Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 6, Number 212, 5 September 1881 — Page 2

EnWtl m BeoooJ-Class Matter at Um Puatofflee,

MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 6, 1881. TO ADVEKTI1KK. Tk:lRaUUM ml the rsvllalni MOlri Week I r. I la Mere ikaa etexsfcle Ual ml mmy ther paper pa 1st Wara Cobb If. Tkb coroner's jury in the Jennie Cramer case at New Haven, Connecticut, hare decided that the girl was murdered by the xme of poison and that James Malley, Jr., is guilty of the murder, while Walter Malley and Blanche Doug lass were also morally, if not legally, guilty of the crime. Got. Pobtu. of this State, adopting the suggestion of the Governor of Pennsylvania, has issued his proclamation re commending the people of Indiana to assemble at their respective places of worship on to-morrow, between the hours of 10 and It o'clock, to unite in public prayer for the recovery of the President. The proclamation in full will be found in another column. Mb. Ykhhok's predictions for August proved to be remarkably correct for scientific man. One of his guesses actually proved correct and on three days they were nearly correct, fie only missedit on twenty-seven of the thirty-one days of last month. If this does not establish Mr. Y tumor's reputation for accuracy weather prophet, what could influence an incredulous people! A TBBRTBi.n butchery of soldiers by the Indians, is reported from Northern Arizona. Gen. Carr and over one hun dred of his soldiers are reported killed. It is the work of the White Mountain Apaches. The White Mountain Apaches are the only Indians known to have been concerned in this outbreak, aa they nam ber about 400 braves, but the others may have been drawn to their forces. If con firmed, this will be a serious affair to the Territory, as well as military. The killed are probably General Oarr. Lieuteant Carter, Dr. McCarty, Lieutenant Stanton, Lieutenant Cruse, commanding the Sixth Cavalry, and a son of General Carr, who had just graduated from an Eastern College. Two troops are being hastened forward, and by to-day, it is believed, couriers will arrive with the particulars. Summer and drought seem determined to linger this year far beyond their time. It has been an unusually hot summer, and in most localities a very dry one; and now, in September, both heat and drought continue. Some places in Michigan no rain is reported for six weeks, and at Eldorado, 111., none for nine weeks. In the fruit regions of Michigan and Southern Indiana the drought is the severest ever known. Chicago is choking with dust, and Cincinnati with nothing to drink but beer. In parts of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania the streams and wells are drying up, the pastures are parched, the corn has given it up aa a bad job, and the cattle are in danger of perishing for want of water, People thought all this would end with summer, but they were mistaken. An tumn has come, and still the excessive heat and drought remain. PnmraRATions are making at Cincin nati on a large scale for a grand reunion of old soldiers and sailors, beginning on tne lata of the present month, and con tinuing three days. Headquarters have been designated for every Ohio regiment. from the First to the One Hundred and Ninety-eighth of infantry, and for the cavalry, artillery and navy. Similar arrangements are being made also for the troops from other States. The camp will be on the county fair-grounds, and will be called Camp Garfield. The first day will be devoted to welcoming addresses in the afternoon, and to regimental re unions in the evening. Brigade and corps reunions will occupy the morning of Thursday, after which a dinner and love-feast, concluding with a grand pa rade, which will close the exercises. ExPresidents Grant and Hayes, and many other distinguished officers, are expected to be in attendance. Ok Wednesday the first Ecumenical conference of Methodists will meet at the old City Road Chapel in London, the church in which Wesley preached and near which his body was reverently laid to rest ninety years ago. In it will sit reprepresentative Methodists from every quarter of the world from Europe, Asia, Africa. America and from the far islands of the southern seas. The opening sermon will be preached by an Amer ican bishop one of the ecclesiastical successors of that Thomas Coke, upon whose head Wesley laid his aged hands in 1784, setting him apart as the first chief shepherd of the little but rapidly growing flock across the ocean. The meeting oi such a body as Lois is an event which even unfriendly observers cannot regard with indifference. Today John Wesley's disciples are counted by millions. A hundred years hence, at their present rate of increase, they will be counted by tens of millions. Methodism has become an important factor in the world's problem, and the wonderful meeting of its representatives about to assemble. in the church and near the grave of its founder may well challenge the attention oi all serious thinknra,

Tbb President hal a slight relapse

Saturday night, and was not quite so J welL Blaine's dispatch yesterday says, ! Last night the President did not rett well, and twice daring the night his stomach was so disturbed that he vomited." Yesterday was a very auiet and rather sad Sunday at the White House, a great deal of anxhty at the condition of the President beiig manifested. The vomiting by the President, which alarmed his attendants, the doctors think was the result of being overfed, but why they permitted him to be overfed they do not explain. The symptoms late last night were more favorable and a better feeling prevailed. The removal of the President from Washington to Long Branch has been decided upon by the doctors. A railway carriage will be specially arranged for the journey, and every precaution observed to prevent any injurious result. A Washington dispatch says: "At Long Branch the President will be lodged at one of the Elberon cottages, and the physicians have stipulated that before removal is made a track must be lall from the depot in Long Branch to the door of the cottage. They do this because they do not wish to take any risk. It might be that there would be a spell of inclement weather intervene on the arrival there, during the continuance of which it would be im possible to move the President out of the depot, and the doctors will not risk it. The run from here, it is expected, will be made in about six hours, the railroad people believing that a running time of forty miles an hour will make the easiest riding. A pilot engine will lead the train and stop all moving trains so as to guard against noise." Mr. Glajxstonb has just selected for a peerage one of the great brewers of London, whose immense wealth is founded upon the sale of beer. He is not the first brewer to be raised to the "nobility." Lord Ardilawn also obtained wealth and his patent of nobility from the same source. It must be a comfort to the average Englishman in his moments of discontent to know that the royal road to ennoblement leads through a brewery, and that if one can only make and sell enough beer he may some day become a lord, and sit in the Elouse of Peers under royal favor. PEBSO.YAL AD UEXEBAL. Senator Pugh, of Alabama, believes that Mr. Arthur, if called to the Presi dency, would be extremely conservative. Andrew D. White, ex-Minister to Germany, has Bailed for New York from Southampton on the steamer Elbe. The report that Senator Edmunds was ill has been contradicted. His sum mer vacation has benefited him greatly, and he is now in excellent health. Mr. Goldwin Smith has been ap pointed President of the Economy and Trade Department in the Social Science Congress which is to be held in Dublin. Apropos of the arrest of Cadet Flip per for stealing from Uncle Sam, it is remarked that the devil, at least, draws no color line Zach. Chandler once said that there was not a single act of legislation during be war that troubled his scruples at all except one, and that was the admission of West Virginia as a separate State On being asked what he thought of the Irish land bill, a cynical ministerial ist replied: "It is like the Athanasian creed. We all believe in it, though we do not understand it." Mrs. Fowler of Staten Island, N. Y. is a daughter of the granddaughter of Count de Grasse. She had a son, Dr, Grasse Fowler, who is probably still liv ing in New York. White Thunder, enccuraged by the drouth, has asked for a government office. He estimates that the country dry enough to pay high for any kind of reverberation suggestive of rain. Hon. EL A. Gudger is engineering a national movement for the prohibition of the liquor traffic The Time Star re gards the name as too suggestive of guz rler to prove a watch-word. Mr. Rudolph, brother of Mrs. Gar field, says that his sister's faith has al way's been strong regarding the Presi dent's recovery.and the expresses implicit confidence in Dr. Bliss and his treatment of the case. The Boston City Council proposes to lay out a new square in their city, and eive to it the name of Garfield. A citi zen oflers f 50U as tue oeginmng oi fund for the erection of a statue of the President in the-square. Ex-Minister Noyes is to have a for mal reception at Cincinnati next Monday evening. Judge Taft giving an uddress of welcome. Mrs. Noyes is not in good health, and will probably be unable to be present. She is now with her hus band at Hampton Beach, N. EL General Butler, who has been at Rockland, in Maine, was summoned by telegraph to his son's deathbed, but failed to reach Gloucester in time. Mr. But ler was a genial young fellow of fine abilities, and his future as a lawyer seemed full of promise. The new Senator Lapham is a cousin of Miss Susan B. Anthony, and shortly after his election wrote to her thus: "Canandaigua, July SO, 1SS1. Dear Cousin I have only time now to return my sincere thanks for your cordial con gratulation and kind words. Of the future I hope that our country will prosper, and that woman will yet be accorded her rights. JS. O. Lapham."

ST4TE SEWS.

The Kdfchville IpuliUrH will a: pear week after next as a daily. Plowing for wheat and sowing are going on lively everywhere since the rain. John Adier, an employe of Bayne's saw mill, near Oreencastle, wa run over by a train on the L., N. A. Jfc C. road Sunday morning and killed. A Wabash hrakemsn, named J. G. Long, was instantly killed Saturday, at a point a mile and a half west of Logansport. Anderson is really moving into the ranks of thriving towns. Since January I, 1881, she has expended $100,000 in substantial improvements. Homer May field, a most estimable young man, aged twenty-two, son of John D. Mayneld, of Clay township, Owen county, was drowned in White river Thursday night while fishing. Jacob Eckert, a convict, Jdied in the Southern prison, Friday morning, suddenly, from heart disease. Eckart came to the prison from Harrison county on March 2, 1880, for arson, to serve a term of two years. Typhoid fever ha3 appeared at Rushville in a most malignant form. In the family of Wm. J. Rebout (six in number), all save Mr. Rebout are victims of it. Mrs. Rebout has died and the others are dangerously ilL A seven-year old son of Horatio Guthrie, who lives east of Muncie, met with a fatal accident Saturday afternoon. He was driving a team to a land-roller, and the horses became frightened and ran, throwing the boy in front of the roller, which crushed him to death. The Wabash County Teacher's Association adjourned Friday, having been In session during the entire week, with 150 teachers present. The session has been highly successful and satisfactory. Evening lectures were delivered by President E. E. White of Purdue University, and by Rev. L. L. Carpenter and Oliver II. Bogue, Esq., of Wabash. On Saturday evening a cowardly.coldblooded murder was committed at Sharpeville by Charles Harlan, the victim being James Bess, who was stabbed six times. The first cut was in the abdomen and was three inches long. After committing the deed the murderer escaped. Harlan was one of the '"goodygoody" criminals who was pardoned out of the northern prison by the late Governor Williams, having been sentenced to that prison for a term of years for the murder of a young man at Jackson's Station in 1876. The cause of both crimts was whisky. A Nation oil lts Knees. Boa ton Journal. Through the length and breadth of the land there were very few of any denomination of Christians in which no reference was made to President Garfield's condition on Sunday, and few worshipping assemblies in which earnest prayer was not offered for his recovery. There was no need of any special summons to this service. It was the spontaneous and natural expression of the national feeling. The heavy tidings of Saturday had prepared all for the worst. The physicians had abandoned hope, and all human help seemed to have been tried and to have failed; and in an agony of prayer the whole nation, with one consent, directed its entreaties to Him who holds men and nations in His hands Never before, probably have so many prayers been offered at one time in behalf of one man. Those who have faith in prayer must have had their confidence strengthened by the thought of such a solemn unity of petition; and those who have little faith in religious things can hardly have failed to be im pressed by it- To many minds, the strange and marked improvement in the President's condition, reported during the day, must have seemed a reason for belief in the effiacy of prayer. Whether these countless prayers are answered in the way in which those who offered them desire, or not, only good can come -from this deepened sense of the nation's de pendence upon God. (iamlitus't Oratory. Paris Cor. Cleveland Leader. Finally he took the floor and talked in a very rapid strain for an hour and a half. I know of no American orator to whom he can be compared. He possesses a fine physique, a magnificent, sonorous voice, gestulates with nervous rapidity, and talks faster than any speaker I ever heard. It seems impossible for him to lose the mattention of his hearers even for a mo ent, and there are times when be sways his whole audience as absolutely as any mind ever swayed another. His chief object seemed to be to excite their emotions and to play upon their passions and he did it as easily as a trained must cian would play upon an instrument. When he referred to the efforts making to strike down the republic, he did it in language and with actions and gestures which called to mind the speech of Mark Antony over the body of Julius Caesar. He spoke of the enemy invad ing France in brief sentences, his rich voice rising with the climax of his thoughts and his body Bwaying to and fro in the tribune until his bearers were fairly electrified. It seemed to be a dec lamation oi tne Aiarseuiaise. l never heard any one who so completely embod ies all the qualities of a popular orator, and, with his wonderful power as an or ganizer, it can be readily undei stood how he has so long molded the political doctrines of France. Democratic Diajrnstt wlita Wbeelrr. . Baltimore Gasette. We wonder what sort of people the friends" of the Quincy Herald are. The fact that enough supporters of such a sheet and such an editor could be gotten togemer even to nave anven on naif a dozen small boys while engaged in a de monstration to express contempt for such a journal as Wheeler manages, and such a journalist as Wheeler must be, is blistering disgrace to the town. Wheeler could not possibly be a more despicable scoundrel than Goitean, but he is in every respect quite as base. Ha deserves a like fate and it is a great pity that the law protects him. Two Brooklyn burglars chanced to upset an alarm clock, which immediately fired itself off in the perfectly terriric manner peculiar to that diabolical invention, and the burglars "lit out." Tumefaction," a medical term which appears in the Washington dispatches today need create no alarm. It means simply "swelling" and is not as bad as it looks. Sfrimgfittd Uniem. j

KclapMilBTrpliald Feer. Some people depend wholly on domestic treatment in typhoid fever. They seem to be successful; for, in the large majority of cases eight out of ten the j system throws it off wholly apart from j medicine, especially if the room, and j the body is frequently sponged with cold ' water, or better, with a weak solution of i common soda. The fact, however, that j one cannot know beforehand the character of the case, makes it alwajs safest in the hand of a faithful physician who can watch it and care for it according to the symptoms. This seems the more important in view of the discovery recently made by the late Dr. Irvine, of England, reeoecting relapses of typhoid fever, of which the London Lmnott says, "To most of us it must come like a revelation." He has shown that these most troublesome contingencies are much more frequent than is generally supposed by the profession; that, in fact, there are often several, the first predisposing to a second; that a real relajtse may set in without any interval of convalescence; and that many cases of the disease, when they first come under the notice of the physi cian, are relapses, following upon a mild primary attack. The fever normally lasts twenty eight days. A first relapse, where there are no complications, lasts twenty or twentyone days; subsequent relapses are each shorter than that immediately preceding. The interval of convalescence, between the first attack and the first relapse, averages about five days, during which the temperature is natural, or nearly so. The onset of the relapse is marked by a sudden rise of temperature, which reaches its height by the fifth day, main taining a high level until the eighth or ninth, when it falls decidedly, but again rises and gradually declines to the end on the twentieth or twenty-first day. -... , Tne Story of a. Hundred Iolla.r Still. Balttifrore Oaaette. A distinguished statesman forty years ago was on a visit to Baltimore, and he gave to a colored girl while here what he supposed to be at the time a one dollar bill. The next morning the girl went to a grocery store, and after makiug a few trifling purchases, gave the bill in payment, supposing that it was a dollar. The proprietor of the store, a highly -esteemed citizen of Baltimore, noticed with great surprise that it was for a hundred dollars, and he supposed at once that the woman had stolen it. Ascertaining the delusion she was under, he informed her of the true character of the note, and told her he would detain it until the owner was found. The girl told how she had received it, persisted that it had not been stolen and assented to the gentleman retaining it until the owner was found. He advertised the bill, and the statesman, in answer, called to say that the girl's story was true, and that as her honesty had been -.uspected she should keep the bill. He then departed to the scene of his daily triumphs, and in the acquisition of a great fame perhaps forgot the incident. The grocery merchant retained the note, in the expectation of the girl returning, but she never called for it, it is supposed being frightened and fearing being charged with ijs theft. He deposited it at interest. Yefers rolled on and she married, bore children, and died, and a few years ago a son applied to the merchant for the note and the interest, which now amounted to a large sum of money. This amount the custodians paid into one of the city courts, in order that the court should decide whether or not the claimant was entitled to it. The court sustained the claim, and the money was paid to the heir, and thus ends the story of a hundred dollar bill.

Tne Beer Problem. Brooklyn Eagle. "Boy, do you know what that can contains?" said a tramp to a lad who was hurrying along with a tin pail full of lager. "Beer," responding the boy promptly. "Exactly," continued the tramp; "and that beer contains glucose, cocculus indicus, corn starch, rice meal and raw grape sugar, all deadly poisons and sufficient to kill any man." The lad set the paii down and moved off a little from it, whereupon the tramp picked it up and was raising it to his hps when the boy interrupted him to say: "Ain't you afraid of it"' "Yes; it's dreadful to die this way, but I don't care to live," and draining it empty he handed the pail back. "He's a goner," muttered the lad, as he walked thoughtfully off. "Lord, what a narrow escape dad had!" I'ailDreol f Ilgner Education. Detroit Post and Tribune. "Can yen read, my girl," said a lady, patronizingly, to a waiter in a New England mountain hotel. "Yes, ma'am; seventeen languages," was the answer. Still the chances are that she could not remember an order of any length. A visitor at the Glen House, White Mountains, this summer, watched about twenty dif ferent orders given at different times to the student-waiters, and not one was correctly filled. The untutored African, who can t distinguish zed from diagama, can discount the whole senior classes of Dartmouth and Amherst in carrying, either in his head or hands, a couple of twelvedish orders for the table. Don't Worry. He la Safe. Boston Herald.Of all the foolish and "cranky" talk which the fatal talk in the President's case nas developed, tnat is tne worst which proposes to wreak vengeance cn the assassin. Are we a nation of sava ges to torture and murder our prisoners? Could the violent death of the miserable wretch now shivering in jail remove ote panz whicti tne nation nas soxtered for the past tight weeks! Will it help our good fsme to revenge assassination by mob murder I Such tnreats, when they are not empty bluster, are criminal folly. The cordial feelings always entertained by the American people toward Queen Victoria, says the New York Iris tins, have been greatly strengthened since the tragedy at Washington by the repeated evidences of deep interest in the President's condition which have been afford ed by her many telegrams of inquiry and of sympathy with Mrs. Garfield. At every serious crisis in the President's case there has come a fresh message of hope and condolence from England's sove reign. The tender woman s Heart of the widowed Queen goes out to one who is threatened with a loss like that which has befallen her. The Southern Governors are now offer ing hetvy rewards for the apprehension of noted criminals.

TrflB( mm Ik Haaart. New Haven liag-.iU-t. A New Haven gentleman, whose busint&sketpe him up late at nights, was persuaded to do a miliuuery errand for his wife the other night, and as a result stumbled up the front stairs about two o'clock in the morning with a brand new bonnet held carefully under his arm in a tissue paper. As soon as he turned on the gas, his better half rubbe t open her

eyes and drowsily inquired: "You forgot my bonnet, didn't you I" . "No I didn't Here's the busiuess." Oo, is it t and that woman sprang up and ripped the wrappings oil in a jiffy and, slatting her nightcap into the corner, adjusted the new purchase carefully on her head, "How do you like it I It's becoming, isn't it!" "Madam," respoaded the husband, "the bonnet certainly is becoming, but, somehow, the remainder of your costume don't jibe. Your dress if 1 may call it such, has too much Hamburg edging and not enough overskirt. I think you need a little knife pleating and a couple extra ruffles" "Oh, you horrid " " And then, too, that bonnet has too much color for the rest of the tout ensemble, if I may borrow from the French." "You hateful, I'll throw the thing out of the window if you don't tell me just how it looks, so there." "Tnat's what I'm trying to do, my dear. The bonnet looks immense In your present costume you couldn't fail to make a hit on the street, and just as like as not land in the police station. I should think some milliner had hired the statue of Queen Zenobia for a dummy to show off her goods." "Daramy, dummy, did you say? I'll let yon know I'm no dummy," and she Bat on the edge of the bed and lectured, and lectured, and lectured, until the deluded man had been hummed to sleep by the monotony of her voice. But she didn t take off that bonnet. She went and rigged herself in the lent duds she had, and when he awoke in the morning she was promenading alxiut the room. trying the effect by posing in attitudes before ttie mirror. Colonel Dan Murphy of Hallcck Sta tion, Elko county, came to California in 1S44, and may be said to have made the country pay him well for his time. He is now probably the largest private land owner on this continent. He has 4,000, 000 acres of land in one body in Mexico, 50,000 in Nevada, and 23,000 in Califor nia. His Mexican grant he bought four years ago, for $200,000 cash, or five cents an acre. It is sixty miles long, and cov ers a beautiful country of hill and val ley, pine timber and meadow land. It comes within twelve miles of the city of Durango, which is to be a station on the Mexican Central. Mr. Murphy raises wheat on his California land, and cattle on that in Nevada. He got 55,000 sacks last year, and ships 6,000 head of cattle a year right along. Mrs. Hannah Cox, who died at Holder ness, a. u., aunuay, in ner 107th year, was tue oldest person in New England, A Benton narbor, Michigan, factory, has a navy order for 100,000 cans of tomatoes. The irrigation of Colorado's plains by wells is being looked into by the government. hop bitters: (A Medicine, not m Drink.) CONTAINS HOPS, BITI1I', MAMHUKE, DANDELION, AxnTM PfRKST Asn IIhtMidicii.QuiuTIUOP1U, OTliJtB lilTTSBtt. THEY CURE . All Disuses of the Stomach. Bowels. Hlood. l.iver. Kidneys, and I riimry Orerans. NerFemale Complalnu. SIOOO IN COLD. Will !e paid lor a ease they will not enre or Help, or ior anyimuft impure or injurious fouud in them. Askymir rlriipriet for Hop Hitter an4 try tue in hufore joa sleep Take ue other. D T. C. Is an ulisoliiteaoc! IrreslstlWernre for Drunkeuness. use of opium, tobaeco and narcotics. FSNO FOB dRrri.al aflSTETTEV J CELEBRATED 3 &ITTERS Though Shaken In Everv Joint And fiber with fever and ague, or billon remittent, the yatem may vet be freed from the malignant Tims with Hostetter'i Stomach Bitters. Protect the system against it with this benifieent anti-tpauniodic, which is furthermore a supreme remedy for liver com -plaint,eoDstiption, dyspepsia, debility, rheumatism, kidney troubles ajd other ailments. For sale by all Druggist and .Dealers cecersily. Foresman's ANODYNE Cnrea JMarrhoea, Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum. Cramp Colic, Flux and all pains in the Stomach. , EVERT "GUARANTEED." BOTTLE FOB SAUK BT A. G. Luken Cc Co. ftSflsVUizi

All &he-e seltf hy Miriruu. II II Hop Bitten Mitz. C... RoclMitrr. N. V., A TmaU.OiL II

K.NOLLENBE RC.

OPENED. Our recent Iarge Purchases of AND DRESS GOODS HAVE COME. $10,000 worth of Fresh Goods added to our Dress Goods and Silk Stock, tchicli now represents the ehoieest novelties in the market. We eall esjteeial attention to our Silk Goods, including several grades of colored Silks, the iopular Surah Silks, in all the leading colors, and the choicest lllack Gtos Grain Silks, from $1.00 per yard upwards ever opened in Jlielttnond. Also magnificent Brocades and the new effects in Ombre Shaded Goods for trimmings, perfectly elegant. Give us a these goods. Sj fecial Call on Geo. H. Knollenberg. tprSdaVwU HARNESS IN THE FRONT! With the best assorted stock of Linen Lap Dusters Cotton Lap Dusters. Worsted Lap Dusters (All of the latest designs). Leather, Cotton and Fly Nets, IN THE CITY Linen A full assortment of HARNESS constantly on hand. WIGGINS & CO.. 509 pTl7dwtl !TIaln Street. B.3ii,?.citi Mil Wortki HMuaxmn to imbiamatoia. wo. Bnb-ofHoe at Green-8. Mills, two block! soatr or tee Hanroaa tizuiga KICiiHONU, LV. MILL STONES and Improved FlooriDf Mill Machinery, Portaule Mills, Bolts, etc Con tract to furnish all eotnplete. IDI'tDCKK A"n "IK'HIIINTH. 9mat afacrdnes, Floor Faekera, and Bat Glotrit read T for shipment. FIRE ALARM DIRECTORY. The following is the eorreet location of the Kb Alarm Telegraph : 1-3 Corner of Third and North C 1-4 Wiggins' Tannery. 1 -6 Corner of Fifteenth and North B. 1-41 Corner of Fourteenth and Main. 1-8 Corner of Fifth and booth B. S I Corner of Twelfth and Booth B. S-S Smith's Coffin Works 8-4 Corner of Kleventh and Main. 8-6 Corner of Tenth and South C. 8-0 Corner of Eleventh and Forth B. 8-7 Corner of Seventh and Booth C. 8-1 City Mill Works. S-8 Bobinaon Machine Works. 8-4 Wayne Agricultural Works. 8-6 Corner of Fourth and Sooth D. S-S Kngine House No. i. North Eighth. 8-T Vanneman. Bead Co. 'a Fork House 4-1 Piano Factory. 4-3 Knopfs Fork House. - Kaat Oakland. 4-0 Comer of Eighth and Mam. 4-6 Corner of Eighth and Booth E. -l Kendall Barnes' OH Mill. 5- 8 Engine House No. S, North Fifth 5-4 Eariham College. o-l Hntton's Coffin Factory. Hooater Drill Works. 1-S-B Gear. &aot GoOt Works. 1-8 8 Hailroed3Popa. Butler University. THE Twenty -Seventh Session opens Tuesday, bept-Uth. Professors, -5; Students. :i4l. Kvery educational taeihty. Toittoo less than 1 per term. Board a abaoiote oost. or less. WhoiS) expense for forty weeks, alio. "or Catalogue, adtireea. ITrMK-Mtil t. W JVEBEST.

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HEAD WHAT THE PEOPLE S AY. Mrs. J. O. Robertson, FitUbur m, ra writes: "I was suuVrirtg frotu general debility, want of atHt;tt, rtwstipaUiin, et.-. so that life was a burden : arW nsinn riurdoek Hl.Hxi Hitters I felt twtter than fi yean. 1 cannot nrtuae vour Hit ters too lunch." R. CHhbs, of Buffalo, N. Y, writes : "Your Burdock ttkod Bitters, in chroma diseases of the blood, brer and kidnevs. hits teen simUly marked with eucooas. ) have sed them myself with best resatia, for torpidity of the liver ; and in the cane of a fiieud of mine tcfiertnn from dropsr toe effeot was marvelous." Brace Turner, Hoehester, N. Y writes : "I hay been subject to senous disorder of the kidneys, and unable to attend to business; lIl'Rjxx-a Blood Bittkhs relieved me tx-fore lialf a bottle was used. I feel conndent that they will entirely cure me." E. Asenith Hall, Bmsliamton, N. Y write : I suffered with a dull ilu through mv loft lung and shoulder. I unit my pinta, apx-tite and color, and ooul.l witb diiil.-nlty keep up all day. Took your Burihk k Bixmi HrtTKhd aa dirnoUtd and have felt no pain since first week after ualna Uiem." Mr. Noah Bates, Kl intra, N. Y., writes : "About four years ao 1 bad an attack of bilious fever, and never fully recovered My divstive organs wext' weakened, and I would beootuplotoly prostrated tor days. Alter uaim two b ittle of our Burikh-k Blood Bittkhs the improvement was so visible that I was astonished. I can now though 01 years of ae. do a fair and reasonable day's work." C. Blaeket Kobinaon. propr of the Canada Presbyterian, Toronto, Out, writes : "For yean 1 ulfered greatly from oft-recurring healaohe. I used youi Bi'Kdock Biakio Ul i-inut with the bapiest results, and I now find myself in better health thau for years past." Mrs. Wallace, Buffalo, N. Y write: "I l ave u.i Hi hihm k Bluod BrrTKtta for nervous and bilious beadacbes, and can reoommon 1 them for any one rouuiiinic u eure lor bilious nesa." Mrs. Ira Mulholland. Albany, N. Y..writea: "Fot several years 1 have suilered from oft-recurring bilious headaohes, dyspepsia, add complaints peculiar to my sex. Since usini? your HufwooK Blood Bittkhs I am entirely relieved." Mr. Churchill, machinist. Ohio Htreet, Buffalo, N.Y, writes: "irom some cause, 'I laid it to chewing tobacco,' I lost flesh and foil so badly that I resolved to leave it oil and try HuhihH'I Blood Bittkhs ; since doiug so 1 have gained steadily, and in a few days hope to 'kiok the beam' at my usual Weight." i. W. Might, Syracuse, writes : "When I flint oomrneneed using yoiirhuaDooK Blood Bittkb I was troubled with fluttering and palpitation of the heart. 1 felt weak and languid, with a numbness of the Umbs : since uing. my heart has not troubled me, and the numbing testation is ail gone." l'BJCK, tl Mil BOTTLR ; KtaTLI KlZR, 10 OTB. FOSTElt. MILltUltX CO., FBOPaiXTOHS m i i Aio, iv. i .. Wholesale and retail by A. a. Luken A Cte. A llaptiftt nimitcr't Fiiperience. I am a Baptist mirmter, and liefore X even thought of being a clergyman, i graduated in medicine, but left a lucrative practice for nij present profession, 40 years ago. I was for many Years a sufferer from quinsy; Thomas' Eclkctkio Uil cured me. I was also troubled with hoarseness, and Thomas' Ecleetric Oil always relieved me. My wife and child had diphtheria, and Thomas' Ecleetric Oil cured them, and if taken in timn it will cure seven times out of ten. I am conndent it is a cure for the most obstinate cold or couch, and if any one will take a small teaspoon and half fill it with the oil, and then place the end of the spoon in one nostril and draw the oil out of the spoon into the head by snuffing as hard as they can, until the oil falls over into the throat, and practice that twice a week, I don't care how offensive their head may be, it will clean it out and cure their catarrh. For deafness and earache it hi done wonders to my certain knowledge. It U the only medicine dubbed patent medicine that I have ever felt like recommending, and I am very anxious to see it in every place, fur I tell you that I wouia not ue without it in my house for any consideration. I am now suffering with a pain Like rheumatism in my ritrht limb, and nothing relieves me like Thomas Ecleetric Oil. Dk. E. F. CRANE, Corry. Pa. Otto J.Doeabnrg, proprietor Holland City News Mich., writoe : "A bad cold settled on mw .lit and back, kidney trouble, liver and rheumatism combined ; I suffered terribly, though was obliged to move about and attend to business. I tried local doctors, but reeeived no relief, and aa a forlorn hope tried your Thomas' hcLacrac Oa ; have only need half a fiftv cmt botti m.nA f J as well as I ever did in my hfe." E. Bairn. Elgin. writes - Thz tr-t-dosens of patent hniments, without relief, for a rheumatic and stiff knee. I fel T ba Sbb oil at last,' for after using three bottles of Thomas' Ectjccttuc Oil, I am prepared to say it is the best application I have ever oaed." A letter from P. O. Bhimlmi a ui writing w ibiisu rxjLacTKic oil, says "One man was cured of sore th-nalolabn cored of Bora ah-rMkftnf alant jctu aMkuuLus; wiw one ootKe,- we have a number of eases of rheumatism that ban hem eared when other remelie have failed. We consider it the best medicine sold. Mr. Albert Anderson. Tork fUmit Rnfraln. n down stairs and severely braised bis knee. A few appUeations of Dr. Thomas' Ecuorun Cm. entirely cored him. My son had a badiv swelter! unit aruf - mmm. throat. Ir. Thomas' Ecutoraic Oil. caTvd him la 4& bonrm. MTwJ'ifoo(wui mncb lrflam.il - Eoiectrie Oil cured ber in one day. u a. Virgil, N. T. BOLD BT DBDGG1HT8 ETEBTWHEBX. Price SO ctaw subs I.OO. FOSTER, SIILBCBM C HXFrAIvOJw.jY. Wholesale aa.1 retaajby:A. O. Lokaat 4k Co. E. N. FRE8HUAN & BROS Newspaper Advertising A rent, OosrirwaraAx. Bctljcto. CIciwwatx, Are aothoUaed to reeefve advertisements lor tela paper. Estimates tarnished free spoo apptiea05 TO $20 Hampaae

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