Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 July 1888 — Page 7

Parity and Strength The former in the blood and the latter throughout the system, are neceasary to the enjoyment of perfect health. The best way to secure both ‘t is to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, which ekpels all • impurities from the blood, rouses the kidneys and liver, overcomes that tired feeling, and imparts that freshness to the whole body, which makes one feel perfectly well. • ‘T have taken not quite a bottle of Hood's Sarsapaiilla, and_must say it is one of the best medicines for giving an appetite, purifying the blood,f and regulating the digestive organ", that I ever heard of. .It did me a great deal of geod.” Mrs N. A Stanley, Canastota, N. V. . Hood’s Sarsaparifla. Sold bv all druggists, gljslx for $5. Prepared only by C. L HOOD* CO.,Apothecariea.Lowell, Haas. 100 Doses One Dollar.

True Blessing 'jpo suffering humanity would follow a discontinuance of the habit of using cathartic pills and compounds and Bevere diuretics. They tear down, wear out and destroy. By arousing the kidneys and liver to unnatural activity, they, seem to relieve distress, but the relief is only temporary, as the causes of physical disorder are not removed any more so than a weary horse can be refreshed by a severs whipping; ho may go a little farther, but will eventually drop dead in his tracks. A remedy that will strengthen the weak portions, remove impurities of the blood and general system, and gently stimulate the appetite, is wliat is needed by the majority of dyspeptics and sufferers from sore and clogging kidneys. Such a remedy is Dr. Ouysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla, an alterative of splendid virtue and unmistakable effect Thousands there are who would now he in their graves, had they not resorted to a timely use of this common sense curative. rPHB GRATEFUL RELIEF ’*■ given to soreness of the throat and lungs by a few doses of Dr. Wi*tar’s Balsam of Wild Cherry Is most pleasing to the afflicted. This remedy is .the very best that any physician can prescribe as a cure for coughs, colds and all bronchial and pulmonary irritation. It has cured many cases of consumption after other remedies had failed and recovery announced hopeless. If you suffer from a cough or any lung trouble, you do yourself great injustice if you fail to try this excellent remedy. It is very pleaaant to take, and a single teaspoonful will frequently cure an ordinary cough. JOHN D. PARK & SONS, Proprietors, Cincinnati. Ohio.

The best and sorest Remedy for Cure of all diseases caused by any derangement of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels, i Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation, Bilious Complaints and Halariaof all kinds yield readily to the beneficent Influence of ;\3JI iiSTHiIS It is ileasant to the taste, tones np the systen restores and preserves health, It is ;arely Vegetable, and cannot fail to prove i ienefleial, both to old and young. As a Blood Purifier It is superior to all others. Sold everywhere at tl.oo a bottle. tUK Abb DISORDERS OF THE Stomach, Liver andjowels PACIFIC p!™ eTßioTxrsr veqht awt.-fi Ctrnn Constipation, Indigestion, Dyspiphia r tuts, sick Hbadachi, Livxb Complaints, Lot t nr app»tit«. Biliousnms. Msbvousnsss, Jal\* dm- Bto. PRICK, Umdi. r *WM CO.. ST, IQIJIS. MO. rp " lIM m We trill piint your mme and UNLUVtntU .fci': r t zr™, In pottage stamps; yon will then receive great numbers of pictures, cards, catalogues, books, sample works of art, circular*, magazines, papers, general samples, sic., etc.. I'.NPOriHIJfO to you tlio great broad field of the great employment and agency business. Those whose names are In this Directory often receive that which if purchased, would cost f’JO or fUU cash. Thous* nd* of men and women make large sums of money in thengeury business. Tens of millions of dollars worth of rroods are p arly sold through agents. This Directory is sought and used by the leading publishers, booksellers, novelty dealers, inventor* and manufacturers of the tTnited States a mlEurope It is regarded •s the standard Agents’Dhrectory of the and is relied upon ■ • harvest awaits nil whose names appear in it. Those wbdie names are in it will keep posted on ait the hew money making things that come out, while literature will flow to them in a steady stream. The great bargains of the most reliable firm's w ill be put before all. Ageuts make money in thair own localities. Agents make money traveling all around'. Some agents makt over ten thousand dollars a year. All depends on w fist the agent has to sell. Few there are who know all about the business of those who employ agents; those who have l lift iuloßuaiian*. ~lSfc<rTj|#» tawytsfikt those whtnmnamrtfHrelri'flfl* Directory get this information FREE and complete Tliis Directory Is used by all first-class firms, all over the world, wbo employ agents. ~ Over I,IJW such firms use it. Your name tnthUtfirecton' will bring you in great Information and .large value; thousands will through it be led to profitable work, add FORTUNE, -leader, the very best small investment you can make, is to have .’oar name and address printed in this directory. Address, « American Agents' Directory, Augusta, Main*. ■ mediate relief in the worst casesJnsureß com fort- ■ ■able sleep; effects cures where all others fail. .< B ■ fruit C'-mnnceelAemetet sceptical. Price

HOW CONGRESSMEN LIVE.

Ex-Governor Long Gives Some Interesting Facts About Their Hopae Surround i ngs. When John D. Long, of Massachusetts, leaves the House of Representatives, as he proposes to do at the en,d of his present term, his State and the country gerigenerally will lose the services of a bright statesman. Some time ago he advised his friends that he would not be a candidate for re-election, and it has generally been understood that Mr. Long, not being ripfi, Was desirous to return to the practice of his profession as a lawyer, so as to provide more adequately for himself and family. Writing to a newspaper friend who had commented on his retirement, he gives some interesting statements as to the life and expenses of many of his colleagues in Washington. He says: In reference to my withdrawal from the House of Representatives, I beg you not to think it is a matter merely of a few dollars more or less of salary. My habits are simple, and salary is not a controlling consideration with me, as it ought not to be to any public official. His public duty turns on far higher considerations. And what you say of his obligation to them, and of the grave public responsibilities that rest on him, is true and you can not say it too often or too forcibly.

I do not write, however,with reference to my retirement, reserving what I have to say about that until I write a general letter to the district a little later. I write to correct what I infer from your editorials to be a mistaken notion with regard to the manner in which Congressmen generally live in Washington. So far from being to them a “Babylon” full of “wasteful wantons” and “lavish luxuries,” it is vefy much what Abingdon or Hingham is to your neighbors or mine. There are a few persons of great riches who now and then give entertainments and live in an extravagant and profuse way, as some rich people do in every other community. But the great bulk of representatives, including noticeably nearly all the men of controlling influence, are men of limited means, who live in a modest and simple manner.

On the whole, I should say that the instance of Henry Wilson, which you cite, is a type of the present majority of members. Our Massachusetts Senators, Dawes and Hoar, live quite as simply, one in a little tenement no better than our ordinary New England parsonage, and the other in a boarding-house, which you will not think extravagant when I tell ycm that, with the exception of myself, the rest of the boarders are Government employes, whose average salaries range from perhaps $2,000 rapidly downward. Walking out with Mrs. Long at sundown last evening we passed a modest doorstep on which, with his young children playing about him, sat a member, who pointed to a plain suite of rooms as his lodging; whose dress and manner of living are as simple and unostentatious as those of a Plymouth county farmer, and vet he is a millionaire, the richest man, I think, in the House, a Western lumberman, wise and hard-handed, and not ashamed, but proud of the goad stick which he wielded in his youth, and with which he pricked his way to fortune. Among the leaders, Reed lives in the fifth story of a small hotel, Randall in a house that would perhaps yield a rent of S3OO or S4OO, McKinley in two or three chambers, Mills in a quiet boarding house, and so on through the list. The House is full of poor men who make no show, who are just such plain, well behaved, temperate, churchgoing people as you and I meet at home, who go afoot and drive no fine teams, who ape no fashions, some of whom go to the few public receptions that occur in the winter, but few of whom are able or eare to hold receptions or give entertainments themselves.

Fine raiment is so rare among them that an old suit which I am now wearing for the third summer has actually been exploited by the newspaper reporters, in the absence of any other sensation, s subjecting me to the charge of being “well dressed;” and if Tom Reed should cover his shining head with a silk hat he would lose the Republican leadership. The member who lives luxuriously is the exception. r WKat is undoubtedly true of a few officials, especially so of some outside persons of great wealth who reside and entertain in Washington in the winter and are advertised in the society columns of the press, is not at all true of the great majority of the people’s servants.

Breaking in a Cadet.

Harper's Magazine. .■ ' : —y ;.'S Within a few days the cadets shake easily into their places, and by going over the mast-head every morning, sending up and down the light spars, and being ordered to get a pull here and a pull there and a long pull altogether everywhere, during the be6t part of their waking hours; they soon aeqmre a nautical air and a fairly good grip upoif the strange surroundings. Two or three days later the Constellation drops down the Annapolis Roads, stands in Chesapeake Bay, and the long looked for cruise* begins. Practical work commences at once, and if the winds be un.favorable, and -they are—usually, the ship beats down the bay in the daytime and anchors at sunset. Here the

new cadet sees the envied senior classmen in charge of the deck, .make and take in sale, tack, wear, boxhaul, and chapel ship; sees him occasionally miss stays and box her off, heave to, get casts of the deep sea lead, shift sails and spars, reef and shake out reefs, and bring the ship to an anchor. All this time he is doing yeoman’s service himself; his hands get horny and hard, his white working-cloths are tarry, and he is so used to “stamping and/going it” that when night comes he is glad to tom in early, and leave the hardships of anchorwatch to those who have enjoyed the triumphs of the quarter-deck. After Hampton Roads are reached, the vessel lies at anchor for a week or more; but this is a busy season, and all day long there are great-gun, company, pistol, or small-arm drills, fire quarters, boats armed and equipped, or that stirring exercise when the crew and cadets are called to “abandon, ship.” This drill is usually executed Without previous warning, exactly as it might be needed in any sudden emergency, as in a collision, or danger of foundering on the high sea; but within a moment after the order rings out, every one is at his station; some lower the boats, others stand sentry over the falls, so no unauthorized or panic-stricken person may enter without orders; the majority pass up provisions and water, cooking utensils, arms, ammunition and nautical instruments; there is heard everywhere the rush of feet, the whimper of boatfalls as the davits creak and complain with the strain and weight of the crews lowering themselves by stopper or halyards; from' every gun-port willing hands pass- stores into the cutters, and when ready, each reports its name and number. In less than five minutes, if the discipline be good, the crew is embarked in cutters, whale-boats, launches, gig, and dingy, all submerged almost to their gunwales and the ship is abandoned-officially.

THE REPUBLIC OF LIBERIA.

Interesting Statistics About the Curi--9 ous Little Negro Nation. New York Graphic. The President appointed a few days since a new Minister and Consul General to Liberia. Every President who has been in office since the foundation of the little African Republic has had’a chance to nominate three or four men as our representatives there. The troub e is that no American, black or white, can live on the coast. Hence the man who goes there to act as Consul General either resigns in a short time or else he dies. There is not much known about Republic in this country, but ex-Minister Taylor, who returned from there lately, gives the Graphic some interesting information about the country and its resources. He puts the value of the private property in that country at $1,000,000, or $1 per capita. The “Nation” has a bonded indebtedness of $2,000,000, and over $7,000,000 have been sent to it by benevolent persons in this country and England. There are about as many Cabinet Ministers as in the United States. There are only four post-offices in the country. The Navy consists of two gunboats, presented by the English Government, which are rotting on the sand. Some time ago the President of the United States recommended to Congress the giving to the infant Republic of two old war vessels, but the offer was rejected unless crews and provisions for ten years were provided. The army consists of one regiment numbering 417 men, of whom 388 are. officers and 29 privates. The President’s body guard numbers 19, of whom 17 are officers. In some of the counties'there are not enough citizens to hold the offices, but in the others -there are just about enough to go round. Class distinctions prevail to the extent they did in the Southern States durings la very times. The citizens domineer over the savages and often use - them cruelly. Their boys make the young savages carry them on their back to school and do all kinds of work for them. Candidates for admission to the bar ary required to read the first chapter of John’s Gospel and to spell the columns of words in Webster’s spelling book as “publication.” They mast also read the laws passed by the last session of Congress. The Legislative Atfeembly consists of two branches, the Upper House having eight members and the Lower House, thirteen. The annual session generally lasts two weeks, and the laws enaetecWll about three pages.

Omitting Certain Services.

Just before the collection a country minister said: # “Dearly beloved brethren, owing to the excessive heat of the day, I think it will be wise to omit certain portions of our morning service.” This seenied to please some of the members, and they began covertly to return dimes and quarters to their pockets. Then the minister went on: “The collection will now be taken up.” ~

He Wanted Peace.

Xthrpjik'a Journal. ' Wile—Where havp yon been, George? Husband—l was over to Quinby’s 1 awhile. I tell you I never, saw such a ! household. They quarrel like And | dogs. lam too fond of peace to lead such a life. Is supper ready? “Not-quhe.” “Then why in thunder isn’t it? How j-long- does it take yea too- stew- -np-a4ittls hash, anyhow? You’re slower than a clock that won’t run.”

SUNDAY LABOR IN GERMANY.

More Than Half the Working People Do/Not Heat on Sunday, L Expressions of surprise have bean indulged in by some portions of the press at the existence of such a state of affairs as systematic labor in Germany on Sundays. The immediate cause of the late appearance of the subject in the daily presses the report of the United States States Consul at Leipsic to the Secretary of State, Washington. This report is based on certain inquiries instituted by the German Government concerning the extent to which Sunday labor is practiced in Germany. The purpose of these inquiries is for the enactment of imperial legislation regulating Sunday labor. The Consul writes that “the laws of the various States ot the German Empire are by no means uniform on this subject. In Saxony, for example, Sunday labor is prohibited in the manufacturing and farming industries, and in trades, with the exception of work necessary to prevent accidents or injury to health, repairs which cannot be delayed, and works of ‘urgency.’ In Prussia the legislation is not so strtet. For sometime past a demand has been raised in various quartersfor the limitation, or, at any rate, for the uniform regulation of Sunday work throughout the empire for it is obvious that a manufacturer or trader in a State which permits Sunday labor possesses a considerable advantage over his rival in a State where Sunday is a legal day of rest.” In Prussia, out of 500,156 establishments of all kinds employing 1,582,591 hands, 288,939 establishments are kept in operation on Sundays With 668,027 hands. Here is a proportion of nearly fifty-eight per cent, of the establishments kept open on Sunday, or every day in the year. Examination shows that Sunday labor is much greater in trade and transport occupations than in those devoted strictly to manufacturing. In the trade, the Consul writes, “the keeping open of the shop or sale department may be taken as the definition of regular Sunday work. In factories and great industries regular Sunday work applies chiefly to repairs and keeping the machinery and so on always going.” The opinions of those to whom the inquiries were addressed seem to have been solicited concerning the practicality of prohibiting Sunday labor, with the general result that 23 per cent, of masters, and 32 per cent, of the men believe in an unlimited prohibition*, 39 per cent, of masters and 41 per cent, .of men in a limited prohibition, while 38 per cent, of the masters and 27 per cent, of the men hold any kind of prohibition to be impracticable. While this is so in Germany it should not be lost sight of that in this country Sunday labor is systematically required to some extent on ourrailways, in some of the Southern and Western States among tradesmen, and perhaps in ottfer occupations.

A Common Sense Remedy.

In the matter of curatives what you want is something that will do its work while you continue to do yours—a remedy that will give you no inconvenience nor interfere with your business. Such a remedy is Allcock’s Porous Plasters. These plasters are purely vegetable and absolutely harmless. They require no change of diet, and are not affected by weTor cold. Their action does not interfere with labor or business; you can toil and yet be cured while hard at work. They are so pure that the youngest, the oldest, the most delicate person of either sex can use them with great benefit. Beware of imitations, and do not be deceived by misrepresentation.' ■ Ask for Allcbck’s, and let no explanation or solicitation induce you to accept a substitute.

T. Daw, a Japanese civil engineer, has been up to the Connellsville (Pa.) coke ovens getting points about the manufacture for copying in Japan, where ovens will be established. He has also inspected the coal mines and the manufacture of iron. She (at a musicals) —Do you care for Meyerbeer, Mr. Wabash? He—Well — er—l generally take Ehret’s when 1 can get it. When a person is in good health,items concerning the merit of a reiqpdy are of little interest. However, it is.wise to be prepared, and our readers should not forget that the most, reliable tonic and blood purifier is Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. This remedy is a simple vegetable compound, and is harmless to the most delicate individual. Try it when you feel unwell, and enjoy its revivifying effect. A new way of serving watermelon is to cut it into balls. Pleasure seekers and tourists visiting the White Mountains, the Maine Coast, Nantucket and other seaside resorts, should stop at the United States Hotel in passing through Boston. Here they will find every comfort,careful attention and moderate charges, while its convenient location to the Western and Southern railway stations saves all carriage hire. Some one has asked: “wheredo flies go in winter?” We don’t know, but we wish they would go there in sumnaetv M. de Lesßeps isn’t dead, by a long shot. He wants to live until he sees the completion of tfraUgreat undertaking—the Rochester jfublie budding.

WORTH KNOWING.

The worn Scald 6r Born can be cored without a scar if Cole** Carliolisalve is promptly used. It instantly stops the pain. Sold by bruggiata at 25 and 50 cents.

SAINT YOUR BUGGY for ONE DOLLAB riniiiiinii'irn ['.iiiiiiiiiiiiii ilium n HiiigffWi^iiuWi'WluiimrN P She pi. Will free «*«xpe&Nb enough to paiot youe Boggy upon vecciot of Oo*t I>olU- <3 OXT c*» CO., CHIUAttO,

Deserving of Pity.

Chicago Journal. A correspondent at Grinnell, lowa, writes: “We have tramps and a variety of paupers, but no class appears so deserving of pity as the old man who is working so hard to support a fashionable family and paying his life insurance that they may be rich when he is dead.” »

Of All Things in the World

A tonic Is what nervous people require. To imparl strength Into the nervous org.iitsin is to inMiielts tranquility, provided causes o( un healthiul excitement are avoided. A medicinal tonic mat—like Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters—commands the unqualified sanction of -the healing profession, and which' lnsti utea a general reform in a bilious, dvioeptic and-debtlltisted condition of the system, is surely entitled to a careful trial by intelligent people capable of forming a uue estimate of a medicine from emphatic and often recorded professional evidence in it" behalf, f* ot only are the nerve* und stomach invigorated by the Bitter.", but the system is also endowed with unwonted power of resistance to influence* in air, water or daily avocations subversive of health Prominently danger oils among the first named of these is malaria, against which Hostetler's Stomach Bitters affords a competent safeguard. Rbeumathm and kidney troubles are also prevented and overcome by it. Monroe county, 111., has more saloon keepers than Sunday-school teachers.

The Population of the United States

Is about <10,000,000, and we would say at least one-half are troubled with some affection of the Throat and Lungs, as those complaints are, according to statistiesmore nu merous than others. Wo would advise all our readers nottSf neglect the opportunity to call on their druggist and get a liottle of Kemp’s Balsam for the Throat and Lungs. Trial sizes free. Large bottles 50c and sl. Sold by all druggists. In monarchical countries the people ought not to complain of drought, inasmuch as there is a constant reign.

Popular Education.

We sympathize with the feeling which often leads citizens to boast that no child born in this country need grow up in ignorance, and-yet it is a fact that many people who have learned to read and write have never taught themselves to think. A man who suffered from catarrh, consumption,bronchitis, scrofula, or “liver complaint,” might read till his eyes dropped out, how these and many other diseases have been cured by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, but if he did not take the lesson to himself and test the virtues of this great inedi cine his time would be thrown away. A new bug has made its appearance in New Jersey and is said to be pale looking but large and ravenous. It is probably the Jersey mosquito’s ghost. “Ah me!” sighed Potts, “I’m tired of living, The world is hollow, ambition’s vain.” ‘Come now,” said his chum, “1 know the symptoms: It’s all yonr liver-that’s very plain. You need not suffer, for help is easy; Pierce’s Pellets go right to the place. ‘A friend to the bilious,’ I welt might call them. There’s nothing better; they’ll suit your case.” Potts ceased his sighing and bought the Pellets, No more he mourneth his hapless lot! His face Is cheerful, hts heart Is lightsome, His melancholy is qnite forgot! A howling swell—the sea in a storms Dr, Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures when every other so-called remedy fails. Bancroft, the California historian, has a library worth $200,000. Prickly Ash Bitters Is an unfaiting cnreforall diseases originating in biliary derangements caused by the malaria of miasmatic countries. No other medicine now on sale will so effectually remove the disturbing elements, and at the same time tone np the whole system. It is sure and sale in its action.

TOURISTS Seeking rest and recreation dnring tlie hot summer months can obtain valuable information from the i lusirated Gu'de Books entit ed “A Summer Jaunt” and “Summer of 1888,” issued by the Wisconsin Central Line. These books are descriptive of the Summer Resorts in Wisconsin and Minnesota, reached by the Wisconsin Centra 1 Line, and wi-1 be sent free <oany address upon application 10 JAMES BAKER, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Milwaukee, Wis. If afflicted with Sore Eyes, uae Dr. Iseac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggis sell it. 25c.

Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a ChlM, she cried lor Castoria, When she became Miss, the clnng to Castoria When she had Children, she gave them Castoria (Established 1850.) INDIANAPOLIS (Reorganised 1885.) Business universitv North Pennsylvaaia St., Opp. PostofEee. jf SE2UAH, SSZB ft 03395 N, Principals anl Prpriciers. Best facilities for Business, Short-hand, Penmanship, English and Actual Business Training, individual instruction. Educate for pro6t—least expensive in time and money. Attractive City. Graduates hold lucrative positions. A strictly business school. Open all year. Enter now. Write to us. Elegant Catalogue, Free. «i prescribe and fully on >rse Big ( ‘ as the only leciflc forthc certain euro this disease. . H. INGHAHAM, M. D-, Amsterdam, N. Y We have sold Big 6 ic. rhRD-CHEAOO.^ 1.00. Sold by Druggist t O I ri/a harmless, positive and permanent cure of 111 r a failing manhood from age or abuse. Best W Lelallblood purifier known. II bottle; sent prepaid Druggists keep it. Glek Co.. I*4 8. Halsted-st., Chicago. fiPIIIH &£ MR Wr 4. f

GRAND JUBILEE celebrating the Settlement of tin Northwestern Territory. UNSURPASSED .DISPLAY. e x cu lpoihts!

LESS Than COBT. THE CAMPAIGN WEEKLY Globe-Democrat (TEN PAGES) For ISSS Will be sent to any address in tbo United States as follows: From Ang. to Dec. Ist, 20 Cents From Sept, to " 15 Celts From Oct. to “ 10 Cents Subscribe at Once and Get All the Interesting Political News. - Special rates to Postmasters and news-dealers! Addiesa, GLOBE PRINTING CO., ST. LOUIS, MO *S*3end for Sample Copy! FOR THE CAMPAIGN OF 1888. The Great Democratic nnd Independent Newspaper, The Sun c»n afford to be Independent, for it* Democracv is sound to me core. That is why The Sun. with the truest loyalty to Democratic principles and the Democratic cause, is accustomed to speak ont its honest convictions with absolu’e fearlessness and in language that can be understood. Thug The Sun is the People’s Newspaper. From now until November t rings the triumph of the United Dem< cracy and the election Of the Democrspv’g candidate*. CLEVELAND and THURMAN. The Bun will print the most tru'hfnl, instructive. impartial, and entertaining hist ry of the campaign of 1888. It* ample renames enable .it to get all the facts, and to present them in incomparably compact and interesting style: whiles good-natured philosophy and a tolerant habit of view in the minor affaire of mankind do not check it" earnestness in working with all its heart for the canse ol honest government, to be ensured by the lasting prevalence of the nolitical ideas h< Id by Jefferson, Jackson, and Tllden. The Sun has six, eight, twelve, sixteen, and twenty page*, as occasion requires, and is ahead of all competition in everything that nukes a newspaper worth reading. Dally, per month *o 50 Daily, per year. 0 t o Sunday, per year 2 00 Daily and Sunday, per year 8 OO Daily and Bunday. per month 0 70 Weekly San, one year 1 00 Address THE SUN, New York. “■ffiARVELOUd MEMORY DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike artificial systems. Cure of mlort wardering. Any book learned in one reading. Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit 1500 at Pbi'adelphia, 1113 at Washington, 1810 at Boston largeclasses of Columbia Law Students, at Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, University oi Penn , Michigan University. Chautauqua, Ac.Ac Endorsed by Biohabd Pbootob. the Scientist, Hons. W. W.' astob. Judah P Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Bbown, E. H. Coox, Prln. N. Y. State Normal Col’ege, Ac. Taught by correspondence. Prospectus post fbkx from PROF LOIBETTE. 287 Fifth Ave.. N. Y. - AND CIRCLE- • - INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA DR. WINCHELL’S Teething Syrup FOXI CHILDREN Regulates the bowel*, assists dentition, core* diarrhoea and dysentery in the worst forms, cures canker sore month, is a certain preventive of diphtheria, quiets and soothes all p -in, invigorates the stomach and bowels, corrects all acidity, and gfvse energy and tone to the entire system. Sold by all druggists at 25 cts per bottle. _ t’HMKKT PJROPUSTARY CO., Chicago, flk WKSELLALLAMFRICAIt A BICYCLES. riL And guarantee LOWEST PRICES. yvtvl fvSrila. A. W. GUMP dc CO., Dayton, O. '(ill*''*Lar*e«t retail stock in America. 52 in OTTO, factory price *60.00, our price *<o.oo. 50 in. ’’ “ “ 55j00, M “ 35.00 48 iu. “ “ ” 50 00, “ " 33.00. 46 in. ” “ ** 45.00, “ “ 30.09. 44 in. “ ” “ 40.00. “ “ 27.001 Order quick. A 150250 second-hand Wheels. Repairing <6; Nickeling. Bicycles & Gnus taken in trad* UfIMC STUDY. Book-keeping, Bnsinesi nUmC Forms, Penmanship, Arithmetic. Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught *-v MAIL Circular* free BRYANT'S BUSINESS COLLS OB Buffalo. S.T p|p B» return n-ait. Fall OeaertpI lx Ei Ea tioa Moody'. New Taltar *»yatenj ofUroa Cnttlnsr. HOOItT A CO.. Otn.. O PSf a Live at noraeaaa make more tnoaey woikingltorastLaa <J Jinn ■* anvihlngelae In the world. Either tax. Coetly outfll rasa. Term* rasa. AdAreas. Thus a C- Auguata, M'**a 1 HD S»—88 IKUm When writing to Advertisers reader* wtU confer a favor w men Honing tbla paper.