Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 6, Number 211, 3 September 1881 — Page 2
M eniiiVClass MrttoftlttM Postoffloe,
' SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 3. 1981. TO aOVEKTIIEHSa IrcvUkUesi mt the PaUlavdlnm, slwvwte) Uaevt susy sUier paper pa to la Way-Me ;onity. Tn doctors think if all goes on as at present the President may be removed from the White Boose in a week or ten days. Long Branch or Mentor are the places named. It is probably the excessive hot weather that has induced the Memphis Appeal to start the story that Samuel J. TUden will be the next Democratic candidate for the Presidency. In such weather almost anything is permissible. Mas. Sfcboboit is a woman of great forethought and kindness of heart. She has distributed more than 80,000 vol umes of her husband's sermons "among the more needy clergymen of different denominations in England. This is a real charity, not only to the "needy cler gymen," but to their congregations. Tn summing np of the condition of the President yesterday shows that he still holds the ground he gained early in the week, and that the symptoms were still favorable. He had less fever than on the day before, and seemed to relish his food better; but, as far as the main features of the case are concerned, there has been little or no change. He is still very weak, and, in the opinion of the majority of the surgeons, is not gaining in strength. Oonsidbbiro the utterances of United States Senator Beck, of Kentucky, relative to the election of Senator Anthony, ' of Rhode Island, to be Vice President, pro. tern, of the Senate, may we not con elude that there is, after all, some honor in politics and among politicians. Senator Book is a Democrat of the old school and a very pronounced partisan, yet, in view of the seriousness of the situation, brought about, mainly, through the at tempt upon the President's life, he, for the sake of harmony, is willing to forego any possible advantage which might ac crue to the Democratic party. Of course there are other Democrats, members of the Senate, who will oppose any t uch action, yet it is to be hoped that when the test comes, enough of them will be found to carry out and endorse the proposition of Senator Beck. Wht the iron workers of Cincinnati should demand to be paid higher wages than the same class of workmen receive la Pittsburg is twond oar comprehension. As it is, the iron mills of the latter place are working on full time and making money, while the mills at Cincinnati, together with their hundreds of striking operatives, are idle and losing money every day. From the best lights before us it appears that the iron workers of Cincinnati are at war against their oven best interests or that the Pittsburg mills are furnishing their Cincinnati brethren with the sinews of war to continue a contest which can only r rain It eventually, to their great dis advantage and consequent detriment. Oointr nnnn the trround that the iron manufacturers are business men, that they are anxious to make their business a sucobjs and that it is no pleasure or profit to them to see their works laying in idle ness, it is evident that if they could pay the increased price demanded and still benefit themselves they would not hesi tate to do so. As it is, however, the iron interests of Cincinnati are suffering very greatly and their inactivity is doing great deal towards retarding business in other sections of the country which de pends upon the Queen City for iron ma teriaL In the meantime Pittsburg is making hay while the sun shines. Th water work's question is now fully before the people of Richmond, and will soon, we presume, be submitted to a pop ular vote to determine whether to have or not to have them. That such works are needed in this city is scarcely a debatable question; very few will deny their urgent necessity. But there are nu merous questions connected with the subject that ought to be fully understood before the people can intelligently determine whether they are sow prepared to embark in an undertaking which will cost them so much money as a thorough system of water works must call for. A correspondent in yesterday's Palladicx very properly raises the question whether the city, unable under the law to foster all deserving interests, should embark in this enterprise to the exclusion of others perhaps quite as im portant. Other citisens, again, who think the water question aa important one aad water works a necessity, still do not believe the city should engage in build ine then. All this shows a divers ity of views, growing, perhaps, out of a want of a thorough study of the questioa. To reconcile these various opinions and unite the people upon some proper plan, information should be furnished them and time for reflection given. We want no water works war such aa has distracted some of our neighboring cities. The Common Council, then, should move slowly, that they may move safely and surely, and do what may be dona in aooordaace with
public approval. T!ie very full and I
elaborate report rf the City Ciyil En-! ginecr, as well aa any other attainable matter bearing upon the subject, should ! be placed in the hands of the people, and plenty of time given to study and understand it. A decision in favor of having water works is only a preliminary question. The system to be adopted, the cost of constructing and maintaining such works are of the first importance and should be well understood before a final decision is reached. The people of Richmond do not wish to expend two or throe hun dred thousand dollars for a worthless system or for works too expensive to keep up. Unless they can Ins satisfied on these points they will scarcely vote in favor of their construction. What we urge then is that our authorities not only fully satisfy themselves uon all these points, but that they also fully satisfy the people, and do not hurry a decision. It - should, also, be known that everything connected with the matter is fairly and squarely presented. We have no reason to believe that such will not be the case in this instance. But public enterprises of this kind frequently have a "ring" somewhere behind them, and sometimes men of great public spirit are moved by very selfuh motives. Even if nothing of this kind is apprehended in this matter, it can do no harm to know that the people's money ia expended only for the people's benefit. If time and opportunty are given all these points can be fully understood, all conflicting views reconciled, and the people all united in favor of a good and economical system of water works which is so greatly needed in this city. Thb question of calling an extra ses sion of Congress is, it is said, being seriously considered by the Cabinet. If the President's inability to attend to public duties should promise to continue during the autumn, there seems a necessity of an early meeting of Congress to make provision for calling upon the Vice-President to assume the duties of the Presidential otllce during such in ability of the President. At least that seems to be the opinion of the Cabinet. PERSONAL AM) GENERAL. Lieutenant Flipper filped the money, and he will be flipped out of the army, Yellow fever prevails to an alarmins extent in Havana, and last week there were twenty-six fatal cases. Seventy - one arrests were made in Portland, Ma, last week, says the Argut) of that city, and of the number sixty-one were for drunkenness. United States Senator Ben Harrison has arrived home from his trip to the Yosemite and other portions of the great West. It is estimated that prior to the close of tlie work of the season, the Washing ton monument will have reached a heighth of two hundred and sixty feet There are one hundred stone cutters at work. This is the latest Western form of saying a man was hanged: "He was unanimously chosen by a convention of twelve property holders to jump from a new pine platform into the sweet subse quently." Hume Dene factor oi tne human race at New Castle, Ind., has been getting away with the canine race, having, within the past , two weeks killed, by means of poison, thirty or forty dogs, valuable (to their owners) and otherwise. Whatever of good Holloway's pills of themselves may have done for the public, in an indirect way their operation was of the most beneficial character, as during the past few years the maker of the pills has given away for charitable and philanthropic purposes about f3,750,000. Great Britain, France, Germany and Austria-Hungary each contain a popula tion of about 35,000,000, or an aggregate of about 140,000,000, comprised in a territory of 800,000 square miles. The States, and Territories of the American Union, exclusive of Alaska, embrace an area of 3,100,000 square miles, with a population of 50,000,000. Just imagine what a country we will have when it reaches the aire of Great Britain or France. Olive Logan, referring to the fact that woman physicians were not permitted to attend, except as ordinary spectators, the sessions of the International Medical Congress, says: "that if skill and learning had been the qualifications for admission, the forty three lady doctors present would have been given front seats." Olive is right and her sentiment will be endorsed by all fair-minded persons whether physicians or not. Excluding the woman physicians was simply a petty piece of proscription. The Washington Hotel, the oldest building in New York City, situated on the corner of Broadway and Battery Place, has recently been sold to Mr. Cyrus W. Field, and will shortly be torn down and removed, and in its stead will be erected a modern ten-story building. to be used for business rooms and offices. The old hotel was built in 1743, for a residence Vy a certain British Admiral, and was at that time probably the finest house is all the country. But, one by one,, the ancient landmark disappear, and the old Washington Hotel is no ex ception to the rule. Modern progress and improvement does not permit any sentiment of reverence for the old-fash ioned to stand in the way, particularly when considered from a dollar and cent
point of view, aad in few more years
at farthest, the great liiaiority of the oi l structures which, left Man dire, mark tiie long ago, will have orally and completely dt;-aptaret STATE NEWS. Frank Hill, an employe in a grist mill at Waldron, shook h&mls with a buzsaw, and lost all the fintrers on his right hand. The wholesale liquor store of Nathan Brothers & btraoss. Fort Wayne, was damaged flO.003 by (ire, Friday morning. Partly insured. Judge W. B. Lousjhndge, once Judtre of the Probate Court at Huntington, and later, up to 1882, editor of the Miami Ltmntu Sentinel, an oil pioneer of North ern Indiana, has been declared insane. Charles Qunn of Fort Wavne, a molder at the Tuckard Stove Work, was found dead on the Jackson Railway track, near the Muncie dspot. He was probably drunk and had fallen asleep, when some loaded cars were pushed over him by a switth engine. Lew Oswalt, living north of Wabash, was arrested Wednesday by tha Sheriff of Allen county on a charge of bigamy. He has a wife living in Fort Wayne and also one in Wabash county. The Fort Wayne woman swore ont the warrant and Oswalt is now in jail at Fort Wayne. Caleb Partridge of Rockport, a young man of 23, was handed a revolver by a friend with a request to clean it for him. Partridge proceeded to do so without observing that one chamber wa3 loaded. The chamber was discharged and the bullet struck him in the eye, destroying the organ completely. Loganspt rt has a peculiar insanity case. The victim is little Carrie Moynehan, aged tlurtot-u, and her insane desire is to kill herself by jumping beneath every train that passes her mother's door. Her mind-trouble dates from the time of the killing of her brother in a railroad accident some months airo. That sad affair was a great shock to her sensitive nature, and was the cause of her reason becoming dethroned. Wanu to iet Away Vort of All. Charleston, H. C Journal and Courier. That Mrs. Garfield's dread of the White House has been shared by the President is well understood. His isolated condition has contributed, together with the gloomy surroundings of the great bare chambers, to aggravate this lonesomcness and morbid state of mind. While he was somewhat better, a tew days ago, Mr. Warren Young, an attache of the White lis use, of whom the President thinks much, asked as a special favor that he might be permitted to see him. The young man was about to go to bis home in Ohio, and wanted to look at the face of his suffering patron before he departed. "You know. Doctor, I I might never again see him. alive," he pleaded. They concluded to admit him, on the promise that he would be careful, and not disturb the President. When the young man entered the sick-chamber the President's face lighted up with a happy smile. He extended his hand and grasped that of the young man tirnily. "I am so glad to see you," murmured the sick man. "Why didn't you come before?" "They wouldn't let ine," answered the young man through his tear a. "Who wouldn't let you, luy boyt" asked the President, gazing earnestly into Warren's face, still retaining his hand. "The doctors. I wanted to come in long ago, but they would let nobody in." "Why, I told them" and the patient looked wistfully around at his physicians "I told them I wanted to see some body; it would cheer me up sometimes. but they Baid you were all away. I thought everybody had gone away but but me, and I wanted to get away worst of all! Good bye, Warren." And tne emaciated nana released its hold as the physician approached to terminate the interview, and the young man stole softly out of the chamber. A Prohibition Wluc-I'reiw tlaker. Columbus, O., State Journal (Hep.) And then comes the People's Temperance Reformers and Prohibitionists with their declaration against the manufac ture, sale and use of all intoxicating drinks. That declaration they follow up by nominating a man for Governor who has made a respectable fortune in the manufacture and sale of wine and cider-mills and presses, and who is still engaged in that business. We do not say, or intimate, that Mr. Ludlow is an unworthy and bad man because he rankes premium wine presses. From our staudpoint he is not; but from his standpoint and the standpoint of his party, he is closely allied to the criminal classes; for he and they know full well that his mills and presses are nwd in the manufacture of intoxicating drinks that such mills and presses are manufactured, sold, purchased and used for that purpose. How many private cellars in Ohio are stocked with tine old Rain bo and crab ciders, and Catawba, Concord and Isabella wines, the product of Mr. Ludlow's mills and presses! Tr. TalDiago's First Sermon. Albany Argus. "A good wife" says the good book, "is frcm the Lord." Dr. Talmage, when a student at Rutgers, was, according to his classmate, the Rev. John McC Homes D. D., of Albany, given that text for a trial sermon. Dr. Holmes is very successful in reproducing the Talmagian "analylis" of that sermon. (1.) "A good wife," that is one good wife at a time, is a good thing. More than one, at a time, is sinful as well as superfluous. Illustration: The miseries of Brigham Young. (2.) She must obviously be your own wife. Another man's wife is to be avoided. IIlustration: Any divorce suit going. (3.) "A good wife is from the Lord," therefore "a bad wife is from the deviL" Moral: "Love the Lord and hate the devil." Conclusion: "Depict the diabolical traits of a bad wife, but do not bear down too hard on the devil, lest he have a chance to afflict you with one of his wives." Be Tlnst Ofc-cy (be Law. Springfield Union. Jay Gould owns or controls 11,714 miles of railroad and f 646,500,000 worth of railroad and telegraph stock. Such a man would seem dangerous were it not that in a free republic he has as much reason to be afraid of the people as the people to be afraid of him. He may be a railroad king, but he must obey the laws like all the rest of us.
Tbe Pranideul'i PhTticiaaa. The physicians and surgeons in attendance on the President are ail middle airxl or elderly men. Ir. D. Willard 31iss was born at Auburn, N. Y., in 1S35, graduated at the medical department of Western Reserva College, Cleveland, in 1850, and practiced at Grand Rapids, Mich., until the war broke out, when he served as army surgeon. In 1S62 be was placed in charge of Armory Square Hospital, Washington, keeping the position until the institution was closed in 1865. Over 21,000 patients were admitted during his superintendency, among them a very large number of severely wounded men. Surgeon General Joseph K. Barnes was born at Philadelphia in 1817, and took his medical degree in 1938. He entered the army in 1840, and has seen much service in all parts of the country before and during the war. Dr. Joseph Janvier Woodward was born at Philadelphia in 1S33 and is now Chief Assistant in the Surgeon General's Bureau. He was the editoi of "The Medical and Surgical History of the Rebellion," and author of papers on TyphoMalarial Fever and Pyemia.
Dr. Robert Rejourn was born in Scotland in 1803, and served as an army surgeon during the war. Dr. D. Hayes Agne sv was born in Pennsylvania in 1818. He is the son of an eminent physician, and has long been Professor of Surgery in the Univers.ty of Pennsylvania. Dr. Frank Hastings Hamilton was born in Vermont in 1813. He began practice about the age of twenty-one at Auburn, N. Y., afterward removing to Buffalo, and in 1862 to the city of New York. He is the inventor of several ingenious surgical instruments, aud the author of a number of works, lie is famous for his operations in rhinoplastic surgery, having built up lost noses in at least twenty cases, and being the first to transmit skin from the palm of the hand. He has been a surgical professor and during 1863 was a medical army inspector. It will be seen that the sick bed at the White House is watched by really eminent men, and the public may expect that all which skill can do wi.l le done for the patient. The Man ;arfleld. New York Tribune. No other man has ever been so anxiously watched, by the whole civil ized world, while lying face to face with death. His life and heroism go to the hearts of men in every land. The grand Christian fortitude of the true man him self, and the lofty devotion of his wife and others about him, create a new standard of manhood and womanhood for all the civilized world. Living or dyine, this one man brine's a blessing that space or time can not measure. Nobler impulses, grander and purer thoughts, fill all Christendom to-day, because of the life and the heroic con duct of one man. Only Om niscience knows how to make the best use of any man, atd James A. Garfield himself, in his highest aspira tions, never yet has thought of doing as much good as he has done already, lying on a bed of pain. If lie is to recover, only infinite wisdom can measure the power for good or evil which will rest with so rare a man, so raised as if from death itself. A re sponsibility before which any man living might shrink, the (responsibility of a life endowed with a strange and awful power, will rest upon him henceforth Out of the blackest cloud comes the most blinding and terrible light. Praying to the end tor his life, the nation must also pray that the infinite Father will guide that life henceforth, that the man, already so true and great and noble, may ever be equal to an unexampled and in calculable responsibility. Alive in their ; raves X w o ItrotUerat in u Cared Well Mnke Verbal Will. Niobrara Pioneer. Mr. G. Wiard, who has just returned from O'Neill City, informs us that the two Biglow brcthera, who resided in town for a while this spring before going to their homesteads near Atkinson, Holt county, were buried in a well at that place on the 28th ult , by the caving in of the quicksand through which the well hd been sunk, the curbing not being of sufficient strength to resist the pressure. Although one was severely injured by the timbers, he survived until the Saturday morning following, and the other, who was not injured, lived until that evening, when their strangth was exhausted and death released them from misery. Although twenty-eight feet from the surface .of the ground, they could make themselves heard, and gave flfeec tions regarding the disposal of Cueir property, advising thir wives, who were a sters, to yo back to their old home i:i the East, where they would be happier and more comfortable. There were more rescuers than could work at one time, and frequent changes of hands were made, all being done that mortal could do, but of no avail, the brothers being fully aware that help could not reach them In time. They died calmly and manlully, taking their fate as true men do. They were exhumed on Sunday and buried. Take lour Choice. New York Graphic And now, if the President recovers, what will be the two things that will be the most frequently said and most generally believed I One is that he recovered because the doctors gave him up and left nature and him to fight it out between them; the other that the prayers offered yestirday in every church in the land snd by many men w ho did not go to church to pray, were heard and graciously answered. And if he should die, what will be saidt That the doctors misunderstood and mismanaged his case from the first; and that the united prayers of 50,000,000 of people had no more effect upon the immutable will of God, or upon the inevitaDle laws of nature, than would have the effort of a fly to arrest the course of a eteam engine. There is plenty of food for reflection in these facts. Valne of Honorary Degrees. Springfield Republic. Take it altogether, D. D., LL. D. and Hon. are all equally useless and fortunately harmless. Well edited newspapers suppressed the entire batch long ago. Tney are now chiefly used in addressing letters and, just as Esq., has worked up until employed by everybody. Hon. and D. D. are coming to be of regular use in addressing laymen or clergymen. Friday evening at Knigbtstown, John McCarmel was seriously stabbed in the left side by Lon Preston.
FIMM5U LOST CARS.
Il'w tne Tla-ii j -I,-ll-rl t reign Can Are Traced. Philadelphia Press. Travelers up and down any line of rail way having a terminus in this city are in the habit of seeing daily hundreds of fugitive freight cars extending in broken lines along the sidetracks and reaching many miles out of the city. They belong to a hundred different railway companies, each car bearing the initials of the proprietary road, and in the general otllce of that company, whether it be in New l ork, Pittsburg, or ban Francisco, there are records which show just where that car is standing and why it is there. For instance, if the car is detained an unwarranted length of time at Gertnantown Junction the Pennsylvania Railroad receives a searcher, either by telegraph or train service, asking why the car is not sent home. In this way a great railroad stretching half across the continent and with its rolling stock scattered over every State in the union.keeps an account of its stock, numbering in the case of the Pennsylvania Railroad more than 30,00 freight cars of all kinds. Occasionally one of the number is lost altogether and then the complicated railroad detective service is set at work. The last clues to its whereabouts are traced out. and in time the lost car is found somewhere between Texas and Montreal. Yesterday afternoon Superintendent Reilly, of the Transportation Department, was notified of the recovery at Worcester of a Pennsylvania Railroad freight car that has been missing since Novemler 7, 1880, ami had in the meantime traveled thousands of miles over New England railroads. Sieaking of the matter Chief Clerk 14cCully said: "The New England railroads seems to entertain the idea that our cars are sent up there for their convenience. As soon aa a car is unloaded it should be started back to the road from which it came, but in New England they turn it over as the common proerty of the road and it is run back and forth, carrying local freight. It is not an uncommon thing when a car is loaded here and sent to an eastern point that it is not again heard from for three or four months. In the meantime there are more than a hundred clerks in this office employed on the car accounts, and week after week searchers are sent out from hero for the missing car" Yesterday letters of inquiry were dispatched to all parts of the country aggregating 2,902 crs that had gone astray between the 1st aid 10th of this month. Every freight conductor on the road sends in a daily report cf the cars that have been in his charge, and a fair idea of the magnitude of these ; accounts may be ha i from the fact that the entire movement over the Pennsylvania railroad exceeds 40,000 per day. The accounts are entered in different colored inks to distinguish loaded fro m empty cars. There are received at the Fourth street office 2,500 conductors' reports every day, and 120 clerks are employed in the freight department alone. When a Pennsylvania Railroad train is sent out over another line, the conductor reports the number af each car and its destination. The absent cars are in this way traced from road to road, as for instance, by the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago railway to Chicago, thence by the Cnicago, Rock Island and Pacific to Council Bluffs, and by the Union and Central Pacific roads to San Francisco. In the couree of two months the car returns by the same route, and, if any accident on the way destroys the car, it is charged against the road on which the accident happened. Lost freight cars, which were formerly hunted up by traveling agents, are now traced by "searchers," official documents which contain the number and descrip tion of the lost car, and the date at which it was last seen on the Pennsylva nia road. These documents are forward ed in the wake or the car, receiving many official signatures on the way, and finally overtake an agent who has the car in charge. A distinguished English delegate at the recent medical celebration at Boston. after the poem, inquired if Dr. Holmes wasn't considered a very clever man, and hadn't he written something about break fast in bed. Mr. Flood, of the Nevada Bonanza, intends to erect in Fifth avenue a larger and more costly residence than of Mr. Vanderbilt. The outlay will not be less than f 3,000,000. An Irish lady was so much on her guard aeaiust betraying her national accent that she in repiHted to haVf; pokeii f the "creature of Vesuvius," fearing that the crater ould betray her again. hop bitters: (A .Medicine, Bet a Itrink.) cosTirss HOPS, BrCIir, MANDRAKE, DAN DELI ON, Aim tbr rturT awt Prrr V rTt'A L Qi-ali-nmir au. otukk liimtica. THEY CUR TZ ATI rHr of theStnmivTi. JViwpI, Blood, Liver, Kiiny.and Crtanry Orvaii. Nrrr einaic Colui.UiliU. SIOOO IN COLD. WTH he nt! for a ow they will nr.t r-.irr or fieip. or lor in) uung urpiire or injurious fouad ia tiit-to. Af yonr rlnceist for ITop Bittern nJ try tbcin before you sleep. Take ua other. D 1. t an stwolntp ni 'frosts? !hlcpan for Ift-unkeuuiaa. u? of oi lum, tobacco and n&rcuti-. SlD FOB ClRTTLAE. Ait m3tBm Md t'T ctrT-i.l. K-w,, X. Jt Tomtit, Ont. Foresman's ANODYNE Cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Tnfantnra, Cramp Colic, Flax and all pains tn tbe Stomach. beo?tble,( GUARANTEED." FOB BALK BT
A. C. Luken & Co. anglBiflm
K NOLLE NBERC.
OPENED. Onr recent Large Purchases of AND DRESS GOODS HAVE COME. $10,000 worth of trenh Goods tidiU'd to our Jres Gooils and aSHc Sto-k9 trhich tuur represent! the eholeest noreltfeM in the market. We rail esp'etal attention to onr Silk Gtxtds, including several grades of evlored Silks, the ijmlar Sarah Silks, in all the leading colors, and lite choicest lilack iiros Grain Silks. from $t.OO per yard nptcards ever ojtened in liichmond. Also magnificent llrocadcs and the new effects in Ombre Shaded Goods for trimmings, perfectly elegant. Give ns a Sicelal Call on these goods. Geo. H. Knollenberg. uprttdftwtf HARNESS IN THE FRONT! With the beat aiiorted stock of Linen Lap Dusters Cotton Lap Dusters, Worsted Lap Dusters (All of the lateat designs). Leather, Cotton and Unen Fir Nets, IN'THE CITY A. full assortment of HABVES8 constantly on hand. WIGGINS d CO.. 309 Main Street. aprI7dwtf FsishrceeJ lliil forb KJCXOTEU TO DlOlAjtAFOLIS, BID. hnb-aOee st Or p C, Mill, two block south of Uii KsllToad Vrlilgs K1CHM OND. IND. MILL STONES and Improved Floariof fill Machinery, Portable fills, bolts, eta. Gobtraet to famish J sosaptote. IOHNDEKN AWI I A:M IN1MTM. 9aut Mseblnes. YVomi Pseksrs, sod I'.ol Cloths resty tor shipment. FIRE ALARM DIRECTORY. The following is tbe correct location of tba Vfre Alarm Telegrapb : 1-3 Corner of Third and North C 1-4 Wiggins' Tannery. 1-6 Corner of Fifteenth and North B. 1-6 Corner of Foorteenth and Main. l- Comer of Fifth and Hoatb Ft. S-l -Corner of Twelfth and booth B. a-3 (Smith's Coffin Works. 9-4 Corner of FJeventb and Main. 9-6 Corner of Tenth and Booth C. S-6 Corner of Eleventh and North B. 8- 7 Corner of Seventh and booth V. S-l City Mill Works. 9- 9 Hoblnson Machine Works. S-4 Wayne Agriealtoral Works. S-6 Corner of Fotzrth and Honth D. S-6 Engine Hoose No. 1, North Eighth. 5- T Vannernan. Held Co. ! Fork Boos 4-1 Piano Factory. 4-3 Knopfs Pork Hoose. 4-S East Oakland. 4-6 Corner of Eighth and Main. 4-6 Comer of Eighth and Booth E. 6- 1 Kendall Barnes' Oil MUX. 6-9 Engine Hoose No. , North Fifth 6-4 Eariham OoUege. 6-1 Hntsoot Coffin Factory. a-S Hoosler Drill Works. 1-6-9 Gesr. beott Co.1 Works. Ill Usllroarl Butler University. THE Twenty -Seventh Session opens Toesday, feet. 13th. Professors. Scodeots. :Uil. Every educational facility. TBI boo fees than 1 per term. Board at abeoiate cost. u.Mof less. Wboie expense for forty weeks. IIS. For Cetslngne. address, iHwKlsfit U. W s VaEsT,
If you suffer from DjH'ia, use Burdock Blood Bittkrs. If you are afflicted with Biliousness, use Bchdock Blood DrrTKRa. If you are prostrated with 8ick Headache, take Bckdock Blood Bitter. If your Bowels are disordered, regulato them with Bckdock Blood Bittkrh. If your Blood is impjire, purify it with Bckdock Blood Bittkrs. If you have Indigestion, you will find an antidote in Burdock Blood BiTTKRa. If you are troubled with Spring Complaints, eradicate them with Burdock Bixoi BiTTKRa. If your Liver is torpid, rostore it to healthy action with Burdock Blood Bittkra. If your Liver is affected, you will find a sure restorative in Burdock Blood BrrTRKa. If you have auy species of Humor or Pimple, fail not to take Burdock Blood Bittkrs. If you have any symptoms of Ulcer or Scrofulous Sores, a curative remedy will Ik; found in Burdock Blood Bittkrs. For imparting strength and vitality to the system, nothing ran etiual Burdock Bmiod Bitters. For Nervous and General Debility, tona up the syntem w ith Burdock Bmmid Bittkrs. 1CEAI WHAT THE PEOPLE SAY. Mrs. J. O. Ilolcrtoon, Tittaburg, Ta., writes: "I was suffering from general debility, want of apju'titc, constipation, etc., so that life was a burden; after using Burdock Blood Bitters I felt bettcr than for years. I cannot praise your Bitters too much." R. Gibbs, of Buffalo, N. Y., writes: "Hearing your Burdock Blood Bitters favorably spoken of, I was induced to watch their effects, and find that in chronic diseases of the blood, liver and kidneys, your Bitters have ltcen signally markt'd with success. I have used them mymdi v. ith the boat results, for torpid ity of the liver; and in the case of friend of mine suffering from dropsy, the effect was marvelous. " Bruce Turner, Rochester, N. Y.,writes: "I have been for over a year subject to a serious disorder of the kidneys, and was often unable to attend to business. I procured a bottle of your Burdock Blood Bitters, and was relieved before half a bottle was used. I intend to continue, as I feel confident that they will entirely cure me." E. Asenith Hall, Bingham ton, N. Y., writes: "1 suffered for several months with a dull pain through my left lung and shoulder. I lost my spirits, appetite and color, and could with difficulty keep up all day. My mother procured some Burdock Blood Bitters; I took them as directed, and have felt no pain since first week after using them, and am now quite welL" Mr. Noah Bates, Elmira, N. Y writes : "A boot four years aeo I bad an attack of bilious fever, and never folly reoovort-d. My digestive organs were weakened, and I won Id be eoupletely prostrated for days. After nslng two bottles of yoor Flitters the improvement was so visible that 1 was astoniBbed. I can now, thongh el years of age. do a fair and reasonable day's work. T.Walker, Bond St., Cleveland. O, writes: "For the last twelve months I have soilered from loiobago and general debility. I oomwenoed taking BiiT'l'ck J;:r; 1 Hitters abo'-tsix weeks ago, and now, have groa! l-snreiij stating that I have reoovered my apiietite, luy oouplezion has grown rndily. aud eel bettor altopetiu-r." '"- Blacket Kobitnon, Prop, of the Canada Pr byteriati, Toronto, Ont,, writes: "For several years I huve safTernd greatly from oft-recti rrlng hetulaehes. I osed yuor Bordook Blood Bitters with the happiest results, and 1 now find myself ia better health than for years past. I cheerfully recognise the sterling character of yoor preparation. Mrs. J Wallace, Buffalo, N. T, writes: "I have osed Burdock Blood Bitters fur nervous and bilious headaches and have reoomiuended them to my friends. 1 believe them so perlor to any other medicine I have osed, and oan reeotnnead them for any one requiring a cure hm bUiousMr. Churchill, machinist. Ohio St., Buffalo, N. writeo : "From some cause, -I laid it to chewing tobaooo,' I lost flesh ami felt so badly that I resolved so leave it off and try Bnrdoek Blood Bitters : since doing so I have gained steadily, and in a few days hope to "kick the beam' at nay usual weight." Mrs. Ira Malholland. Albany, N. T, writes I 'For several years I nave suffered from ofVreeorring bilioas headaches, dyrjepsia and coca. piamw peculiar ua my ses. nines using yoo( Bordoek Blood Bitters I am entirely relieved. J. M. Mlsht. Syracuse. N. T writes: first eommeneed osing yoor Bordoek Blood Bitters I was troubled with fluttering and palprtattoo of the heart. I felt weak and Mangold wtin a nombness of the limbs: slnee amino n. heart has not troubled me, and the nuxuhtns aersafloo la all gooe." Prte l-OO, Tnavl ItolUea Iirjctav. FOSTER, niLBUKlt CO. iraormxaroaM Wholesale and retail by A.O. IcienHOc. E. N. FRESH UAH & 3J100 IVewspaper AdvertiidBs; Agent, OoanraxciAX Bcxunaa, Cl ;i XXATI. in snttriHsnil in urns! hi s IiisIIssiiisi Is trw gspa. Estimates tanaabsd freeze pot r Ijfa 05 TO 920wLn
