltttqur.Hrtt. Time# True tios Baglaessad Plata Jtogiacs •ver seon in tbe .Vccric*u market. A auAittid* of ipacioi /Vafora* <nd foymi.mil for 1981, to«relher with vwh'tfo*A> en..r«i. Hon and vtaiarialt not drean ted of by oilier ic&ken. Pour size, of Sepantom, tram V to 18 Iwss cav*sntv, for tlorm or Morsopoteor. Two style* of “ Mounted ■* Horse-Powers. ! 1 *7 Ann »f Selected Lumber I |WUV|UUU I/ron line lo >u ,nn air-drfol) constantly on bar J, from which is bnilt the by. com parable wood-work of our machtneiy. TRACTION ENGINES^9? StroKyert.wmt dnrahle-anA rfieirut nor fS/ m*. Ht lOt 13 Horse Power. IMI NICHOUS, A BHEPARD * CO. Battle Crselt* Michigan. EJ Ptso's Cure for Coosamption. H ■ It act* quick and It tavtesgood. H B Dose small,—bottle lar*e.l H Therefore the a* w.l B Has the best. Bold everywhere. B HtJSe^midaLOOperhtrttl^ Pr. Cape’s Carbelats of lar lahalanA SCnnsytln, A*th> ma, B rone Bins. Deafboo. Cured at hetoa. Trial Couaultatlon S Advice nTJTJTJ lep. PamphlntlulLU Addrew Dr. a. W.CABX, QOO Area Btreet, THE LARQEST SCROLL SAW HOUSE AAA In America. BnoiatOnu. In order to tatroduca my new French Saw Blade..which jHHa arc the beat for bectanen to om, a* they arc rn w|tou*titr and harder to break than other*,l will B Bee Lid to every one who Mad* me tht* card and m _m forty cents, tlx dosen aacorted Freach Saw ASA Blades, from No. 00 to 9. Ur I will send tha f£„of same amount for tutrty cent* when ordered 2VB with a Scroll Saw Maoblne. Thi* offer will be UU January *Oth. Send also for new cataocuee of Scroll Saw liood», loo.e. Skates. Biejig 4 dee. Games and Home Amusements. Order U blanks and envelopes free. JOHN WILKINSON. 77 ead W State street, Uhloapo, lU. W. G. PRESS * CO., Bankers, Grain & Commission 187 Madison street, Chicago. We are member* of the Chicago Board of Dade. W# buy and Mil wheat, oor and oat* on a margin of Sol cant* par bash*!. SI,OOO I* oft*a mad* by an lnveitment of tit to *IOO a* margin. H BLISTIO ETk. Genuine XL AST IC EL TRUSS JM TKOBB la worm with perfect oemfert, aigkt rOtoWLo* and day, retalalag rap A M taro under tbo hardest \Y W / exercise or seven at strain 8 .Id at groaUj reduced prtoea and Mat by mall to all part* of the country. Send for foil descriptive drooler to N. T. XLkSTIO TRUSS CQ , SIS Oread way, NT ENCYCLOP/€DIA TIOUETTESBUSINESS 188 1* the rbeapeat aad only complete pad reliable work on KU'iuette and Business ana Social Forma. It telle how t* perform all the various duties of Ufaaii bow to appea to the beet advautrp* on all ooeaaloae. Ai:ent. wanted Seed for clrc-aler eontatnlo* a full Iwr iiUen of the work end extra terms to aaenta. Address Nstioiiai.Pumtaouto Co , Chicago. HI.. Bill**, Shot Onn*, Revolrwa, eent a a ABroamlaatNa
wmrm
Dm. HAWTXR'* I BOX Toyicl* a preparatlou od Frotoxkf*^ Peru v fan TUrk tbs Wit*. phates. associated with tha Vagatabb Xromatlo*. Endorsed by tha and recommended by them for Dyspepsia. General Dablllty, Femat* rlilfiif*. ytlilfTfTini 1 1 BWi *abt CHUa ax 4 Ffifßf* iv itmi CY«ry purpoti WDHf 5 tonic !• Bfiowirji lUllfUlnl by THE (ML HARTER MENCME CO., la 2B Btk Bk SfriWt, ft Pda
I DYSPEPSIA.!
ft W O iv: -A. ]\r I
case* hare annually been treated. Dr. I’lmrt Favorite PifirHnHaw la the result of this extended experience, and baa bectkne Justly eelabraTcilfcs U* many id rctnarkaUe cures of all those thntatte dtsPBCULIAU TO FEHILES. Favorite Prescription fe a powerful Beatoratlre Tonic to the entire system. It U a nervine es mesurpassed efficacy, and whllalt qtrirta nervous Irritation, It strengthens the enfeebled nervousayatem, Hmmm emails lairtwtl painful meant mnttent nnentnS*! anppewaateaaf'wcok back) pralapana, m felling es the eternal nSnenhst nlearamfons hearing dawn mi alia a; cliroala roagnetten. Ma» motion, nad wleemUeaf Internal brail atisaj Itimdsnl servant and ak-k headache? deMtttgl and I mu ntai.er stcelUtr. when not caused by stricture of the neck or On womb. When tbs latter condition exist*, we can, by other meads, rest fifty rat novo t)>e linji etaaaae in tha baariag ad efeplat (see Invalids’.Guide Book, sent for one stamp, or the Medical Adriaen Favorite Prescription la sold under a | idUte frnaan il la For conditions, sea wrapper around botfeaa -D# UEXnm."—Mrs, B. F. Morjpn, of New Castle, Uneota Maine, says: “Flt* veaieafel J waa a dreadful sufferer from uterine Double*. Having exhausted the skill of Utreu physicians, IWaa have lied no trouble since. 1 wrote a letter to my family paper, briefly tnemlonlng'hSrmy bfelftW M beta restored, and offering to send Ibe IhU particulars to any one writing me for them eadfstcleatna a stamped envelop* for reply. ' I havc received over four hundred letters, la have oeecrthed for IL>n Address, tmetiw fMtsirhfenii.r wwtm - ’
nu nig my ooioraa onws w TUTT’S PILLS 1* psidMlMtr dratoßm Tbs Hep muereßlg. rf Pwk.rtw, N.T. edk pmJ ee.Lke.li.. In., ifoUt He, btiuie. wkkh erele eefl foeee e .see .rerun Is. isfo im were seres ikee ell efoec riwitlw, ■ Fo^A^grjL^mjCQgTOj ffsS£s§^rfl Mwhy"Arowrglok?| Bgma* |fl Why eudare aervoe* WORT Kd^retowillW UoeeynVifivflloakeOxfteef Miikßi B ■OM it ts your DrmgqitL. k* will order B Tbrowt. Prict. SI.OO. M I WHf.to ermftvnanw 4 H| | (WUlem*pmtyafo.) BerflmHa, Tk £ FOR CHILLS AND FEVER jBkJSQZD ALL DIABAatM capsxo BY Malarial Poisoning OFTHECLOOP. A Warranted Cur*. Price, SI.OO. FOB PALS BT ALL DBCOOISTA *7 PENSIONS iEv'HS of the la- e war to a needon. Pensions by tbo law of January, IST9, betia bacx at data of discharge. All eatiiled ehoakd apply at once. Thousands who are aow drawing y —- -M are entitled to aa Increase. Soldier* aad widows «l tha war of ISI9 aad Maxfoaa war arc entitle! te pea■ions. Thoasands are yet ertltled to boaaty, hat don’t know It. Bond two stamp* for new Mom blank* aad instructions to R.C. FITZBXXAUY Pea*fo< A tty, Box tn, Waehlst dr, D O Hro s m°jp Fiti, ijnl<p«v and Acres i/Mma If taken a* directed. Ao Atr after a. Treatise and tt trial bottle free to ffigssssssas T. ELLWOOD ZELL’S PUBLICATIONS. ZELL’B ENCYCLOPEDIA is the moat oamqreheo»lv* work *ve» is aed It oompriea* a wonderfully ooaneneed aad, thorouch Eariei pMla aa Uaahridged Dictionary, aa Allas of the World, superior M aay, aad a Oasettesr of the World. 7he -a] features eombiaed form in* SSell’e Cno Coped la, nave token Medals aaa Diplomas for Special Merit at the la I* cm t >aal Exhibition of Vienna UcolJ medal). at Chin aad Faitadeiphla leach a medal aad diploma;, and at Faria (two m-dale aad diploma.) „ - Zr l.L'ti UA >D ATLAS, with index aad Oeeoriptiw* matter to sees map, chart nt colored tin, eke. ZELL'S IMPERIAL ATI.AS-very lore* maps. - ZELL'S CONDENSED CY* LOI’KDI A. 1 vot. OY LOFKUtA UF XUEH N HIKiUTCEK. The HUUSEHOLO OYLLOntDIA OF RXCIdPTS Tb# beet tesUmooUla have been xlvv* vp BtUti v for these book*. CJrcntar* eent Aaucts and earn ms *n wanted. T ELLWOOD ZB L, gg y O 9100 PRK9CIITI Ak For a Vachta* tkaf will Pfife few.** r*tat ato £aay i *t« tofe SW'JJU u V. This la th« izir.tr of Sty Kachtnaft tl itw* off a 3 foot lor *hx 8 £O,OOO la nre. TU« ch*B.vMwtt —»v>.. . fc.a -'.'i.RTs'l fallywttrrwtM. CtvoalarfrtO. Cniitd Yttrcftt-futlaa Ca., Cbtaxat, UL ITR P IVfo »»Ueur Rubber Prlatlt.* Btamiw. **» *iU tfil pUr free. Ttfum Hxe tO».
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BLOOD.
