Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 6, Number 99, 25 April 1881 — Page 2
iMlmnlltwIlktMriittirMtaaM, Htnhnar-ad. l-Mllane.
MONDAY. APRIL 25, 1881. TO ADTEHTIHEKt. Tk drcalavUsm mi tmm aaUl-aaam, DaUr mm Weekly, la aware 4nM laal f Mr - paper pa IU ha Warn tTwaaaty. REPUBLICA CITY TICKET. ElMtlM Tm y, yimr 3, uie For Mayor: GEN. T. W. BENNETT. JOSEPH H. COOKE. For Clark: BIOHA&O H. KINOFor Marshal: l)U18 O. 8HOFEB. For Ooonaflmfln: -jsond Ward Ehrood Morris, i. i. Jordan Third Ward Thomas W. Roberta. Fourth War-Joseph V. luff. l"tflh Ward-Oliver Yates. Thb Sunday edition of the Indianapolis Journal will not be published hereafter. Tm Farragut statue will be unveiled at Washington to-day, with great cere mony. To witness the event, the city is full of old sailors, who take great pride in the fame of the grand old AdmiraL Ex-CoHOBKaaMaH Mombok, of Ohio, it is said is to have the Brazil mission. The appointment, it will be remembered, was refused bv Senator Bruce. But then the latter is not an Ohio man. Wb are told our neighbor of the Dem ocrat is sarins' ucIt things of the Pal ladium. We don't see the Democrat and therefore cannot say whether we ought to feel bad or not. So rretly f the woolen trade depress ed in Ens-land, and so little hope of improvement is entertained, that some of the manufacturers at Bradford contemplate removing their machinery to this Country and try their chances here. Wade Hampton, is either badly scared or unusually candid, he is admitting the solid South is a thing of the past and that Democratic supremacy in some of the Southern States can no longer be maintained by fraud. Thk Republican Senators will caucus this week upon the subject of holding an executive session for confirming some of the appointments made by the President. This they can properly do without KttutWia their position on the question of election tne offtoen to 1m tflaaia It is certainly desirable that they should do so and relieve not only the anxiety of the appointees, but the President also from the embarrasment of his position. Bknatoh Conkling seems to be labor ing under the hallucination that it was he and not General Garfield, who was elected President. It is not the first in stance of a distinguished New York statesman making such mistake, still there was more excuse for Tilden than there is for Conkling. Roscoe will awa ken from his dream some of these days and learn the truth. In the mean time the country should be charitable to his infirmity. Tbb western rivers are in unusual flood At Omaha the water has invaded the town and much of it is submerged, while railroad communication is almost entirely cut off. At Sioux City there is neither railroad or telegraph communica tion with the outer world toward the north or west. Much damage to prop erty has been sustained at most of the river towns, but as the water was reced ing at latest reports the danger may now be considered at an end. isi itepuoiican state uonvention in Ohio will be held at Cleveland in June. Governor Foster will probably be nomi nated without opposition. Lieutenant Governor Hickenlooper, it is understood, declines a renomination. The Democrats have not settled upon a candidate for Governor, though a number of prominent gentlemen are named in connection with the nomination. The contest in Ohio will be fought out this year on national issues, and the result can be easily fore told. Btwatob Fbts's speech had a depress ing influence upon Democratic Senators. They labored under the delusion that the election frauds at the South had been fergotten, and were beginning to assume that all was regarded as fair and honest in that section. The forcible way Mr, Frye had of reminding them of their mistake, greatly disturbed their tranquility, and led them to see, if not acknowl edge, that some of them were occupying seats in the Senate to which they were elected through the results of intimida tion and fraud. It is understood at Washington that the plan of Secretary Windom of extend ing the time of redemption of govern ment 6 per cent, bonds at a reduction of interest to 8 per cent, is proving so popular that not more than $20,000,000 of such bonds will probably be presented for redemption. The choice lies entirely with the bondholder, who can present his bond and receive payment in full for it, or continue to hold the bond at the reduced rate of interest, subject to any future legislation of Congr ja. The large number who accept the lower rate of interest shows that a new 8 per cent, bond could be disposed of without troubled.
THE IHI4H LASD Hll.l It ia difficult for Americana to fully
underaUnd the intricacies of British. Dolitica. and especially the controTersiea ! omwinff out of leeialation for Ireland. ' The United Kingdom is unlike the Initsxl j B ' , Slates, in that it is composed of three separate nationalities or peoples, formerly three separate, independent Kingdoms. The union of Bcoiland with tngiana was a sair event for the Scotch, though it was a descendant of a long line of Scotch Kings who sat upon the throne of the united countries, to whom both peoples already owed allegiance. But with the Irish it was far worse; they had never been subjects of the Stewart dynasty; from time immemorial they had been in open warfare with all that was English or Scotch. They had been subjugated by force and transferred to British rule by fraud. It could not be expected that a spirited and brave people would tamely accept enforced sub jection or gratefully receive even protec tion from the hand of a master. Therefore ever since the Irish Parliament was abolished Ireland has been in a chronic state of insurrection. There have been times when British statesmen have sought to deal fairly and justly by the Irish peo ple, but oftener British prejudice and bigotry have loaded with oppression the laws enacted for the government of the sister island, until, it would seem, almost all of confidence on the one side and the other have boen de stroyed. That Mr. Gladstone is seeking to establish peace and confidence between these estranged sections of his country. by a measure of justice to a long oppressed people, and doing it in the face of violent opposition, even from some of his own political friends, shows him to be not only a just but a wise and brave statesman. Mr. Gladstone may be defeated in his effort; the land law which he proposes for Ireland may satisfy nei ther the landlord nor the tenant; it may not produce that peace so necessary for the prosperity of the Irish people; but he will have done his duty in proposing it. It does not, it is true, grant all that Irish agitation demands, but it goes far toward doing so, and most of the wrong now complained of will be removed if a this measure is accepted in good faith by the Irish people. The bill is long and intricate one, and all its details have not reached us, and might not be entirely understood if they had. But it secures fixity of tenure and makes im possible arbitrary eviction; it establishes a method for securing fair and reasonable I rent charges, with the right of free sale. causes of complaint urged by the tenants. It is indeed the land owners who most object to the bill, and declare that if becomes a law, in its present form, they will be in the future at the mercy of thei tenants. They denounce it as a "revolu tionary measure" subversive of all their legal rights, and as one of them says may be made to "transfer millions of property at one stroke from the hands of the present owners to those of the tenants." This is doubtless an exaggeration but it shows that for once at least British statesman has not proposed legis lation solely in the interest of the Irish landlords and to the injury of the ten an try. This view is also strenghened by the remarks made by Mr. Parneil at the reception given him at Cork on his recent return from this country. He admitted it was a very strong bill, and claimed that it was thus strong. and favorable to the tenants because of the obstructive course adopted by the Irish members in Parliament and the firm stand of the Irish people at home. In discussing the provisions of the bill Mr. Parneil said: "The provisions of the second portion of the bill are taken al most line for line from the recommendations of the Committee of the Land League of April, 1880. I look upon the power of letting holdings to tenants in fee farm as the most valuable provision of the whole measure, as it secures to the tenants of such estates as are allowed to take advantage of this part of the measure the right of becoming permanent tenants, at a reduction of fully 35 per cent, on their present rents. In fact, I do not see how rack-renting landlords can receive any money at all for their estates, or any rents in future, expept under the provisions of this portion of the bill" It ha been a long while since an Irish land bill has been presented to the British Parliament by a British Premier, in which Irish agitators could find so much to praise and Irish landlords so much to condemn. It is to be hoped the bill will become a law, and have all the effect for good it3 distinguished author expects from it. THE SENATE CO.VTEST. As we have before stated, we depre cate and regret the existence of the Sen ate deadlock, and would gladly see it brought to an end, or in some way remedied, in order that the public business, which is now suffering in consequence, might be in part, if not wholly, relieved. But, while so deprecating the unfortunate state of affairs, it must not be forgotten that there is a question of honor, and a question of right as against wrong at taching to the matter, which makes it necessary to look at the subject in all its bearings before rendering judgment. Somebody, or rather some party, is to blame. The responsibility for the present obstruction of the business of the government, belongs somewhere, and in view of the fact that there are but two -
parties in the Senate, there certainly ought not to be any great difficulty in centering ; and fastening that responsibility. It is I ..11 nAr.tr.rUI nnwr fViat h Ri-nnMi. !
well understood now that the Republi cans are in the majority, ana t cause . they are in the majority they demand the ? right accorded to all legislative bodies, to rule; but the Democratic minority, in consequence of certain needed regula tions necessary to obviate such a course, have the power, and are using it, to pre vent the exercise cf the right of the ma jority, and hence the deadlock. The ma jority having the right on their 'side, re fuse to yield, while the minority, having the power to thwart, choose to exercise it. Such, in brief, is the situation. The ostensible reason for their conduct, assigned by the minority, is to prevent the Republicans from electing the Senate officers, but the real reason is because the Senate officers, whom the Republicans would elect, are objectionable and, in one case obnox ious, to the Democrats, and because farther, in the election of the said officers, they discover an entering wedge to the splitting, breaking up and final dismem berment of the Democratic party in the South. It is this particular result that the minority would prevent and because they would prevent it the deadlock pre vails. A characteristic trait of the Dem ocratic patty is opposition, it knows nothing and studies nothing but opposition; in fact, it occupies its normal condition only when in opposition and would seem totally unnatural when acting in any other role. This truth has been ex emplified in a number of instances ex tending oyer a period of twenty years or more, as for instance, their opposition to the war of the Rebellion; their opposition to every measure suggested or offered for the suppression of the rebellion; then opposition to the issue of the greenback currency, to national banks, to the free dom of the slaves, to the punishment of rebels, to the constitutional amendments, to the resumption law, and so on ad infinitum always opposing; never favormg, and now we nnd tiiem opposed to the right of the majority a right never before questioned to rule, and, hence, to properly conduct and manage the affairs of the government. Certainly, in the light of the foregoing, it ought not to be difficult to place the responsibility for the deadlock, and with equal certainty it may be said the majority, the Republicans, rather than yield, should stancl firm, rock-rooted, as it were, until doomsday, that not only their rights but the principle involved in the ques tion shall be fully and completely substantiated Frjc'e Speech CM,t rn.pooh,,, Bvxacafuit. It will not do to pooh-pooti Fry's speech by declaring, as correspondentand editors are already doing, that he merely revamped old stories of outrages at the South. Its distinguishing feature was the magazine of brand-new outrages. The items of Southern violence and in tolerance were almost entirely connected with the most recent elections, as, for in stance, his vivid description of "the dead-line for Garfield niggers, " stretch ed by Democrats in front of the polls in a Mississippi town. The speech has made a deep impression, and in spite of Democratic effort to divert its force and bring the debate back to the "foul bargain" issue, it will give a dis tinctly low turn to the Senate proceed ings. I hat it was prepared and deliver ed with the sympathy and co-operation ot the administration is assumed as a matter of course. It is said that the Southern Senators will try to hurt Gar field, on account of Frye's speech, by helping Conkling. So did the Volscians welcome Coriolanus. Jlr. Xyner'a Future. Special to Cincinnati Commercial First Assistant Postmaster-General Tyner is expected to resign in a few days. He will, probably, be made Minister to Turkey, although he has been talked of for a vacancy in the Court of Claims, and was at one time promised that position. There is no complaint against Mr. Tyner s administration of the First Assistant's office, and the President desires to give him a more important and better salaried position than the one he now occupies. Mr. Tyner's successor in the Postoffico Department may be Frank Hatton, of the Burlington (Iowa) Hatekeye. The other names mentioned for the place are E. D. Webster, of Nebraska, who was ex Secretary Seward's Private Secretary.and Marshall Russell, of Texas, but nothing is positively known as to who will get it. Thef Want Tkcn Counted. New York Tribune. Congressman Manning agrees with all other Southern statesmen that the "niggers" would get along all right if they would let politics alone. When the census is taking these statesmen -are anxious to have all the"niggers'counted, and when the Congressional apportionment is made they are anxious to have each "nigger" count as much as a white man. But there the counting must stop. The "niggers" have no right to say who shall represent them in Congress, who shall govern them at home, or who shall be President. Just as soon as they meddle with any of these questions they get into politics, and trouble begins. Xhe Turtle and toe Eagle. Fort Wi) .ie Gitetta. The turtle, thinking it could fly as well as the eagle, got the latter to give it a good start by taking it up to the clouds, and then feeling confident of success, asked to be allowed to go it alone. Resuit a dead turtle. Mr. Conkling, having heretofore been carried along by Republican success, has gotten it into his head that he is "a bigger man than old Garfield," and can soar just as high. Ac- 1 cordingly he asks to be let alone, and j will at once commence a fisht ac-amst ! the administration. The result will be a politically dead duck. Vale Conk. Mr. Wm. EL Vanderbilt purchased at the recent Brinley sale six New England i primers at $105 each, or $630 for the lot All of them could easily be put into a vest pocket.
STATE EWS.
The Shelby county fair authorities have offered three premiums on bicycles races. One mile beats, best two in three. First premium $20, second $15, third $10. The Republicans ot Greensburg have made the following nomination?: Mayor, J. F. Bonner; Clerk, RolL G. A. Adams; Treasurer, Divin Smalley.by acclamation; city Marshal, J. R. demons. The IVmrxrat of Aurora have nom inated for Mayor, L. E. Beinkamp; Mar shal, George Renner; 1 reasurer, jh. aialoney: Clerk, Chas. btedman; Assessor, Frank Ulrica. An unknown disease has broken out among horses in Laurel. Ten have died within a short time after being attacked. The disease does not seem to be very contagions, but owners of horses are very uneasy for the safety oi tneir stoca. The Republicans of Rushville have nominated . for Clerk, EL P. McGuire; Treasurer, B. F. Tingely, Jr.; Marshal, Wm; Caldwell; Councilmen, B. W. Riley, J. D. GTore, J. M. Gwinn, V. B. Bodine, Noble Brown and Milton Churchill. Cunningham & Bos well's grocery store at RidgevUe w9 burglarized Thursday night. Tie Burglars gained an entrance by prying off the front door, and, taking out the-saie, dragged it about a square to a blacksmith shop and blew it open, getting $120No clew. At Pera the Republican nominations for city officers made Friday night, are: For Mayor, Wm. B. Reyburn, the present Mayor, who has served the city faithful ly for a number of years in the othce; for ClerkJ, D. Oates; Treasurer, Byron L. Myers; Marshal, Thomas Pierce, who has held the office several years. The Democrats hold a convention the 29th instant Kerlbrrn Serf. The following is an extract from the speech recently delivered in the United States Senate by Mr. Frye, of Maine. It is a reply to the speech of Senator Call, of Florida, when he alluded to the workingmen of New England as "serfs." The extract tells the balance of the story. Read it: "Well, Mr. President, I live in one of the New England States. I live in a manufacturing city, a city which manufactures the cotton raised in the South, and I know something about the manufacturing employes of New England, more, evidently, than the distinguished Senator from Florida knows. "Why, Mr. President, the South does not know anything about the laborer of the North. There is no more comparison between the laboring men of the South and the laboiing men of the North than there is between white and black. On the one hand labor has been disgraced by 100 years of slavery; on the other hand it has been honored, made free. made independent, made dignified, made proud, and when the gentlemen from the South talk about 'serfs' in New England manufactories, they do not know what they are talking about. - "I say tt'jfc Senator from Florida, I 1,000 -adult shployes, men and women. and he may jfelect the beat villaa in. fch whole State tr Florida, having 1 000 adults, men and women, as its inhabit ants, and he may exclude every colored person from that number, and then I will take these null curatives, commencing with the agent and going down through, and 1 will compare them, man to man. and woman to woman, and in dignity of character, in intelligence, in education, in every manly and womanly virtue, in property, in prosperity, the employes of that mill can discount the 1,000 selected from in Florida. "Serfs! Men to be bulldozed and intimidated! If the Senator from Florida had had the operatives of Massachusetts down there during the bloody, history of that state, and the Conservatives had undertaken to intimidate and bulldoze them by the methods . then prevailing in Louisiana, there would not have been enough Conservatives left to-day to form the decent nucleus of a party. "Ah, it is easy to shoot labor where it has been ground, down for 100 years by slavery. It is a different thing to point a pistol and look at the eye -of a free white man, and bulldoze such an employe. Starving and hungry employes!. Let me tell the Senator from Florida that the operatives and mechanics of Massachusetts to-day have laid by in the savings' banks of that Commonwealth money enough to purchase the whole State of Florida, real estate and personal property, five times over, and have $50,000,000 left. (Laughter and applause in the galleries.) The valuation of Florida is only about $30,000,000 of real estate and personal prop erty, and the laboring men and women of Massachusetts have to-day on deposit in that State in the savings' banks over $300,000,000. When toe Lion Hear, Look Out. New York Tribune. This fine effort of the imagination appeared in an alleged letter in the Commercial Advertiser last evening: "Probably the coolest and most unconcerned man in Washington at the present moment is Roscoe Conkling. He does not exhibit any evidences of restlessness or anxiety, nd is apparently quite confident of eventual triumph. But he is a sleeping lion. When he does wake up his assailants will hear his roar, and it will be well for them if they keep out of hi9 reach." If the President does not back do irn when he reads that he is a bold man. It should be placarded in the Senate: "Look out for the lion when he roars!" The Prnidrat Will fee avt Home. New York Tribune. The only thing said by the opponents of Judce Robertson's confirmation which carriesreight in the threat that if he is confirmed it will defeat the party in New York. That depends. Is it to be understood that Mr. Conkling means, if he can't have his own way in everything, that the party shall be defeated in New York I Possibly he might have the power 3 betray it into defeat, but does he mean, or do his friends mean, to threaten that! Of course the President deprecates war, but it may be expected that if war is brought to his door, whoever brings it will find the President at home. Detroit Free Frw: And now a doctor in Brooklyn jumps up and says that as a nation we use too much soap, and this is the reason we have such a variety of blood humors and skin diseases. Let's use more brick-backs and less soap.
H4CM Neatacra Dnuwrll. Xfc3oa (TuuU Herald (Pens ) Judge "Tourgee attained prominence by the authorship of a book which attracted general attention and provoked much comment "A Fool's Errand' and yet no man untinctured by blind Bourbonism, can deny that in the main the book is a just and accurate delineation of the state of society in the South during the period of reconstruction. It tells us some unpleasant troths, not altogether in the pleasantest way, but the truth is always desirable, and the sooner the people of the South get rid of that supersensitiveness which resents facts as insults.
the 1 etter for all concerned. The writer of this paragraph was a Confederate soldi'", and afterward a member of the much-abused "Ku-Klux Klan" and he Iris therefore a right to say, as he does here, that "A Fool's Errand" is entirely too true to be altogether agreeable. Beaconsfield lived a year and a night after resigning the seals of office to Mr. Gladstone. DECORATIONS. WINDOW SHADES, NEW DESIGNS. LAMBREQUINS, Of Fancy Cretonnes. LAMBREQUINS, Of Fancy Plush. Cream Colored Cheese Cloth. Cream Colored Curtain Nets. FRINGES, GIMPS, CORNICES, POLES, Etc. For Curtain Trimming?. Jutes, Damasks & Terries. Geo. H. Knollenberg. aprSd&wti A Compound Tincture of the most valuable remedies known to the medical profession, prepared upon strictly pharmaceutical principles. Aa exprKnt nf tw-nty-fiv y-rw prvme it to be the reat Antidi b Malaria and ail otber Ajrua tut! to- known to tbe world. Tbe only mhtnl.t. cmr. for all AfTr-rtnn ef the Kldnrva. Id Utrr nmplninl. Itvaprpalav. ail IliMrdenof tbe Bowrla, and all A itt-r-ttmtn f the Threat nnd I. an, it v" rantmm, wtule aa a ramnij for comulamt pscaiuu to toe female ai it haa no equal. b NOT A BEVERAGE Bat u eld rrlluMe H.a-Mh.ld Keaejf, tiiorrmgnlr adapted to awM aatura. H anpplHia tone to tbe atomacta. n-mvienratea tha dietie errane, atmralatee tbe encratifms. and pro. motinsa mralar action of the bnwelx, enablna even oraan of the body to perform ita allotted work nm larlr and without nurropUn. Ita hwhent orromciHiatKJtM come from tboaa who Baje need a toncect and known it beat. Wownere ao pnpolar aa in Lancaster, Pa., where a f.V""?. m T than a quarter a o-otorv -iIrtf,iL?"""e",,t3,.,u,.m fieiterml Tee 4 ue Appetizer. otd by ITQ-)eta evorwbere, THE MESSENCER OF HEALTH y awd paper deecnptive of dieeaue. ita origin and core, will be mailed free to an aildnea on application to THE MISHLER HERB BITTERS CO. Lancaster. Pa. ew we arrona-tr reeomnvod to motnere Prof. - oruwi nira rnta, it aiia, iaij to mw, ana no aruw-pUTSMi m race. HA ceaia. If of ened by tbeati yoor dotMse avxad atiimlanti aa d tit Mop Bitters, ff ven are yofroe? ant nurttt work, to resv HOP Bm nrfferinar from may tsV Uoo ; if yoa art mvjh msr on a. bed f tmrk Bitters Vft DnUXI HfTT( ftaataat r-d or auarie. old or I poor health or hwnnnsfa I ana. retv eat Hop fiarr4ann or diralDa WttmuLT yea are, vtMarnr yon fel , tnat j m r fTateaa m-eda cteamdmfcae Inwuj tit' m pjuw f,.na at U III... fauwmx .ua salient I hae bwen pi ca otil by a timely a. withootmrooatiaA J ate nop Bitters. . nopannrl O. L C la aa at ante and tm mi t a b9 e a T e tcm ot the efr Mira HOP bnmHm. frloed, atawaraeraea 7 dnmkenneaa . a ot -""l tobaccoaSr Tan will eared if T see Mop Bitters H y on ei e aim F Viw .rarw-d. try it i It may NEVER FAIL lire, re nas saved himdrees. -
Hp
Den
flfyoaawaV m ma of lea- aa.
Mdbw4rna ifvnW. . a-reZl" aTtaaaZoet.
Still in Front. The City Carriage Shop
st HI tetU in the tuanufactare of fine, first-class Varriages.rhnton, Itujjte ana JSprittg Wayons. I em plot a large force of hamlsall the yctxr rouml,and am constmtttly constructing a large quantity of tcork, thereby giving the irool am ple time to season, ana the l taint sufficient time to oem come thorougnty narutrnn. before finishing. And I em ploy only the most killel mechanic the country af ford, ami use the best ma terial that money will buy. J have now fin islieil, ready for the Spring Trade, about 75 jobs of different kinds a ntl styles, and am satisfied that lean give you a better job, in both material and mechan ical construction, at a much lower price than any car riage maker can who deftends on a short Spring and Sum mer trade rushing ft is work through from the lumber pile to the. show room in 3 or 4 weeks. n.11 ud sin niT i Look mad work a critical ex amination, and you will L convinced that I am building tne beat worn ever iram in uua out. Repairing given prompt attention ard ititelaaa work guaranteed, at the moat ruaaon&bla vre. .... No. 9 South (Old Marion) Sixth street. aprlOd&irtf DRUGS. ETC. E. ui.. rami, It tbe best and most satisfactory article In tbe market tor CHAPPED HAHDS, FACE, I.1FS OB ANY KO ITCS II NESS OF THE SKIN Aperient anbatitnte for ljTine,;Caniphor lee, Cold Cr am, Ae. A nice article to dm after ahavinr Price 2 Be Bold wholesale and retail by L. 8. TIBBAL8 & CO. DRUGGISTS. 730. Old Ho. 308 Main Street. apr2Md&wtf COAL, WOC Da Etc. Geo.H.Eggemeyer Wholesale and He tail Dealer In COAL! LIMB, CEMENT, Plaster, Stone Sewer Pipe FIKE BRICK, hm Tases, Patent Chi..;;:, Etc, Etc, ltM, 10a 194 FlaWarnc Ave Swam thb Dhpot. KICII2TIOND, IND. meb3dtf HARNESS IN THE FRONT! With tbe beat assorted stoek of MARCHESS Saddks, Bridles, &c, Ever OaTerel In this County. Also, a fan Pine of TRUNKS,VALISES Shawl Straps, &c. UIGGKJS & CO., New 999 main Street. atMdwtf KAI-m SPECIHC 9IED.CI3IE. TRADE MAR The Ores KmrJUah Bemedy, An nneaiMj cure tot Weakness, Lm potency, sad aU Diseases rasnJttnc tram Tnillei ie.aia tm overwork of tbe Brain, as of afeoaory, Uniaeraal -1 tade,Pais la tbe Back. Dimy ness of Vision. I'rersaXare Oid 2 Vfc. Ae, sad many other Diseases f-v that lead to Lasamty, or Codtmmptiun and a Tianalnia Ami TAIIIS. Grave. jor-FsJl parttealars in tm pamphlet, widen we lire I ui to send free by mail to every one. atarTbe Bpeetfle Medicine is sold by all druggists at fLOS per psekaee, or six paesaces (or 5o, or wCl be sent free by mail on receipt of the money, by ari dresatna; Til K - K- V 91 CDH I t CO. Sold la Uehznod by A. 6. Loksa A Co.
MRS. LYDIA E. PiJIKHAM.
OF LYNN. MASS. w-iiiri;t or LYDIA E. PINKHAtVTS tssstasib ccirrorap. For all Female Complaints. TM. prriaunntkm, aa ita name ata-mltae. enndara ot VraTftai4r iYiftja that are luntiliw lo tae nauat del a-ateinaaUd. I'poa our trial the umiU of Uila Com pound will be reevainiapd, aarvlu'f la Immediate j ant' when ita uer ta continued, la nimty ntneeaiaeia a hue dreil, apwTuanruteuivUeo'tH'ai'ilwtaHaasaiaU will aw tlfy. On aceonnt of Ita pruwa naxrtta. It la to-day e. ruannaenalrd and praarribrd by tne taw hjrai.-iane la tne country. It will cure entirely the von form of falliaw of the uU'nu, Leacarrtai. tnvtiubur ami aiuful MenatraAtiiMX, ail Ovarian TrouiOi. InnammaUxa and CVetmUon. rwviin. all IHnOacenwnla ami th. fn aeauetit epinal wvakneaa, and aa eaiHvUUy eiiaitrd to the Chans of Life. It will dlaaolv. and eapel tuaaura from the numaaln an early ataara of datanrnt. TH tendency to caneeroua aauwta thrv la cheeked, very speedily by Ha nam. In fart It haa proved to be the arret eat and beat remedy that haa ever even ewo- r ad. It pernamlea every portioa of the ayatem, and new Ufeand vluor. It mmmn faiutneaa,naUia-nr,. astrove all craving for eUmuUi ta, aud reUvrea weaa twee of theatonuk-h It oauve Bloatlmr, Headai-bce, Mervnua Pnadrmthm. Jenrral Ivbllity. KhvpkwMu-Mi, Ivpiwee and Indl ip-atlnn That fer tins' of bearia- down, cauaiuc fain, weight and bacam be, laalnayaia'rnianrntly cured by Ha nee. Itwillatalltlnire.andunlrral rirrnmaUua ana, net In harmony with the law that roverM IU "aiaah rrrti i Pur kklix-y Cutnaalnta of rltbrr era tida runifOHiad !a snaurieaaed. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a prepared atetJend OS WMi-ra Avenue, Lynn. Maaa. Price i.e. Ki butthe fur avou iknt l.j mail in the tore of pllla. ak In tl form of Iroir. , on nwel of prtne. $1.. t hoi. f'r elth. r. Mra. I'INk'MkN freely anawera ail h ttera of iii'iul.y f" l10 nHWC Addreaa aa aliove Mmlum in. a'iT Ho family dhuuM be without LY1H K 1'INKll.tM' UVIK nlii They cure Oonntllmrwin. Itiliooalnw la1urpaliL of the Uvr. f4 ct-nte ivr lia OTarlebyA.O.IiOkenCo lUctmend.In, Jofan D. Park A bon, Cincinnati. Wbolssre Acsots. ootSaMAwtf RAILROADS. Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and St. Loate RJ (1'fut-llsvndle Itonte.) Time Table of Through & Local Trains. Corrected to November t, I ISO. kSBOE. Columbus Tims. I.ve Indianapolis. KnlKhtatnwn ........ iiewiarilie. " Dublin. " Cambridge Clty... " Kiohiuontl. ' Greenville. Bradford J a notion Covington flans. HtParls Crbana. , Mllford Centre Columbus..... Pittsburgh-.. Hsrrlsbnrg.. Baltimore Washington . Philadelphia. new xork Boston OOIIt "WJ Columbus Tims. Kxp. PaelCi KP. r.af. I F. BT. 8:40 fSM) Lve Oolonibtii Arr Mil ford Centre-.... " Crt.aria . tlOMOj 11:15 11 Mi 4 7:17 6JjJ 8D6 Bt Paris Piqna. Covlntrton .... r.w IS SS .. 8:44 MM, 6:0) SAO iae! 94 136' 6 20 9:46 8:46! Bradford JoncttonJ OreenvUle lilehmond . ..... Cambridge City ' 7 00 L"ave Anoun. .. Iiewisvule.... Knlghtstown, OreenAeld .. " TnrHsnspolls..., BttonlB lisliy. 726 Daily esnept Bnnday. Trains leave Bradford Janetim hrnhtaaanaal Intermediate points at t9.10 a. m. and liM p. m. Trains leave ttMihmond tor Chieaeo jh intermediate points via Kokomo at Ha2s a. nx ; lor Chicago via Kidgevllie and Ixagansport at KUO p. m. ; for Kokomo and Inhs Ifals points a8 f8.00 P tn. Trains leave Biehmond tor Dayton, Xanla and intermediate txdnts at f7jki a. m. tiiaS n. m and 7JUp.m. Drswingoom, sleeping and hotel ears ttuvjogb to Pittsburgh, Harrisborg, Philadelphia and Mew York without ehanae. Onl v one nnanga af mm to Baltimore, Wsahington City and Boston. . U'MMIKK, rtwnawmj Pata A " ' Aa Oenersl Bfi fXIT7VBnn. OHIO FIRE ALARX DIRECTORY. The following ts tbe eorreet loostaon of the Alarm Tekagrapfa : 16 Comer cf Third and North a 1-4 Wiggins' Tannery. 1-6 Corner of Fifteenth and North B. 1-8 Comer of Fourteenth and Main. 1-8 Corner of Fifth and Booth B. 8- 1 Corner of Twelfth and booth B. 9- 6 Smith's Coffin Works 9-4Corner of Eleventh and Main. 6-6 Corner of Tenth and Booth C. 5- 6 Corner of Eleventh and Mortfa B. 6- 7 Corner of Seventh and booth C 8-1 City Mill Works. - Hobinaon Machine Works. 6-4 Wayne Agraraltnxal Works. 6-6 Corner of Fourth and Booth D. 6-6 Engine House No. 1, North Eighth. 6-7 Vannemaii, Held A Co.. Pork Hoose, 4-1 Piano Factory. 4-3 KnopTs Pork Hoose. 4-6 East Oakland. 4-6 Corner of Eighth sod Mam. 4-6 Corner of Eighth and booth K. 6-1 Kendall A Barnes Oil Mill. 6-6 Engine Hoose No. 6. North FiftU. 6-1 Hatton s Coffln Vectory. 16 6 Oasr. beott A Co. . Works. 1-6-s BaUroad bhopa. E. N. FRE8IIUAR ft I.D00. Mfwipaaer A4tverttolnr Agcais, Cobtvxbciax. BuTLrnao, CI"CI ."fKATae Are aothofhmd to i C595 TO 020
09 Irshi aria' ' i la -tian nr
4Ta li'Of
MM!. .......
.. 1:171. 6:13 .. SMI 1331 7:6! :U) .. 7:lftj SJiul :36i 1130 .. b:18f S:10j 9Jk)jLe'vs .. '"o'-ioj" i"5w " 'i'im t6:U
88 6na
.... 9. -at; 4! 1US1 bX .... 10 4:47! 616 1U.H6; 6:10 11 US Ifl 11-lKi lia ll-Ka V IM
Mao'Tji la jo e aii ... p. at. 76 7 M 8:40 A.M. r.M. AJaT. 4 MM 66 U:4S .. . 7:4'. a 0H 7 dbti AJS. 7:4U 8:46 4:16 in-Mr.1 o-aiif a -aa
.. Z'. J A.atT r.M. I 8:lffl , 8. tin 20
TH t705 6.-40; 8:46 Ifl 6:46 !fl 4A8 6:18 4M tin Ifl 4 Mt nan 9O0 " j'&KtSo' "ioJo A. ML. .1 70
